Someone tip my roomie so he can pay me the money he owes me.  :)

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Joel Dick [mailto:joel_cd at yahoo.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, September 24, 2003 11:30 AM
> To: tclug-list at mn-linux.org
> Subject: Re: [TCLUG] Tipping (was: something else)
> 
> 
> Interesting thoughts of course. I for one try to tip as much 
> as I think
> the service was worth. Sometimes the problem is I get a server that
> obviously doesn't care about what they're doing (no, these 
> are not servers
> I have ever even come close to having contact with ever in 
> the past). It's
> odd how often these people are at the places that (for your 
> "convenience")
> tack on the tip to your bill automagically. That being the 
> case, I try to
> avoid restaurants that do this like the plague.
> 
> Yes, I know servers tend to rely on tips to make a decent 
> living, and I'm
> fine with tipping if indeed the service is worth it. However, 
> I don't like
> the idea that tipping is a means of insuring you don't get 
> intentionally
> terrible service like someone spitting in your food or drink. 
> That to me
> borders on extortion, or at the very least, giving the bully at school
> your lunch money for fear of getting beat up.
> 
> The only reason I would tip if I received poor service is if 
> it looks like
> my server has been having a rough day. But if they blatantly, 
> and for no
> good reason, give me poor service, the lack of a tip should 
> tell them they
> need to be doing a better job, not to spit in my food the 
> next time they
> see me. Otherwise, a tip is just an expectation, and if so, 
> just added to
> the bill, forget about the service.
> 
> Do I install a virus on a client's computer if I got treated poorly or
> didn't feel they paid me enough the last time I worked for them? No.
> 
> Sorry about the ranting, just tipping sometimes gets to me, 
> and how some
> servers thingk they deserve a good tip, even if they're 
> slapping you in
> the face.
> 
> Best Regards,
> Joel
> 
> --- Dave Sherman <dsherman at real-time.com> wrote:
> > Hi all,
> > 
> > I haven't really been following the thread too closely, but 
> I noticed 
> > that few of you (of those messages which I read, and of those who 
> > actually chose to talk about it) have ever actually worked 
> in the food 
> > service biz.
> > 
> > Well, I worked as a waiter for 10 years during and after 
> college. The 
> > restaurants don't matter, although they were here in the 
> cities. I want 
> > to bring up one really interesting point: lousy tippers are 
> remembered 
> > by waiters and waitresses. Not only that, but they warn 
> each other if 
> > one person knows something that the others haven't heard 
> about yet. Not 
> > only that, but groups are remembered even more than individuals.
> > 
> > The situation of a group that tips poorly (regardless of some 
> > individuals being generous and others being cheap) will rapidly 
> > degenerate, because a server thinks, "Why should I bother 
> giving them 
> > good service if they're just going to stiff me anyway?" 
> Meanwhile, the 
> > cheapskates are pointing at the sub-par service to justify 
> their already
> > 
> > low or non-existent tipping (even though it is likely that their 
> > cheapness is what inspired the poor service in the first 
> place). Those 
> > sitting on the fence, as it were, may very well be swayed by the 
> > cheapskates' argument, and lower their tip as well, further 
> adding to 
> > the degeneration of service. And those who tip 15% minimum, 
> more for 
> > better service, and less for poor service, end up getting 
> poor service 
> > even though they are perfectly willing to tip well for good service.
> > 
> > Now let's throw another variable into this mess. What if you get a 
> > not-so-ethical server who already knows about a group or 
> individual? 
> > That person has no problem spitting in your drinks or food, 
> or dropping 
> > food on the floor and then just picking it up and serving 
> it to you. 
> > I've seen it done, and it happens a lot more to the 
> cheapskates than the
> > 
> > generous folk. So from a purely selfish and pragmatic point 
> of view, it 
> > makes sense to tip well, in order to motivate your server 
> to give you 
> > not only good service, but clean food and drink.
> > 
> > If I ever actually went to a beer meeting, I would do like 
> I've done at 
> > other group meetings: I personally hand the server my cash 
> tip, so he or
> > 
> > she knows that *I* am generous, even if the rest of the 
> group isn't. 
> > And, in order to really make a distinction between myself 
> and the rest 
> > of the group, I usually give a 25-30% tip -- that covers at least a 
> > little bit of what is lost from those who don't tip or tip 
> poorly, and 
> > further cements the memory of my generosity in the waiter's 
> mind. The 
> > server will remember me in the future, and tell his 
> associates to give 
> > me good service even if they ignore the rest of the group.
> > 
> > Just my three cents. I'll not saying anything more on this topic.
> > -- 
> > Dave Sherman - MCSE, MCSA, CCNA
> > 
> > Meddle not in the affairs of dragons,
> >    for you are crunchy, and good with ketchup.
> > 
> > 
> > _______________________________________________
> > TCLUG Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota
> > http://www.mn-linux.org tclug-list at mn-linux.org
> > https://mailman.real-time.com/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list
> 
> 
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