Waitress Says iOS Alarm Bug Caused Firing, Instead of Repeat Lateness
After all, based on the amount of training that goes into prepping a new employee for work, a company, restaurant or not, is not going to fire anyone for a single instance of tardiness. If they did, they are crazy and won't stay in business for long, and you probably wouldn't want to work for them, anyway.
At any rate, the iPhone bug caused non-recurring alarms for the first few days of the year to not fire when they should have. Lindsay Garvey, 28, lost her job at the Foundry restaurant in Somerville, MA, after her alarm didn't go off. In her email to Apple CEO Steve Jobs, she said:
Upon my termination, I was told that I was wonderful, but that my tardiness was unfair to the other employees. So, Mr. Jobs, I'd like to let you know that you have officially, directly contributed to unemployment in 2011. If you had warned me about the glitch, I could have at least picked up a $5, battery-operated alarm clock that would have saved my job. Now I'm unemployed in a time when jobs are not easily had, and I am short on my rent. So, Happy New Year to you, Mr. Jobs. I hope you remember to shoot me an email next time there is any chance of a glitch. (Just a note, my iPhone bill payment will probably be late this month.)However, in a story on her in the Boston Herald, it was noted that Garvey "sidestepped" questions about repeated tardies. And in fact, in a statement, the Foundry noted that Garvey had been late multiple times.
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