• harry_balzac@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It’s because the impact to Rotten Rons corporate bottom line is positive. Franchisees are required to buy the specific machine and can only have authorized service people work on them. That money goes to corporate and they make more of it than having machines that run well and can be serviced by the franchisee.

    The machines are connected to the intertubes so when they breakdown (like they’re supposed to), corporate knows and nothing can be done until the authorized service technician arrives from Clown Shoes Corporate Shell Company, Inc.

    • deegeese
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      1 year ago

      Basically another “how is this not criminal?” kickback scheme.

    • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I get that, but it doesn’t really explain it. The machines don’t need regular fixing, they’re down because the software has tighter specs for temp control and the required cleaning schedule mean it takes hours to clean and get back to proper temp, like 12 hours IIRC.

      I other companies, the same machines don’t have the same tight temp tolerances and they work fine.

      There’s a great YouTube on this.

      The repair issue is related, but not a root cause of machines being down. Most are down for the cleaning cycle issue.

      The repair issue is McD’s requiring a specific vendor to repair them, and there are certain errors that require a service call for no good reason. A developer built a device to read the codes and reset them, not sure where they stand today.