Yeah, your description of a call to tech support is right on. The guy that worked on our cable connection, seemed to be an older monkey and had a much broader tech vocabulary than most tech monkeys. I.e., when the test web page loaded up slowly (which I was convinced was related to a poor connection) he said "well, maybe you have a lot of TSR's running on your computer -- errr, I mean, maybe there are a lot of programs running in the background."

It just absolutely stunned me -- I remember TSR's from the DOS days, the programs that would Terminate and Stay Resident in the background. What an ANCIENT term. Was it too much to ask that he stay up on his reading and follow the current computer industry even slightly? That was the first time I had heard "TSR" in 8-10 years. Incredible.

Richard




On Nov 24, 2004, at 10:34 AM, Michael Halcrow wrote:

On Wed, Nov 24, 2004 at 09:59:49AM -0800, Richard Miller wrote:
There was a Mozilla Firefox icon on the Desktop, on the Start menu,
and in Programs, but since he couldn't find a Blue E anywhere, he
said "Where's the Internet?"  This is the Cox Cable Internet repair
man talking!

You'll find that many of these repair people are trained to do a very specific set of tasks. Click this, click that, enter this number here, load this software, plug the cable into that port, and you're done. Rinse, later, repeat as necessary. It actually works to reduce costs. If Cox had to hire generally computer literate field technicians, then they would be more expensive, and hence your cable modem bill would be higher. By hiring trained monkeys, Cox can pay them like trained monkeys, and pass the savings on to you!

Most companies have an effective hierarchy in place to balance cost
and competency: support levels.  ``Level 1'' support people tend to be
nothing more than inefficient database front-ends.  My conversations
with them used to go like this:

---
Tech droid: ``Thank you for calling SBC.  What seems to be the
problem?''

Me: ``The ISP forgot to re-enable my user account when I moved.
Please contact them and tell them to re-enable my account.''

Tech droid: ``So you're Internet doesn't work?  Do you see any lights
on your modem?''

Me: ``My connection to the access concentrator is just fine; the ISP
is rejecting my authentication credentials because they have neglected
to re-enable my user account.  Please contact them and tell them to
re-enable my account.''

Tech droid: ``What does DSL Connector say when you click 'Connect'?''

Me: ``I'm not running DSL Connector.  I'm running a
standards-compliant PPP Over Ethernet client to connect to the
network.  It is reporting that the ISP is rejecting my authentication
credentials.  Please contact the ISP and tell them to re-enable my
account.''

Tech droid: ``You need to be running DSL Connector.  Insert the CD
that came with your modem into your CD-ROM drive and click on
'Install'.''

Me: ``Your software will not run on my operating system.  I have
everything set up correctly on my computer, and I am connecting to the
access concentrator.  The ISP does not have my account enabled, which
is the problem.  Please contact the ISP and tell them to re-enable my
account.''

Tech droid: ``I'm sorry, we only support Windows.  Please call back
after you load Windows onto your computer.  *click*''
---

I find that For ``Level 1'' type problems, you just need to get
creative about what you are running on your computer.  Pretend that
you are doing everything they ask you to do, until they make it all
the way down their flowchart to the bubble that tells them what to do.
Hopefully, it says, ``send customer up to Level 2 support.''  It's a
fun game to play, but luckily, I do not have to play it very often.

Mike
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