|
I don't even give them a chance. gently caress those systems.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 01:38 |
|
|
# ? May 21, 2024 18:16 |
|
Helushune posted:I just received several emails from some of our new hires... I have gotten this multiple times. I was on one of my rare days off, boss was gone for the day, and even between the employee who submitted the ticket, our HR lady and an engineer from manufacturing... Nobody understood the concept of Start->All Programs->Office............................
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 01:52 |
|
Sorry Fuzzy, that really blows. I'd missed most of your ongoing saga of fail. 'Course you've got ammo to cover your rear end, right?
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 02:06 |
|
drukqs posted:I have gotten this multiple times. (outlook shortcut missing from desktop) coyo7e posted:"As a painter I just wanted to let you know that my new monitor.." Migishu posted:I don't even give them a chance. gently caress those systems. coyo7e fucked around with this message at 02:18 on Aug 27, 2013 |
# ? Aug 27, 2013 02:14 |
|
TWBalls posted:We have a couple of somewhat similar stupid situations with laptops here. I had a small stack of laptops that were supposed to be loaners for end users. Some of the other techs loaned them out without telling me and none of them thought to take note of whom is borrowing what. I now have no more loaners and no one knows where the others are. Our ANÄ Laptops are on metal tables with wheels, glued and locked to them. Maybe this can help you as well? Prevents both stealing and dropping, sadly not dumbassery. Also, just asking them where they are right now usually works, we just have a p-touch label with the name on them.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 07:24 |
|
coyo7e posted:This woman came in again and wanted to show me how bad her screen was after she tried to adjust the color settings.. Looks perfect to me..? She insisted it was still pinkish so I showed her how to change the color temp and said, "as an IT professional, it looks fine for your work editing white papers.) Funny, most cheapo business monitors I get hold of are too blue, not too red. I own a little ColorHug though; so I just bring it in, boot off the LiveCD that it comes with in and calibrate them myself. It makes them easier on the eyes and reduces eyestrain, with the added bonus that the vertical viewing angle is severely reduced for some reason. All I work with is black+white too, the only time I handle colour images is to convert them to black+white. Pissing me off this week. Customer leases a high volume colour printer of unknown make and uses this for bulk batch runs of B&W documents, against my advice. Turns out that if you print a document that includes a 256 greyscale image, the printer treats that as colour and they get billed accordingly. If you drop it to 1-bit monochrome then it's billed as B&W. Lum fucked around with this message at 09:46 on Aug 27, 2013 |
# ? Aug 27, 2013 09:42 |
|
I had a guy tell me his MacBook was slow last week. We've been a PC shop for years, but have allowed a mixed environment starting last year. We have no training whatsoever, but we can figure out most of the basic stuff. "It's slow" is almost invariably a bullshit claim, but sure, I'll look at it. He says it's been a problem for months, but he's only bothered to tell us about it now, and it took him a while to actually bring it in. He can't stay, he has things to do, so I look at it and I can find absolutely nothing wrong with it. I get an email at the end of the day as I'm on the way out the door containing both his description of the problem and his assistant's restatement of that description, which do not agree with each other. He says "it keeps spinning when email is open"; she says "the disc spins when Internet Explorer" is open. (Recall that this is a MacBook Pro. It is not running Parallels or anything like that. It is definitely not an "Internet Explorer" problem.) I get nothing more than those descriptions to go on. I have no idea if this is an Outlook issue or something in webmail or what. I did finally manage to catch up with him and he says it's Outlook. (Of course, his descriptions so far have of limited accuracy, so who knows, but it's somewhere to start.) He still hasn't actually managed to bring the machine back in for me to look at.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 10:16 |
|
guppy posted:I had a guy tell me his MacBook was slow last week. We've been a PC shop for years, but have allowed a mixed environment starting last year. We have no training whatsoever, but we can figure out most of the basic stuff. Disable Antivirus and it will probably magically work.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 10:23 |
|
guppy posted:I had a guy tell me his MacBook was slow last week. We've been a PC shop for years, but have allowed a mixed environment starting last year. We have no training whatsoever, but we can figure out most of the basic stuff. Is there a new Mac out/coming out? If it's out then this guy is trying to get one. If it's not out yet then he's putting in the ground work so that when it does come out he can claim his old one has been "broken for ages."
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 10:40 |
|
Sounds like an opportunity to sell him an SSD and a days labour for data transfer.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 12:01 |
|
Guessing the "spinning disc" think refers to the spinning beachball effect that Macs do in place of the Windows XP eggtimer or the Vista/7/8 swirly blue O thing. If you don't realise the beachball is supposed to be a 3D sphere it would look like a spinning disc.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 12:43 |
|
dennyk posted:I guess too many customers finally figured out that just screaming incoherently while mashing the 0 button repeatedly would usually get you to a live person without having to deal with their bullshit menus, which meant they still had to actually Right, this is exactly why they did it. Someone got a bonus for making an awful, awful support system that made me strongly tempted to switch providers right then and there.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 13:30 |
|
BurgerQuest posted:Sounds like an opportunity to sell him an SSD and a days labour for data transfer. This is internal, actually. Lum posted:Guessing the "spinning disc" think refers to the spinning beachball effect that Macs do in place of the Windows XP eggtimer or the Vista/7/8 swirly blue O thing. If you don't realise the beachball is supposed to be a 3D sphere it would look like a spinning disc. Oh, yeah, that part I understood. Thanks though.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 13:32 |
|
Volmarias posted:Right, this is exactly why they did it. Someone got a bonus for making an awful, awful support system that made me strongly tempted to switch providers right then and there. I spent some time dealing with Avaya yesterday. Avaya does the other thing I hate. Even choice point, every hold message, every option urges you to go to their support site and enter your ticket on the web, even going so far as to say that web tickets are handled faster. The fun thing is that Avaya's business is pretty much dependent on large call centers, so it's ironic that they are not wanting you to use the phone.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 14:47 |
|
Motronic posted:What B&W printers are you using that don't have a drum in the toner cartridge? I looked up a picture of the printer's guts and I was remembering wrong, it was the fuser that got brutally stabbed to death, not the drum. Big chunks of it were missing so even after I cleaned and reassembled the thing it would print with a leopard spot pattern of missing/unfused toner.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 14:52 |
|
guppy posted:I had a guy tell me his MacBook was slow last week. We've been a PC shop for years, but have allowed a mixed environment starting last year. We have no training whatsoever, but we can figure out most of the basic stuff.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 15:12 |
|
So a ticket got re-opened About a month ago a ticket was assigned to the Sr on the account to make it so that mail.company.ca worked in the new exchange environment because https://mail.company.ca/owa was too annoying for everyone to remember. Fair enough. He said he completed the work and closed the ticket. I get an email today from the CEO saying it still isn't working. Ive never done this before so I googled the solution to see if there was something unchecked or a setting missing. I checked the exchange server, nothing had been done to it and the SR billed two hours for it. I made the changes, restarted IIS and everything is working great. It took me maybe 10 minutes to do it with having no idea how, but ill probably be billing a bit more than that.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 15:47 |
|
Makes me wonder if the CEO talked to the Sr tech at all. What does that tech even do all day save for break/mismanage things across the board? (Apparently other than write large invoices, which explains so much)
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 15:57 |
|
FreshFeesh posted:Makes me wonder if the CEO talked to the Sr tech at all. What does that tech even do all day save for break/mismanage things across the board? give me spontaneous unassisted training in resolving obscure server issues
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 15:59 |
|
Nativity In Black posted:Is he actually using Outlook? Or is it Apple's default "Mail" program? I had someone here with an iMac that was running slow and it turned out Mail was taking up like 3GB of the 4GB of RAM. It seemed like it was trying to hold the entire mailbox in RAM or something. She had Entourage installed so I just told her to use that. It's actually Outlook. We use Office 2011 on our Macs. It's bizarrely crippled, too. Apparently Outlook 2011 straight up will not sync distribution lists with Exchange. If you want to create even a local distribution list, you have to actually dig into the options menu and unhide local items, or else the button will be grayed out and unavailable. You can't import ones from a Windows machine, either. It's insane. I have no idea who decided that not implementing this basic feature was acceptable.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 16:00 |
|
guppy posted:It's actually Outlook. We use Office 2011 on our Macs. I wouldn't be surprised if Office 2011 "For MacOSX" is just software that's been whitelabeled. It's just so terrible.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 16:01 |
|
guppy posted:It's actually Outlook. We use Office 2011 on our Macs. All apple devices act this way.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 16:02 |
|
Sickening posted:All apple devices act this way. Interesting, I didn't know that.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 16:04 |
|
blackswordca posted:So a ticket got re-opened We are working with an outsourced software company which we pay a premium to rent space on their infrastructure to house a test environment (instead of having it here). The only problem is that they have never gotten their IT to figure out how to give our company outside access to it and their own employees don't use it because they think its too slow. We continue to pay a heavy premium for this service despite not using it. I was told that "It might hurt our relationship with this company if we refuse to pay for that service.". Someone has to be getting some under the table money right?
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 16:06 |
|
SubjectVerbObject posted:I spent some time dealing with Avaya yesterday. Avaya does the other thing I hate. Even choice point, every hold message, every option urges you to go to their support site and enter your ticket on the web, even going so far as to say that web tickets are handled faster. The fun thing is that Avaya's business is pretty much dependent on large call centers, so it's ironic that they are not wanting you to use the phone. Holy poo poo, Avaya's phone system has to be one of the worst. Pretty much made me swear that I will never buy another Avaya system.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 16:12 |
|
So I submitted a ticket:code:
So, you can see where this is heading: We don't manage those servers. does. You don't? Ok, let me ask . , do you manage the corporate DNS servers? Nope. does, I dunno why he's telling you to bug me about it. okay, if I add these stub zones, you'll be fine with it? My group doesn't run those. so gently caress it, I need to get them added because newcustomer goes live on Friday. I have the rights to add the stuff with my regular logins, so i just do it. Can you guess what happens next? Hey, I have a major issue here. I show that you added newcustomerDNSzone.local to the corprate dns servers! Why didnt you submit a ticket? This is against procedure and I had to remove them. I thought you didn't run those servers? See your email from the other day here I don't run them, but I also can't just let anyone add things to them. I swear to god, working here is like a bad Seinfeld episode.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 16:12 |
|
ThinkFear posted:Holy poo poo, Avaya's phone system has to be one of the worst. Pretty much made me swear that I will never buy another Avaya system. And of course their web site is slow, keeps giving you "not found" errors that go away when you refresh, and their knowledge base articles would be hilarious except the at best waste your time and at worst actually cause more problems.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 16:35 |
|
SubjectVerbObject posted:I spent some time dealing with Avaya yesterday. Avaya does the other thing I hate. Even choice point, every hold message, every option urges you to go to their support site and enter your ticket on the web, even going so far as to say that web tickets are handled faster. The fun thing is that Avaya's business is pretty much dependent on large call centers, so it's ironic that they are not wanting you to use the phone. It always continues to amaze me that BT and T-Mobile (UK) have such shite phone support for exactly these reasons.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 16:43 |
|
Dick Trauma posted:Congratulations! Ours stopped doing that a while ago. They blamed our switch to VOIP even though it was plugged into a POTS line that our fax machine runs off. Tier 1 transferred me to the sales department by accident instead of Tier 2.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 16:59 |
|
I used to manage an Avaya Definity system via one of those little dedicated terminals and the thing was rock solid. IP Office on the other hand... terrible piece of poo poo. All the talk about laptop security jogged my memory to back when I worked at a software store. We had demo computers and they were secured with... MAZE PLATES! A steel plate with a maze groove cut into it would be glued to the desk, and then a plate with a couple of knobs on it would be glued to the bottom of the computer. You'd set the computer back down with the knobs in two entry holes and then move the thing around to get them locked into the maze. You were supposed to keep the maze guide so you'd be able to figure out how to get the PC back out of the maze plate but they were long gone by the time we needed them. When the store closed we just brute forced the drat things and then had to peel the plates off so we could return the computers to HQ. What a royal pain in the rear end.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 17:00 |
|
Dick Trauma posted:Congratulations! Still better than TalkTalk. You'll be on hold for a minimum of 40 minutes, then when you finally get to talk to someone they'll just hang up on you if your call isn't one of the three basic things that have a script for.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 17:14 |
|
We were talking about extension cords in walls and stuff here is a picture of what I found today. apparently a teacher thought it would be a good idea to run a cable in the ceiling, or maybe it was a janitor, who really knows but this isn't the least safe thing I've seen. Tons of with a power strip in a power strip in an extension cord to connect 6 student computers because they HAVE to have the computers on the left side of the room instead of the right side. I thankfully don't support the school side that much and mostly do IT in the city buildings. edit: yes I used paint to edit out some labels on the computer.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 17:21 |
|
Lum posted:Guessing the "spinning disc" think refers to the spinning beachball effect that Macs do in place of the Windows XP eggtimer or the Vista/7/8 swirly blue O thing. If you don't realise the beachball is supposed to be a 3D sphere it would look like a spinning disc. It's called a throbber. I would think goons would be all over using that term.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 17:23 |
|
Dick Trauma posted:I used to manage an Avaya Definity system via one of those little dedicated terminals and the thing was rock solid. IP Office on the other hand... terrible piece of poo poo. We're switching to IP Office Server Edition soon from our terrible hosted provider. Avaya was really the only solution for us because we're a mainly Mac house and Mitel has limited OS X support. I foresee a whole ton of fun in my future supporting this.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 17:27 |
|
Dick Trauma posted:I used to manage an Avaya Definity system via one of those little dedicated terminals and the thing was rock solid. IP Office on the other hand... terrible piece of poo poo. The old stuff was bulletproof. Good stability and most of the time if there was an issue it was hardware related and solved within 4 hours by dispatch/part replacement. The new stuff is IP based, which means the stability is based on network, server hardware, and software quality. Especially if issue are software related, fixes can take weeks.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 17:49 |
|
EuphrosyneD posted:Sorry Fuzzy, that really blows. I'd missed most of your ongoing saga of fail. 'Course you've got ammo to cover your rear end, right? Absolutely. The funny thing is, technically we're not even supposed to be in charge of these laptops - we're the desktop guys, we gave them to the audio-visual team, and the audio-visual team chucklefucks refuse to look for them at all, even though we've tried to tell them it's their problem. But from our boss on down, we have the chain of command telling us to do this mondo stupid thing. It is totally unacceptable for the laptops to be limited in motion in any way, because WHAT IF FUCKSTICK MCGEE WANTS TO MOVE THEM? Also? I'm not working around this stupidity. I am going to sit in the middle of this gibbering, mouthbreathing retardation and let upper management swing in the goddamn breeze. We've been raiding the discard pile for replacements - we're losing Lenovo T520s, and we're replacing them with Dell 6410's. I don't even care at this point. I'd put netbooks in those rooms if we had any. Fun fact: we also have a moratorium on purchasing new hardware, so I'm waiting with bated breath to see what happens when our discard pile also runs out!
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 17:58 |
|
Paladine_PSoT posted:It's called a throbber. I would think goons would be all over using that term. I thought it was called the pinwheel?
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 18:00 |
|
poo poo that pisses me off: Dirty monitors. I'm working on a Visio diagram and I move a group of images from here to there on my screen, except one little hyphen that stays behind. I can't select it, whether I use the mouse to grab the area or control-A to select all. I've gone through all the layers of my document but it still sticks there. After what seems like hours of frustration (two minutes ish) I realize it's a bit of cardboard fiber stuck to my screen. That kind of a day.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 18:08 |
|
pixaal posted:We were talking about extension cords in walls and stuff here is a picture of what I found today. I feel like the person at fault here probably went and visited some super trendy architect or engineering firm and saw how "modern" it looked with lines running up pillars to the ceiling or something. "but now there's no tripping hazard!"
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 18:25 |
|
|
# ? May 21, 2024 18:16 |
|
couldcareless posted:I feel like the person at fault here probably went and visited some super trendy architect or engineering firm and saw how "modern" it looked with lines running up pillars to the ceiling or something. "but now there's no tripping hazard!" Power poles have to be the most horrid invention ever. But I still can't decide which is worse in terms of esthetics: raceway or power poles.
|
# ? Aug 27, 2013 20:23 |