bytebuster
New Member
- Reaction score
- 1
- Location
- Sacramento, CA
Somebody mentioned this, and I feel it made me look bad so I want to explain.
I get calls from people who not only don't know what's wrong with their PCs, but can't explain anything to me in any rational way. For example, I get a call asking why Windows won't load. I go out there and the person tried to boot off a driver install CD (non-bootable) because somebody told them that drivers make the computer run. We all saw that pyramid diagram in school where "device drivers" are below "operating system", well this person had seen it too.
Another client called saying the mouse isn't working. I have no clue what could be causing something like that, and the customer can't explain it to me in any way that makes sense. Usually in this case I recommend a N&P because I don't know what's wrong, and I don't want to get in an argument in somebody's house with the "you said it was X but it's really B, you're an idiot!" thing, when it is really a PEBCAK issue, because the user couldn't explain what his computer was doing. This client had essentially said I was an idiot for not diagnosing his problem in 3 seconds from his incomplete description, so I was treading carefully.
I got to his house and found it was a virus issue. I was unable to boot into a RAM loaded shell because the boot menu seemed to be corrupted, with a messed up screen. I could have used F8 or F12, but I'm not sure it would have worked. (The RAM shell is necessary to run the AV off, since usually the OS shell on the PC is locked by the infection.) At this point I should have just done a N&P, but I'm not sure what's wrong with the guy's BIOS, so I'm not sure if it's a good idea. So I told the guy to just buy a new PC.
I hope this clarified some things. I've never worked on a help desk, so I don't really know how to cut through phone crap like that. Add to that the fact that I'm autistic, so my communication skills are a little off anyway.
I'm frustrated by the number of really experienced IT guys now trying to do repair jobs for food money, that's sort of like the designer of a McDonald's fryer trying to work the fryer as an employee, sort of clumsy. I can't charge very much money because everybody is driving down the price. Sacramento has TONS of highly skilled IT people who are out of work, out of options, and have bills to pay and kids to feed. They are desperate, they are willing to work for peanuts just to buy food. Every job opening has 10,000 applicants, people are so desperate it's not funny. Everybody is trying to survive.
It's common practice here for a person with a PC problem to call people until he gets the answer he likes. The guy with the "bad mouse" had called about 3 or 4 people before I showed up. If you don't charge peanuts, the client will call around until he finds somebody who does. Even at my low price-$50-people want to pay less. One guy called me and hung up on hearing the $50 price. He called me back in a panic two days later. The guy he hired had decided to do a manual cleanse of his system (he had the Total Security fake AV) and now nothing was working. I cleaned Total Security off and charged him for that, but I had no idea what else to do since deleting DLL's off a Windows PC at random is not a great idea.
Some sort of certification regime would be nice. California licenses electronics and appliance repairmen, but it's just a way for the state to extract fees out of people-I applied in person, and all they did was take my check and app, run a copy of my A+ cert, and thank me. The A+ itself is treated like the runt of the litter by CompTIA, the test I took was a joke and could have been passed by cramming. CompTIA seems more focused on the Security+ cert, a much more involved test. The school I went to considered the A+ a throwaway cert, a steppingstone to the Microsoft certs (they also offered Security+). The whole idea of certifying computer techs seems to be treated like the FCC treats amateur radio-an annoyance, a legacy issue from the old days that is there because of the law but that really isn't worth the time of the regulator.
After I graduated in March 2006, CompTIA overhauled the A+ to focus on "soft skills". That made the whole idea a bad joke, and led people to think that anybody could be a tech. So you have 15 year olds doing repairs on neighborhood computers and companies hiring gamer d00dz to do tech work. The real problem is that nobody takes the technician seriously. Maybe we're headed towards a future where every tech is just a placeholder, and the real work is done remotely by engineers in India a la GS's Agent Jonny Utah. That's another discussion.
Well, that's my opinion on the whole issue. I may seem dumb, but that's only because the computer field here is populated by absolute morons. I'm thinking of going into the refurbished laptop business.
Edit by Bryce: This is the post made by someone else that bytebuster is referring to, and bytebuster wants to clear some things up:
What happened to learning your craft *before* you go into business practicing it? I may be out of line here (and I expect that the powers that be will tell me so) but in recent weeks I have seen quite a few posts from so called technicians asking questions that even a hobbyist should have under his/her belt. How to mark a partition active? Even the "Guide to repairing and upgrading PC's" covers that. Needing a N&P because of a "corrupt mouse driver?"
I get calls from people who not only don't know what's wrong with their PCs, but can't explain anything to me in any rational way. For example, I get a call asking why Windows won't load. I go out there and the person tried to boot off a driver install CD (non-bootable) because somebody told them that drivers make the computer run. We all saw that pyramid diagram in school where "device drivers" are below "operating system", well this person had seen it too.
Another client called saying the mouse isn't working. I have no clue what could be causing something like that, and the customer can't explain it to me in any way that makes sense. Usually in this case I recommend a N&P because I don't know what's wrong, and I don't want to get in an argument in somebody's house with the "you said it was X but it's really B, you're an idiot!" thing, when it is really a PEBCAK issue, because the user couldn't explain what his computer was doing. This client had essentially said I was an idiot for not diagnosing his problem in 3 seconds from his incomplete description, so I was treading carefully.
I got to his house and found it was a virus issue. I was unable to boot into a RAM loaded shell because the boot menu seemed to be corrupted, with a messed up screen. I could have used F8 or F12, but I'm not sure it would have worked. (The RAM shell is necessary to run the AV off, since usually the OS shell on the PC is locked by the infection.) At this point I should have just done a N&P, but I'm not sure what's wrong with the guy's BIOS, so I'm not sure if it's a good idea. So I told the guy to just buy a new PC.
I hope this clarified some things. I've never worked on a help desk, so I don't really know how to cut through phone crap like that. Add to that the fact that I'm autistic, so my communication skills are a little off anyway.
I'm frustrated by the number of really experienced IT guys now trying to do repair jobs for food money, that's sort of like the designer of a McDonald's fryer trying to work the fryer as an employee, sort of clumsy. I can't charge very much money because everybody is driving down the price. Sacramento has TONS of highly skilled IT people who are out of work, out of options, and have bills to pay and kids to feed. They are desperate, they are willing to work for peanuts just to buy food. Every job opening has 10,000 applicants, people are so desperate it's not funny. Everybody is trying to survive.
It's common practice here for a person with a PC problem to call people until he gets the answer he likes. The guy with the "bad mouse" had called about 3 or 4 people before I showed up. If you don't charge peanuts, the client will call around until he finds somebody who does. Even at my low price-$50-people want to pay less. One guy called me and hung up on hearing the $50 price. He called me back in a panic two days later. The guy he hired had decided to do a manual cleanse of his system (he had the Total Security fake AV) and now nothing was working. I cleaned Total Security off and charged him for that, but I had no idea what else to do since deleting DLL's off a Windows PC at random is not a great idea.
Some sort of certification regime would be nice. California licenses electronics and appliance repairmen, but it's just a way for the state to extract fees out of people-I applied in person, and all they did was take my check and app, run a copy of my A+ cert, and thank me. The A+ itself is treated like the runt of the litter by CompTIA, the test I took was a joke and could have been passed by cramming. CompTIA seems more focused on the Security+ cert, a much more involved test. The school I went to considered the A+ a throwaway cert, a steppingstone to the Microsoft certs (they also offered Security+). The whole idea of certifying computer techs seems to be treated like the FCC treats amateur radio-an annoyance, a legacy issue from the old days that is there because of the law but that really isn't worth the time of the regulator.
After I graduated in March 2006, CompTIA overhauled the A+ to focus on "soft skills". That made the whole idea a bad joke, and led people to think that anybody could be a tech. So you have 15 year olds doing repairs on neighborhood computers and companies hiring gamer d00dz to do tech work. The real problem is that nobody takes the technician seriously. Maybe we're headed towards a future where every tech is just a placeholder, and the real work is done remotely by engineers in India a la GS's Agent Jonny Utah. That's another discussion.
Well, that's my opinion on the whole issue. I may seem dumb, but that's only because the computer field here is populated by absolute morons. I'm thinking of going into the refurbished laptop business.
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