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F R E N D Z  of martian
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----------  Forwarded Message  ----------
Subject: GeeK: bid / get paid for tech support
Date: Sat, 06 Nov 1999 19:38:35 -0600
From: jsyn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


<http://www.questionexchange.com>

Auction-style tech-support forum.  Get certified as an expert, answer
posed questions, and get paid.

So far, the available forums are:

        Apache
        C
        C++
        DHTML
        FreeBSD
        HTML
        Java
        JavaScript
        Linux.Installation
        Networking
        Oracle
        Perl
        Tcl/Tk
        Windows NT
        X Window

I've also submitted suggestions for the creation of OpenBSD, NetBSD, and
Cryptography forums.

If you DO sign up, use 'jsyn' as a referral.

>From <http://www.techweb.com/wire/finance/story/INV19991101S0001>:

Any More Bids For Tech Support? Going, Going, Gone!
(11/01/99, 6:10 a.m. ET)
By Mitch Wagner, InternetWeek 
If the thrill of Internet auctions for Furbys, Pokemons, and collectable
ashtrays is starting to fade, how about auctions for tech support? 

QuestionExchange, a Boston start-up, said it plans on Tuesday to launch
a
website for "name-your-price" support on open source software. 

Users having problems with Linux, the Apache Web server, and other open
source
products will be able to post their questions to the QuestionExchange
website
and either name the price they'll pay for an answer or ask experts to
bid on
what they'll charge to answer the question. 

Users front the fee to QuestionExchange, and then, when the problem is
solved
to the user's satisfaction, QuestionExchange sends the money off to the
expert,
after skimming 5 percent off the top as its own fee. 

"It's like eBay meets PriceLine for open source," said CEO and founder
Hector
Gonzalez. 

The service is designed for individuals and small businesses that lack
resources to pay for conventional consulting, but need tech support
nonetheless. 

QuestionExchange will give them access to a pool of experts who have
been
tested on their knowledge prior to being allowed to bid on customer
queries;
before being allowed to bid, the experts will be asked to first answer
several
free questions posted by users, and the experts' responses to those
questions
will be reviewed by a pool of other experts who have already been
qualified by
QuestionExchange, Gonzalez said. 

Another advantage to users is QuestionExchange's experts will be
international,
meaning many of them will work cheaper than U.S.-based consultants. And
QuestionExchange's responses will be faster than conventional
consultants,
because the questions will be reviewed by thousands of experts
simultaneously,
rather than having to go through a conventional consultant's linear help
desk
escalation process, where one expert at a time reviews each help
request,
Gonzalez said. 

Like eBay, QuestionExchange will offer a ratings service, where users
and
experts can rate each other for public view. 

The user will control the transaction; the fee will not be released to a
consultant until the user says he or she is satisfied. However, the
ratings
system will keep users honest; users who consistently refuse to pay
consultants
will quickly find that no one is willing to work for them, Gonzalez
said. 

The advantage to consultants is QuestionExchange will give them access
to a
pool of potential customers. Also, by requiring users to pay up front,
QuestionExchange solves the problem of collections, which is a burden
for small
businesses, Gonzalez said. 

<-----


jsyn
--
AppDev Ltd. - Internet Solutions Provider.
http://appdev.co.uk/


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