I’d ask anyone considering using them to please avoid the hassle and go for a better provider.
@ADT basically locks you into bad service for 3 years until you’re left with no other option but to endure their incompetence or pay a fine to escape their ineptness.
@ADT has probably the most ineffective mechanism to remove monthly charges.
I have been practically chasing them since I installed the service (9 months) to get rid of charges for services I do not use and they haven’t been able to take these off my bill.
After 9 billing cycles, their process is either broken or the team is intentionally dragging this out so that I am forced to call and waste my time every month or better yet, cancel their 3 year contract and pay a buyout amount.
Either way they are profiting off inefficiency.
Customer service told me the catalog is “like Netflix” where titles keep changing.
Well, Netflix titles can be consumed within 3 to 12 hours compared to PlayStation titles which can span easily between 40 to 60 hours and Netflix informs you clearly when a title will go away.
Hi @PlayStation, I understand that the game catalog is constantly changing and that titles are constantly being added and removed to give users a variety of options.
But how about this as an idea…(1/2)
I was playing Horizon Zero Dawn when it was available in the catalog and was really enjoying it until a week ago when I suddenly couldn’t access the game unless I paid 20$ for it.
I think the best SDE’s and UX designers work on a company’s subscription “opt in” journey, making it easy to pull money from the user.
While those that are on PIP are made to implement the labyrinthine “opt out” processes, allowing everyone to be happy except the customer.
Massy cinema exists to entertain and serve the escapist fantasies of the masses that endure harsh realities every day.
Dispensing judgment on all films with such a haughty lens just wreaks of privilege and myopia.
Critique them for what they are not what you want them to be.
The two highest-grossing films in Hindi cinema are arguably the two worst films in recent times. This goes to show how mediocrity sells and how storytelling has been reduced to formulaic narratives and banality.