Big Deal by Angus Kidman

Industry veteran Angus Kidman casts his cynical eye over what passes for news in the world of ICT. He exposes the deep disconnect between what vendors claim is the next big thing and what IT managers are really looking for to help them do their job. This often bitter and twisted rant comes to you courtesy of ZDNet Australia and any venue game enough to host Kidman during his extensive travels.

Virtual assistance is virtually useless

Posted by Angus Kidman @ 14:52 6 comments

It's no surprise that software companies are keen to fob off as much of their tech support as possible to automated systems -- support is a cost, not a profit centre, unless you charge an inordinate amount for it.

It's also not much of a shock that many of these automated systems are rubbish -- after all, if these companies could write decent software in the first place, they wouldn't need such complex dedicated support tools, would they?

Nonetheless, I'm still slightly surprised at just how many of these troubleshooters/virtual technicians/excuses-not-to-employ-an-offshore-call-centre can't get even the basics right.

In particular, it amazes me that they can't make use of the actual error codes generated by the software itself in an intelligent way.

I've encountered two examples of the problem recently. The first is with a piece of software that I've criticised on many occasions before: Microsoft's sorry excuse for a synchronisation manager, ActiveSync.

In my installation, this product has a nasty habit of refusing to synchronise and generating obscure error codes. Not only are these error codes entirely absent from Microsoft's knowledge base support site, they also appear to have no effect on ActiveSync's built-in troubleshooter.

Even if you run the troubleshooter immediately after the error has been generated, it reports that everything is working fine. Not so much a troubleshooter, then, more like a smokescreen.

Microsoft isn't the only company with this kind of problem though. McAfee recently updated its range of security products, forcing all current users -- myself included -- to download and install the new version. That would be fine, except that my installation decided that it hadn't been verified, and notified me as such.

Clicking on the "Verify this subscription now" link generated a singularly hopeless error message, telling me that this wasn't possible right now. If it continued to not work, it suggested, I should reinstall the product.

Having only just done that, I decided to dig a little deeper. There was absolutely nothing in McAfee's support base that I could locate about verification problems, so I tried running its "Virtual Technician" to inspect my installation.

Yet again, it failed to even notice the error message the program had been throwing at me. I did end up having to reinstall the product, which was annoying and tedious and probably would have convinced a less technically-minded consumer to ditch McAfee and see if Microsoft could do a better job with its own security tools. Doesn't seem very likely, though.

I'm no expert coder, but I would have thought the first thing any analytical tool would do was check existing software error logs. Maybe they're saving it for the upgrade.

Advertisement

Talkback 6 comments

    McAfee Anonymous -- 11/01/07

    Although my McAfee Security Centre does appear to be working OK, I do get an error message frequently on the Privacy Service asking me to restore the database. The thing is that if I ignore this, it works OK at the next boot up. I tried running Virtual Technician to solve the problem. It said I needed updates for virusscan and spamkiller. I tried to update but it said I was fully up to date. I ran it again. Same problem. It also told me parts were missing! But it continues to run fine and tell me it is up to date - with regular updates reported. If I ignore Virtual Technician and the odd Privacy message, everything seems fine.

    printing services Anonymous -- 15/03/07

    Offering printing services including digital printing, same day printing, plan printings, poster printing, on

    demand printing, banner printing and indoor display.http://www.eplot.com.au

    CAD outsourcing, CAE outsourcing,Engeering services, CAM outsourcing Anonymous -- 17/03/07

    Outsourcing of Engineering Design projects to “Sphinx Worldbiz Ltd” can greatly Reduce Cost and Produce

    Faster Turnaround while giving you excellent Technical Expertise.

    CAD outsourcing company in india, offering cad outsourcing,CAE Outsourcing ,3D modelling, CAM outsourcing

    and Engeering services.

    http://www.sphinxworldbiz.com

    SEO Company jashmine Batra, I -- 04/04/07

    We are Offering Search engine rankings , SEO Services, PPC Management, News Leter Marketing
    , E-Commerce SEO, E-Commerce Services and Internet Marketing to all over he World.We are also
    providing the cheap seo services comparision another one those are offering seo services
    Australia and all over the World.Recently we are organising the SEO seminar in Melbourne
    for stare the World towords the SEO side so join the Seminar and Get the benifits of its SEO.

    http://www.searchenginerankings.com.au

    Cad outsourcing, Cad drafting, 3d modelling Anonymous -- 15/11/08

    This information is very valuable. Outsourcingcadworks offers architectural 3d rendering drafting modelling designs outosurce cad conversion in india also with cad outsourcing and cad drafting.

    http://www.outsourcingcadworks.com

    Seo Company Dmitry Ivanov -- 19/06/09

    We are melbourne based seo company offering the most comprehensive search engine optimisation solutions, please feel free to contact us. We have proven results in: Achieving Top 10 Rankings in Google and Generating high quality targeted traffic to our customers websites;
    our customers;

    www.seodeals.com.au

Add your opinion

Angus Kidman

Angus Kidman

 

[+] Read bio

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Tags

Back to top

Featured