Hey Sparky, A couple of pages ago I was agreeing with you that an online presence is a potential way for making sales of product that while different than brick and mortar stores is not new, but certainly a trend for the future. I thought I was very clear that it also is only about product and not service, so race tires are one product that generally needs both. I should have caught on when you asked me about the era I had lived in, that you you were in fact a young punk, with no experience or respect. It appears that you are a self-important, self- entitled little snot nosed punk that thinks your job, education and possessions make you superior to others posting on here. I have to say that you are among the most clueless posters we have had on here in a few days and your weak assed attempts at witty rejoinders and middle school come backs will not serve you well. It has all been attempted here before by better than you and it has never ended well. Perhaps if you posted a screen shot of your report card from a prominent university, name dropped your employer and informed us of your mad skills in IT, we would bow down and acknowledge your expertise in online marketing and business acumen. In the meantime, I suggest that you stop digging yourself in any deeper, show some respect and try to learn something. Or not and I will just enjoy the entertainment you will provide the vultures. Your new pal, Ken (see, I am still the voice of reason)
I’m not reading anything past page 1. I feel dumber than I already am, if that’s even possible for reading that.
here we go. Yea bro, am fast! Look at my sponsors! give me a break dawg. You are pro right raking in mad bank? you run A group right? running liter right? power sliding right? you are just as amateur as everyone else. I do this shit for fun. lame ass bitch.
Times are different my dude. Us punk ass kids are not busy making people living off some small wage. Instead we are changing the way the world operates. Guess what I started to work on today? I am eliminating a Customer Service department by implementing software that can do their jobs. Those poor unskilled fucks will be unemployed shortly. So, who's fault is that? The engineer or the guy that didn't do shit in life? This is all relative to how software and technology is flipping the switch in people's lives. So to go back to the argument of brick and mortar, yep I think you see that happening unlike some of your peers. BTW sorry if I made offense by clouting the badges.
May I suggest telling everyone you meet that you work on automated customer service software? Its not like they don't have experience with these utilities, and boy do they work great. People might even give you free shipping if not free tires.
I have thought this and to be honest I also think that there is a high likelyhood that this kid is in an entry level support development position for a company that probably does some cool shit and thinks that he is speaking to a narrow audience who doesnt have a clue what software development entails. At least he is entertaining at the moment.