Advanced Camera with Interchangeable Lens Nikon 1 J1 / V1:
http://www.nikon.com/news/2011/0921_digital_01.htm
Line up:
http://imaging.nikon.com/lineup/acil/index.htm
http://chsvimg.nikon.com/lineup/acil/pdf/Nikon1_Lineup.pdf
Mount Adapter FT1:
http://imaging.nikon.com/lineup/acil/accessories/mount_adapter_ft1/
You can use DX and FX lenses on these new cameras!
Labels
- 25-50mm (2)
- 70-200mm VR II (2)
- 70-300mm VR (2)
- D700 (2)
- Kenko Teleplus Pro 300 (1)
- Nikkor 105mm f/2.5 (1)
- Nikon D5100 (2)
- Olympus E-PL1 (2)
- Panasonic DMC G3 (1)
- TC-20E III (1)
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Thursday, September 08, 2011
Bad experience with cancelling AT&T's iPad data plan
(This post has nothing to do with photo gear)
The short version: I called AT&T to cancel the data plan last month, and today when I checked my credit card bill and the $25 charge was still there. I called AT&T again today, talked to 4 customer supports, and was told that I cannot get the refund because there was data usage on my account (many days after I called to cancel the plan).
The short version: I called AT&T to cancel the data plan last month, and today when I checked my credit card bill and the $25 charge was still there. I called AT&T again today, talked to 4 customer supports, and was told that I cannot get the refund because there was data usage on my account (many days after I called to cancel the plan).
The long version
I ordered AT&T’s data plan for my ipad 2 in July (on the
10th). On August 9th, I received an email at work saying
that the data plan has been automatically renewed. After reading the fine
prints,
“…SHOULD YOU CANCEL AUTOMATIC RENEWAL AFTER
WE HAVE CHARGED YOUR CARD BUT BEFORE THE AUTOMATIC RENEWAL PERIOD IS SET TO
BEGIN (E.G. WE CHARGED YOUR CREDIT CARD FOR THE RENEWAL AT 7 AM ET FOR A 9 AM
ET AUTO RENEWAL AND YOU NOTIFIED US TO CANCEL THE AUTOMATIC RENEWAL AT 8 AM
ET), PLEASE CONTACT AT&T CUSTOMER SERVICE TO PROCESS A CREDIT FOR THE
AUTOMATIC RENEWAL.”
I realized that AT&T has already charged me. If I cancel
my plan, I need to contact customer service to get a refund (that is how I
understood it). I have wifi at home and work and did not see the data plan too
useful, so I canceled the plan when I got home and called AT&T’s customer
service right away. A guy helped me over
the phone. He didn’t seem to know stuff. I had to explain to him what’s going
on. Finally, he said he has cancelled the data plan and I will get the refund
(I don’t remember what he said exactly, but those were what I asked, he seemed
to understand and said he has done those). The same day, I received a
confirmation email saying that “AT&T Plan Automatic Renewal Cancelled”.
That’s a month ago. Today I received another email from
AT&T saying that AT&T plan expires soon. I was puzzled, since I had
asked to cancel the plan and shouldn’t still have a plan expiring. I went
online to check my credit card statement and found no refund. So I was unhappy
and called AT&T again. That started a frustrating experience.
The first CS doesn’t seem to know stuff. After a long while,
he said there was a 25 dollar credit on my account and I have a new bill yesterday
(to my surprise!). I asked them why AT&T cannot refund me 25 dollars and he
just said because there is a bill on my account. I asked him why there is a new
bill and he couldn’t explain. After a long while, he gave up and transferred me
to another department.
This time the CS explained to me, they cannot gave me refund
because there is data usage (after I called to cancel the plan). I said how
could there be more data usage if I called to cancel the plan. Then he said I
canceled the “Automatic Renewal” but not the data plan. This is like a trap! I said
I stopped the plan on my ipad and called AT&T to cancel the data plan, what
more can I do to cancel a plan. If I did all those and the plan was not
canceled, it is obviously AT&T’s fault! He just kept repeating the same
thing “we cannot refund you because there was data usage” and was not
interested in my complaints.
So I said I wanted to talk to a manager. After a while, I
was transferred to a manager. She just repeated what the second CS said. I
asked her when I used the data, she mentioned a few dates, like August 27th.
At this point, I was very unhappy. I said I called to cancel the plan on August
9th, why there was data usage on August 27th. She
repeated that I cancelled the “automatic renewal” but not the data plan, and my
account is still not closed. I said, “No. I called to cancel the data plan and
I was told the plan was cancelled by the CS and I stopped the plan on my iPad.”
To be honest, I don’t remember what that CS said exactly on
the day I first called. I don’t know whether he really understood my question. But
an ordinary customer has to assume the CS knows what they are doing, right? Now
the AT&T CSs kept blaming me for not doing my part.
I asked the third CS “How should a customer cancel a data
plan then? If I ordered the service through my iPad, I should be able to stop
it from the iPad, right?” She said she can cancel my account for me. I asked
her to do that, but I was not satisfied. Why I have to call to get my plan
cancelled when I can order the service from the ipad. And I insist that we still need to discuss
the refund. I was very confused at this point. You have an account and a plan
and automatic renewal thing, it seems you have to cancel all of these to get
the plan canceled? Why AT&T wants to make things so complicated? Does it
intentionally set traps for customers?
Finally, I was transferred to a 4th CS. He tried
to repeat what the 2nd and 3rd CS said. He said it is
like you go into a restaurant, if you order some food and take a bite then you
have to pay. I said no, it is like you are trying to deliver pizza (or milk) to
my doorstep every day and keep sending me bills. And I cannot cancel your service
because the rules are so sophisticated that they are impossible to follow. I
then said, this is what spammers do, AT&T is a big company and shouldn’t do
such things to make money. I said when I cancelled Comcast’s service; I don’t
need to worry about this. Comcast computed the partial credit and sent it my
new address. He then just said something like “I understand, but I cannot
refund your money”. I said, ah, it is just like AT&T just robbed me 25
dollars and now it says I will not give it back to you, what can you do?
Finally, he suggested that I file a dispute with my bank. I
probably will do that. At the end, I just asked him, “Do you use any cable
services or phone services or anything? Do you ever have to cancel a service?
What you will do in such situations?” To give him credit, he did ask whether I
have other AT&T accounts and mentioned he probably can credit me to those
accounts. But fortunately, I have no other AT&T accounts and would not like
to have one.
I know it is not really worth my time to spend an hour on
the phone (and more time writing this blog) for this 25 dollars, but I just
couldn’t believe AT&T is so arrogant and rude to their customers. I admitted
that there might things that I did not follow correctly, but I believe my
understanding of the tech stuff is “above average”, if I couldn’t figure it out
how to cancel the plan correctly, probably there are many more out there having
the similar troubles. We customers sometimes do naughty things, such buying
stuff when there is price error, but other companies (such as Dell, Amazon) handled
things gracefully. I cannot image AT&T can get away with such terrible
policies and support.
More generally, there are a few things that are just not
right:
For example, this whole automatic renewal thing (not limited
to AT&T) is simply a spam. The only reason for it to exist to give
companies legal rights to spam their customers. Otherwise, a company could ask
their customers whether they want to get their service renewed when they actually attempt to use it.
I guess I could also blame Apple (if I dare) for not making
cancel a data plan possible or straightforward directly from the iPad.
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Nikon D5100 price dropped again at Amazon.com
The body only price today is $686.85.
The price with a 18-55 kit lens is $761.92.
If you buy the camera together with the 70-300mm VR lens, you get an additional $200 off.
The price with a 18-55 kit lens is $761.92.
If you buy the camera together with the 70-300mm VR lens, you get an additional $200 off.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Where is Nikon D400?
Nikon did not announce D400 on 08/24. Sony made a few exciting announcements (see www.dpreview.com). It is reasonable to speculate that Nikon D400 will use Sony A77's 24MP sensor. Nikon may just get hold of the sensor, since understandably Sony want to keep it exclusively for A77 for a while. If so, Nikon may need at least another half year to tune this sensor. I guess the earliest time that Nikon can announce D400 is ealry next year.
Monday, August 22, 2011
The half life of DSLR price
Nikon DSLR D5100 ’s price dropped from $800 to $730 in four months, at this rate, assuming an exponential decay in price, its price will reach $400 in 20 months (this is, of course, a rough estimate).
I (gu)estimate that the price of a consumer level camera body has a half life of about two years. The prices of pro level bodies have longer half lives of three to five years.
What does this tell us? It can help us decide shall we buy the camera now or wait a little longer?
If the price has a half life of 2 years (consumer level bodies), then we expect the price to decrease by 10% approximately every 4 months, or the price will decrease 2.8% each month.
If the price has a half life of 5 years (pro bodies), then we expect the price to decrease by 10% approximately every 9 months! The price will drop just over 1% each month!
For example, the current price of D3S is approximately $5000, if I am willing to spend $2500, I may be able to afford a Nikon D3S in 5 years (it is possible that it will be discontinued long before that time or I may get it earlier if I consider second-hand market). If I just want to wait for one year, I expect the price to be around $4200 by then: if I saw that price before that time, it is probably a good deal (e.g., this may happen around Thanksgiving or Christmas)!
I (gu)estimate that the price of a consumer level camera body has a half life of about two years. The prices of pro level bodies have longer half lives of three to five years.
What does this tell us? It can help us decide shall we buy the camera now or wait a little longer?
If the price has a half life of 2 years (consumer level bodies), then we expect the price to decrease by 10% approximately every 4 months, or the price will decrease 2.8% each month.
If the price has a half life of 5 years (pro bodies), then we expect the price to decrease by 10% approximately every 9 months! The price will drop just over 1% each month!
For example, the current price of D3S is approximately $5000, if I am willing to spend $2500, I may be able to afford a Nikon D3S in 5 years (it is possible that it will be discontinued long before that time or I may get it earlier if I consider second-hand market). If I just want to wait for one year, I expect the price to be around $4200 by then: if I saw that price before that time, it is probably a good deal (e.g., this may happen around Thanksgiving or Christmas)!
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