Job: cashier

Item doesn’t scan

Customer: “That means it’s free, right?”

🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄

Only about 4 weeks in as a cashier and I’ve heard this enough to last me a lifetime.

  • @Hugh_Jeggs@lemm.ee
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    694 months ago

    Note for those reading -

    This doesn’t apply in Europe, or large swathes of the planet. Samsung appliances are excellent.

    The US has virtually nonexistent consumer protection laws, so companies will get away with selling poor quality, because they can.

    See the Hyundai scandal. Only happened in one country, because it could

    Breathe easy, EU folks

    • EleventhHour
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      4 months ago

      Really? How can a company make terrible appliances for a single country? They’re not made domestically.

      • Slippery_Snake874
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        244 months ago

        Same factory just send the units that normally wouldn’t be sellable (defects and such) but still function to the US

        • EleventhHour
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          154 months ago

          The massive volume of sales for North America is too big to be met by factory defects. They’d have to have entire factories making defects.

          • @tomalley8342@lemmy.world
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            194 months ago

            Just because all defect stock are routed to the US inventory, doesn’t mean that US inventory is made up of all defect stock.

            • EleventhHour
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              4 months ago

              as someone who deals with this professionally, i assure you: they are.

              every samsung appliance consistently fails in one of a few ways, so much so that it’s not simply a matter of by-chance defects. they’re design flaws.

              • bizarroland
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                64 months ago

                With Samsung it’s almost always caused in my experience by either the use of plastics that are not up to the stress requirements of the application, or the use of electronics that are not capable of standing up to the use duration.

                Samsung appliances that I have had have always had either broken plastics or fried circuit boards.

                And they’ve got to know that these things break because there are always replacement parts for the specific ones that break, but if you’re not a DIYer you will pay 70% of the cost of the original appliance to install the part that broke.

                • @grue@lemmy.world
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                  54 months ago

                  Samsung washing machine spider arms are very clearly designed to corrode to failure just outside the warranty period. You can tell because every other metal bit exposed to the water will still be shiny and pristine. They literally make a critical structural part out of the stuff you’d usually use for a sacrificial anode.

        • @grue@lemmy.world
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          84 months ago

          You say that, but my experience is different. After my Samsung washing machine failed, I took it apart and found blatant evidence of planned obsolescence. If the units elsewhere are good, then the ones in the US aren’t just the same things with defects, but rather ones with spider arms cast from an entirely different metal alloy.

          • Slippery_Snake874
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            34 months ago

            Fair enough, I was just guessing at a way one country could receive only/mostly inferior products

      • edric
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        114 months ago

        Less regulations means more shortcuts. Another example is Hyundai/Kia. Why do the Kiaboyz exist only in the US when Kias are sold all over the world? Because it’s only in the US where they sold cars without immobilizers because they weren’t required to.

        • @Hugh_Jeggs@lemm.ee
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          94 months ago

          You’re missing one big thing - there’s only one country that has horrendous consumer rights laws and a huge market, and 110v electric

          Well worth making models just for that one market

      • @BCsven@lemmy.ca
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        14 months ago

        The main manufacturing of Samsung appliances takes place in South Korea, with a washing machine manufacturing plant also located in South Carolina, USA.

          • @BCsven@lemmy.ca
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            24 months ago

            For sure, their are model numbers specific to regions. Sometimes you see US Products available for various manufacturers and some say not for sale in Canada, which could be distributor rights or maybe won’t pass canadian electric standard or warranty requirements

            • EleventhHour
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              14 months ago

              That usually has to do with the fact that American appliances are 110 V for everything but ovens and dryers

      • @BCsven@lemmy.ca
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        04 months ago

        The main manufacturing of Samsung appliances takes place in South Korea, with a washing machine manufacturing plant also located in South Carolina, USA.