Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Sun, 13 Jul 1997 21:58:48 -0600
From:      Joshua Fielden <shag@concentric.net>
To:        "Joel N. Weber II" <devnull@gnu.ai.mit.edu>
Cc:        bob@luke.pmr.com, joelh@gnu.ai.mit.edu, davidn@labs.usn.blaze.net.au, freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: My opinion about freebsd (fwd)
Message-ID:  <33C9A3F8.41C67EA6@concentric.net>
References:  <199707131327.JAA14007@ethanol.gnu.ai.mit.edu>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Joel N. Weber II wrote:

> Support is also often rather meaningless; I've found, for example, that
> I'm much more competent than the tech support people at Compaq.  And
> I'm no hardware expert.  A month ago, I'd never even installed a SCSI
> drive on a machine...
> 
> Anyway, IMHO many organizations promise support, but few of them actually
> come through.
> 
> Nevertheless, orgainzations who don't understand the technology often
> have to have competent people.  And if you have to deal with things
> yourself, you're much better off with free software, where you can
> hire any competent person to solve your problems, rather than being
> stuck with a potentially unhelpful vendor.

	I have done internal and external support on both Mac and Win
platforms, and the one thing I have noticed is the smaller the
organization, the better support you get. When you start getting into
larger companies, they merely hire warm bodies who can pass a basic
proficiency test, just to get people answering the phones, and there is
no internal access to the people who make things tick. In smaller
companies, where they may only have 3-5 people answering support calls,
every call needs to "count" more, and the actual rep has a much better
chance of being able to flag down the person who wrote the program, or
did the QA testing, and query them specifically, in order to get a more
specific and personal answer. It's also easier to circulate new
information among a smaller group, and compare notes quicker. This means
new bugs are isolated and found quicker, and the overall support gets
better as new workarounds/incompatabilities are fully circulated within
hours, rather than days or weeks.

My $.02

JF



Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?33C9A3F8.41C67EA6>