←back to thread

527 points lxm | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.44s | source
Show context
sksksk ◴[] No.27673432[source]
When they work well, they're really good, but when they work badly, they're _really_ bad.

The other week, I went for dinner at a place that had a online ordering system. My experience was as follows...

Arrive at the table, scan the QR code

No phone signal in the restaurant, so I need to connect to the wifi.

Connect to the wifi, get a captive portal

Need to put my phone number in to connect to the wifi; there is no signal, so I need to go outside, to receieve the confirmation code.

Connected to the wifi, scan the code again, choose my food.

Go to pay, need to register an account

Put my email address in, I already have an account on this food ordering service!?

Do a password reset

Put in my credit card details (why not use apple pay?).

This whole time, we're sat at a table, in theory to meet friends, but we've spent the first 15 minutes all glued to our phones!

replies(26): >>27673456 #>>27673485 #>>27673529 #>>27673544 #>>27673575 #>>27673592 #>>27673616 #>>27673680 #>>27673725 #>>27673750 #>>27674317 #>>27674718 #>>27674768 #>>27674810 #>>27675286 #>>27675356 #>>27675397 #>>27675440 #>>27676026 #>>27676226 #>>27676355 #>>27677430 #>>27678005 #>>27687050 #>>27687537 #>>27689555 #
HelloNurse ◴[] No.27673485[source]
Assuming there was another restaurant nearby, I'd have simplified the process to "go outside". If a restaurant is too cheap to print a menu, why should I consider it good enough for me?
replies(1): >>27673590 #
topicseed ◴[] No.27673590[source]
With covid, many restaurants removed paper menus to avoid transmission. I hate QR codes so that was a move I was not in favour of.....
replies(7): >>27673742 #>>27673766 #>>27673777 #>>27673998 #>>27674555 #>>27674981 #>>27675450 #
jbluepolarbear ◴[] No.27673766[source]
Restaurants open during the pandemic has been a joke. Outside in a tent/wood box never fixed any problem. I have not been to a restaurant since March 2020. Going to different restaurants was my favorite hobby, but the experience has become so hostile that I won’t go back until I can sit inside without a mask, have a menu, and not have to worry about a coughing idiot.
replies(5): >>27673905 #>>27673963 #>>27675474 #>>27676356 #>>27688650 #
jiofih ◴[] No.27673905[source]
Your comment reeks of entitlement. Restaurant owners have been struggling to survive by serving customers any way they can. Sorry your high dining-out standards can’t be met while a few million people die from the pandemic.
replies(1): >>27673965 #
jbluepolarbear ◴[] No.27673965[source]
How is this entitlement? Dining at a restaurant is a luxury, if I’m going to spend my money on a luxury, I’m going to choose an experience that is safe, enjoyable, and to my interests. Why are you so upset? Why do you feel that the conditions in place are acceptable? Personally, I grew up quite poor and never got to go to restaurants. It wasn’t until I started making a little money in my late 20s that I could start to go to restaurants as a way to remove myself from my current stressful life and just unwind for a bit. For me restaurant dining is an experience and the experience offered at present isn’t appealing.
replies(3): >>27674186 #>>27674211 #>>27674227 #
jiofih ◴[] No.27674227[source]
> why do you feel like the conditions in place are acceptable?

“Acceptable”? To whom? This is why you sound entitled. The alternative is not dining out. You make it sound like restaurants are letting you down or should try harder. The word “acceptable” has no place in this conversation.

It’s fine that you don’t want to go out to restaurants right now. But you’re complaining about how inconvenient it is for you like there is no underlying reason for things to be in this state. Businesses ate also victims of this pandemic.

All of this makes me upset because it sounds extremely insensitive. The world is mourning millions of dead and you’re grumpy about your restaurant experience being ruined. Might be just your wording but one would expect a bit more empathy.

replies(3): >>27674391 #>>27674528 #>>27675460 #
bruce343434 ◴[] No.27674528[source]
I disagree. You are allowed to have an opinion about something you would pay for. In fact you are allowed to have an opinion period. That doesn't make you entitled.
replies(1): >>27674849 #
Broken_Hippo ◴[] No.27674849[source]
It isn't the opinion that makes them sound entitled.

The base opinion is: I haven't gone to such places since Covid began because the experience is less enjoyable and more stressful.

But it is said with contempt for the businesses and regulations, which the businesses cannot do much about. Even where it is open, they have to think about their employees and the risk they put them in. Not only that, but folks have been dining in tents and under wooden awnings - in booths even - enjoyably for decades. Where I am at, before covid hit they had heating and blankets outdoors so the restaurants could extend the outdoor seating season. The poster acts like it something horrible thrust upon them, when the fact is that they simply aren't a fan.

replies(1): >>27676123 #
blindmute ◴[] No.27676123[source]
If people liked that sort of thing it would have been the business model before it was forced to be. The restaurants have declined in quality. Sometimes this is their fault, and sometimes it isn't. Either way, no restaurant is entitled to customers. A lot of places near me have decided that masks are still required, despite the state saying they aren't. In response, I have decided not to eat there. There's no entitlement either way, just the market.
replies(1): >>27678368 #
1. bruce343434 ◴[] No.27678368[source]
How can you eat with a mask on? Or are you referring tot non-restaurant places?
replies(1): >>27679110 #
2. blindmute ◴[] No.27679110[source]
They require a mask at the door and at any time when not seated. Some places even require you to put the mask back on when the waiter comes to the table. It's all just theater, and I won't be a part of it.