DELL support

My experience of DELL support on Bank Holiday Monday was generally good in that I got through to tech support (an outsourced solution) pretty quickly each time. That said there were a few interesting glitches for those who like reading about this kind of thing:

1. First tech support person said they’d get back to me in an hour after installing XP; they didn’t.

2. Second person got me to the drivers’ installation, but I couldn’t connect to the Internet. They suggested I contacted my ISP and after I said I was with NTL they put me through to Telewest.

3. After talking to NTL they reported the issue was simple, I had not been sent the correct Ethernet driver. So I contacted tech support at DELL once again (pointed out the Telewest error) and said I needed the correct driver. The new support guy sent me an email and said when I replied by email he would ring me back. He didn’t ring back.

4. A (second) helpful tech support guy sent me the correct driver and luckily as I had a IBM Thinkpad (old but just about functioning) with wireless connectivity I was able to download it and save it to my Sony PSP (no memory stick in sight!) and then installed on to the PC, which did the trick. Fantastic.

5. The last guy took over remote control of my PC and also set up the video display set up which was great. Finally he said he would send over a customer satisfaction email. He didn’t do that:-)

6. Finished the re-installation, successfully.

PS: Now fast forward to 2012 and I am working (Temp) for Sony and about to install a new wifi router from Sky. Finger’s crossed it won’t involve using my PSP as a jump station for data again!

 

May Day ***Digital Style***

Can you connect the dots?

Pretend for a second that you’re a CEO. Would you reveal your deepest, darkest secrets online? Would you confess that you’re an indecisive weakling, that your colleagues are inept, that you’re not really sure if you can meet payroll? Sounds crazy, right? After all, Coke doesn’t tell Pepsi what’s in the formula. Nobody sane strips down naked in front of their peers. But that’s exactly what Glenn Kelman did. And he thinks it saved his business.

Digg rebellion

Initially, news website Digg decided to remove stories referencing the key.

“Whether you agree or disagree with the policies of the intellectual property holders and consortiums, in order for Digg to survive, it must abide by the law,” chief executive officer Jay Adelson told readers.

Users, angered by the censorship, were determined to keep the story about the encryption-breaking code in the headlines which prompted a hasty change of heart by the website.

“After seeing hundreds of stories and reading thousands of comments, you’ve made it clear. You’d rather see Digg go down fighting than bow down to a bigger company.

We hear you, and effective immediately we won’t delete stories or comments containing the code and will deal with whatever the consequences might be,” said founder Kevin Rose.