Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2009-01-10 Thread Greg Skinner
On Fri, Dec 26, 2008 at 08:01:59PM +1300, Mark Foster wrote:
 On Fri, 26 Dec 2008, Martin Hannigan wrote:
  On Thu, Dec 25, 2008 at 6:00 PM, Frank Bulk - iName.com
  frnk...@iname.comwrote:
 
  I don't think there would be a concern about off-shore support if we
  couldn't tell it was off-shore.
 
  You can't tell most of the time.
 
  The point that is relevant operationally is that off shoring can be a solid
  method to help significantly reduce costs. It can work easier for some
  functions than others. Level 1/Tier1 support seems like an excellent
  candidate for off shoring and I think that the measure is still quality of
  service from the provider verses if they off shore or not.
 
  Just my humble opinion.
 
 
 Hi Martin,
 Seemingly a rational viewpoint (what, on NANOG? Surely not!) but the 
 problem with the gradual depletion of Level/Tier 1 support environments in 
 your home country is the (eventual) gradual depletion of expertise 
 available to the higher levels.
 
 A hellovalot of the clueful engineers that i've come to know over the past 
 few years are people who started off on Helpdesks, and moved up the tiers, 
 to finally land in NOC type slots and from there to engineering and 
 design, perhaps skipping some or all of the 'tiers'... but you've gotta 
 start somewhere.
 
 Aside from the typical Degree or Diploma that tertiary outfits offer, 
 there's not a lot of good ways to 'break in' to the Network and Systems 
 Operations communities other than good ol experience, 
 working-from-the-bottom-up.
 
 So as you move your Tier 1's offshore, you cut off the channel by which 
 people can gain experience and move on up the chain...
 
 (The issues around the advantages from a cultural sense of having access 
 to people who actually know your environs, current events, etc, are 
 probably far more obvious..)
 
 Could offshoring be considered a 'short term fix' and be hindering our 
 ability to employ clooful operators in a few years time? (else, are we 
 limiting ourselves to employing immigrants from 'offshore locations' 
 because we don't locally build the right experience?)
 
 Mark.

The fact that work is offshored also acts as a disincentive to people
who might otherwise enter the field.  Instead, they pursue work that
is much less likely to be offshored.  Witness the increase of
healthcare workers in the US who might have otherwise entered various
engineering professions, but do not, because they are concerned that
they may not keep their engineering jobs.

--gregbo



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2009-01-04 Thread Bill Stewart
Assuming that what you're getting from Verizon is copper and not FIOS,
there should be a number of small to medium-sized ISPs that will provide you
with Layer 3 Internet Service using that copper.
It will cost you a few dollars a month more, but not a lot more,
and you'll not only have more chance of getting somebody with a clue
to answer questions,
but you'll be able to do things like running servers from home if you want.
It looks like Sonic.net doesn't cover Long Beach, but Speakeasy does,
and you should be able to find a range of other small clueful ISPs.

The off-shore call-center business has changed a lot in the last decade;
in addition to Bangalore undercutting the Nebraska and Utah call centers,
there are cheaper places like the Phillipines undercutting Bangalore,
and Canada's been trying to address unemployment in former fishing villages
by promoting call centers (which has the advantage of good English),
and VOIP has simplified work-at-home distributed call centers in the rural US.
But still, if your company is outsourcing first-line support to script-readers,
then they need to be good at recognizing when to get past the initial script
and escalate to somebody with more training.

On Thu, Dec 25, 2008 at 2:37 PM, Jay Hennigan j...@west.net wrote:

 The person wasn't capable of getting the hint when
 I asked after several minutes of frustration what the A in ATT stood
 for, and in fact claimed to have no idea.

Actually, for the last N years, the A in ATT is just a letter;
the company name stopped being an acronym for
American Telephone  Telegraph even before they were bought by
the Company Formerly Known As SBC.

-- 

 Thanks; Bill

Note that this isn't my regular email account - It's still experimental so far.
And Google probably logs and indexes everything you send it.



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-30 Thread James Michael Keller

Matthew Black wrote:

I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
at my DSL provider Verizon California.

I can reliably ping the first hop from my home to
the CO with a 25ms delay. But if I ping any other
location, packets get dropped or significantly
delayed. To me, this sounds like Verizon has an
internal routing problem rather than a problem
with my phone line. Note that it rained recently
in our area and the cable vault in front of my
is usually covered with stagnant water because
the gutters don't drain it away.

I have tried to explain this to tech support but
they refuse to go off script, even the supervisors.
They keep insisting on sending a tech to my home
when I suggest this should be escalated to their
network operations team.

Anyhow, if I can reliably ping the first hop
from my home, would that eliminate my telephone
connection as part of the problem? Just a sanity
check on my part. Thanks.

matthew black
california state university, long beach

Are you seeing drops or slow response times for the Verizon hops but not 
for the last hop destination?


If so, remember that most of the larger ISPs will be rate limiting 
non-admin (ie from their support network ranges) traffic directed to the 
enterprise equipment.   This means they will either ignore or delay 
responding to ICMP requests directed to their own IP addresses vs 
forwarding traffic.


If your seeing about the same for the destination and for the 
intermediate hops then it's more likely an issue on the Verizon network.


--
James Michael Keller




Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-29 Thread Robert E. Seastrom

Skywing skyw...@valhallalegends.com writes:

 Always have to waste a minute for it to decide that it's going to
 punt to a real person.  It would be nice if there was a way to
 bypass it.

A lot (but not all) of them are implemented in such a way that they
will yield encouraging results if you start dropping f-bombs on them.
Avoiding an arrest for disorderly conduct if you are on your cell
phone in public is left as an exercise to the reader.

-r





Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-28 Thread Matthew Black

On Sat, 27 Dec 2008 11:53:18 +
 Martin List-Petersen mar...@airwire.ie wrote:


The problem is, and this was stated by the original poster, that the
lads off-shore he deals with have no clue and simply stick to the
script. No intention of looking what the real problem is. And that
problem lies not in the call center. It is the deal, that $TELCO struck
with $CALLCENTER and the procedures, that were put in place, that are
the problem.

Only solution: find a provider, who's support (off-shore or not) does
have a clue, has an escalation process and is willing to find a solution.



How does one find such a provider? I'm unaware of any company
that lets potential customers test drive their $SERVICE call center
before purchase. Even if one did, how is a potential customer
supposed to evaluate the competence of said call center when
customer has no clue as to what problems may arise 5 years after
purchase of provider's service, whether said test drive provided
an accurate and appropriate solution, and whether said call center
quality will exist 5 years after purchase of the service.

matthew black
long beach, ca



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-28 Thread Seth Mattinen

Matthew Black wrote:

On Sat, 27 Dec 2008 11:53:18 +
 Martin List-Petersen mar...@airwire.ie wrote:


The problem is, and this was stated by the original poster, that the
lads off-shore he deals with have no clue and simply stick to the
script. No intention of looking what the real problem is. And that
problem lies not in the call center. It is the deal, that $TELCO struck
with $CALLCENTER and the procedures, that were put in place, that are
the problem.

Only solution: find a provider, who's support (off-shore or not) does
have a clue, has an escalation process and is willing to find a solution.



How does one find such a provider? I'm unaware of any company
that lets potential customers test drive their $SERVICE call center
before purchase. Even if one did, how is a potential customer
supposed to evaluate the competence of said call center when
customer has no clue as to what problems may arise 5 years after
purchase of provider's service, whether said test drive provided
an accurate and appropriate solution, and whether said call center
quality will exist 5 years after purchase of the service.



Ask people for recomendations. There were several early in this thread 
you dismissed (i.e. dslextreme) because they weren't a CLEC or were too 
expensive.


~Seth



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-28 Thread Martin List-Petersen
Matthew Black wrote:
 On Sat, 27 Dec 2008 11:53:18 +
  Martin List-Petersen mar...@airwire.ie wrote:

 The problem is, and this was stated by the original poster, that the
 lads off-shore he deals with have no clue and simply stick to the
 script. No intention of looking what the real problem is. And that
 problem lies not in the call center. It is the deal, that $TELCO struck
 with $CALLCENTER and the procedures, that were put in place, that are
 the problem.

 Only solution: find a provider, who's support (off-shore or not) does
 have a clue, has an escalation process and is willing to find a solution.
 
 
 How does one find such a provider? I'm unaware of any company
 that lets potential customers test drive their $SERVICE call center
 before purchase. 


Ask others for their experience :), like for example here.


 Even if one did, how is a potential customer
 supposed to evaluate the competence of said call center when
 customer has no clue as to what problems may arise 5 years after
 purchase of provider's service, whether said test drive provided
 an accurate and appropriate solution, and whether said call center
 quality will exist 5 years after purchase of the service.


Well, if you're not any happy longer with the service, vote with your
feet again and find a better option. It's as easy as that.

Kind regards,
Martin List-Petersen
-- 
Airwire - Ag Nascadh Pobal an Iarthar
http://www.airwire.ie
Phone: 091-865 968



RE: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-28 Thread Skywing
Of course, in much of the US, vote with your feet on residential ISP service 
might as well be as realistic advice as pack up and move to a different city. 
 [Perhaps not in the OP's case, though, if they are fortunate.  Which it seems 
like they might be.]

- S

-Original Message-
From: Martin List-Petersen [mailto:mar...@airwire.ie] 
Sent: Sunday, December 28, 2008 3:59 PM
To: Matthew Black
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

Matthew Black wrote:
 On Sat, 27 Dec 2008 11:53:18 +
  Martin List-Petersen mar...@airwire.ie wrote:

 The problem is, and this was stated by the original poster, that the
 lads off-shore he deals with have no clue and simply stick to the
 script. No intention of looking what the real problem is. And that
 problem lies not in the call center. It is the deal, that $TELCO struck
 with $CALLCENTER and the procedures, that were put in place, that are
 the problem.

 Only solution: find a provider, who's support (off-shore or not) does
 have a clue, has an escalation process and is willing to find a solution.
 
 
 How does one find such a provider? I'm unaware of any company
 that lets potential customers test drive their $SERVICE call center
 before purchase. 


Ask others for their experience :), like for example here.


 Even if one did, how is a potential customer
 supposed to evaluate the competence of said call center when
 customer has no clue as to what problems may arise 5 years after
 purchase of provider's service, whether said test drive provided
 an accurate and appropriate solution, and whether said call center
 quality will exist 5 years after purchase of the service.


Well, if you're not any happy longer with the service, vote with your
feet again and find a better option. It's as easy as that.

Kind regards,
Martin List-Petersen
-- 
Airwire - Ag Nascadh Pobal an Iarthar
http://www.airwire.ie
Phone: 091-865 968




Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-28 Thread Martin List-Petersen
Skywing wrote:
 Of course, in much of the US, vote with your feet on residential ISP 
 service might as well be as realistic advice as pack up and move to a 
 different city.  [Perhaps not in the OP's case, though, if they are 
 fortunate.  Which it seems like they might be.]


It isn't different here either :)

Solution: if there is no alternative, it might be an idea to create one.


We had to do that here and works like a treat. You might find, that you
get more custom, that you wished for.

Kind regards,
Martin List-Petersen


 
 - S
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Martin List-Petersen [mailto:mar...@airwire.ie] 
 Sent: Sunday, December 28, 2008 3:59 PM
 To: Matthew Black
 Cc: nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support
 
 Matthew Black wrote:
 On Sat, 27 Dec 2008 11:53:18 +
  Martin List-Petersen mar...@airwire.ie wrote:
 The problem is, and this was stated by the original poster, that the
 lads off-shore he deals with have no clue and simply stick to the
 script. No intention of looking what the real problem is. And that
 problem lies not in the call center. It is the deal, that $TELCO struck
 with $CALLCENTER and the procedures, that were put in place, that are
 the problem.

 Only solution: find a provider, who's support (off-shore or not) does
 have a clue, has an escalation process and is willing to find a solution.

 How does one find such a provider? I'm unaware of any company
 that lets potential customers test drive their $SERVICE call center
 before purchase. 
 
 
 Ask others for their experience :), like for example here.
 
 
 Even if one did, how is a potential customer
 supposed to evaluate the competence of said call center when
 customer has no clue as to what problems may arise 5 years after
 purchase of provider's service, whether said test drive provided
 an accurate and appropriate solution, and whether said call center
 quality will exist 5 years after purchase of the service.
 
 
 Well, if you're not any happy longer with the service, vote with your
 feet again and find a better option. It's as easy as that.
 
 Kind regards,
 Martin List-Petersen


-- 
Airwire - Ag Nascadh Pobal an Iarthar
http://www.airwire.ie
Phone: 091-865 968



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-27 Thread Martin List-Petersen
david raistrick wrote:
 On Sat, 27 Dec 2008, JF Mezei wrote:
 
 The problem with oursourced first level support is that they are totally
 disconnected from real time operations and wouldn't be aware of problems
 that network engineers are currently working on.
 
 Not always true.  Our outsourced support in India were also our first
 layer of network troubleshooting, and they monitored everything related
 to the products they supported.They were almost always the first to
 call the engineers (in .us and .ca) to alert them of issues.
 
 It's all about /what/ you hire them to do.

Not only that. It also depends on the call center. I used to work for a
quite large call center, that would deal with anything from computer
support for vendors, cellphone support, cable-tv, cable-broadband, etc.
And just as an example for cellphones, the people on the floor had
access to internal systems of the telco's and where able to send
real-time commands to the switches.

When $TELCO decides to use this call center, it can sometimes take 2-3
years, before the calls end up in the call center. This is down to the
fact, that the call center has to implement structures with $TELCO that
will make a handover possible in the first place. Also stuff with enough
technical knowledge needed to be located within the agents or new staff
hired in.

Some customers had to be told, that it is impossible to do support for
them on the expectations, that they have, because their own internal
structures simply are a mess.

Outsouring and off-shoring is never the problem.

The problem is, and this was stated by the original poster, that the
lads off-shore he deals with have no clue and simply stick to the
script. No intention of looking what the real problem is. And that
problem lies not in the call center. It is the deal, that $TELCO struck
with $CALLCENTER and the procedures, that were put in place, that are
the problem.

Only solution: find a provider, who's support (off-shore or not) does
have a clue, has an escalation process and is willing to find a solution.

Kind regards,
Martin List-Petersen
-- 
Airwire - Ag Nascadh Pobal an Iarthar
http://www.airwire.ie
Phone: 091-865 968



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-27 Thread Etaoin Shrdlu

Skywing wrote:


I find those speech recognition menus quite annoying.  American
Airlines has one that's just not good enough over a lower bitrate
cell voice link in a crowded situation when you're trying to
determine what's the deal with cancelled flights or whatnot along
with everyone else in the plane.  Always have to waste a minute for
it to decide that it's going to punt to a real person.  It would be
nice if there was a way to bypass it.


say agent and keep repeating that word until it understands you. That 
will bypass the menus, and take you to a person.


--
Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place.
Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are,
by definition, not smart enough to debug it.
  Brian W. Kernighan



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-27 Thread Jay Hennigan

Skywing wrote:

I find those speech recognition menus quite annoying.  American Airlines has 
one that's just not good enough over a lower bitrate cell voice link in a 
crowded situation when you're trying to determine what's the deal with 
cancelled flights or whatnot along with everyone else in the plane.  Always 
have to waste a minute for it to decide that it's going to punt to a real 
person.  It would be nice if there was a way to bypass it.


http://www.get2human.com/gethuman_list.asp


Jay wrote:
But, the reason that US-based $TELCO and $CABLECO use off-shore tech 
support is that they don't want to pay for the training and supervision 
to do it right in-house. 


Jay, that's an interesting misstatement.  It implies that they're going to
be paying a lesser rate to do it right somewhere else, which typically does
not seem to be what happens.


Perhaps my wording didn't convey my meaning.  They don't care about 
doing it right nearly as much as they care about doing it cheap.  This 
often means outsourced, which often means offshore.


The same person diagnosing your IP routing 
issues may indeed be asking, Would you like fries with that? thirty 
seconds later. [1] 


Does Bronco actually do that?  :-)


They actually do outsourced offshore order-taking for fast food 
drive-through restaurants.  Several big-name chains in fact.  And 
they're quite good at it, the customer probably doesn't know.  Whether 
the same people also answer the phones for $TELCO and $CABLECO, I don't 
know.


And they are afraid to admit (or don't realize) that they are not 
capable of complicated problem solving.  They're following a script, 
just like the fast food order-takers. 


Don't-realize.  The number of times I've been talked down to by people who
don't have any clue what the 4 in IPv4 means is depressingly high.  I
do not need to reboot my Windows PC to know that the DHCP answer my UNIX
box is getting from the DHCP server, dumped in gory detail, is providing an 
IP address in a prefix that's not appearing in the global routing table now.


Or maybe they don't have the 
authority to escalate it to someone with clue, even if/when they do 
realize they're over their heads.


That's definitely a problem.


Yep.  I suspect it's a culture of What are we paying you for if you 
can't solve the problems? aimed at the scripted call center people. 
Call center work is a miserable job. The people are thoroughly timed and 
scrutinized, graded on the number of calls they take per hour, time on 
the phone to each caller (less is better), etc.  Automated metrics with 
the goal of pushing as many calls at as few people as possible.  I 
wouldn't be surprised if many of them are penalized for escalating issues.


The interesting thing about your experience is that your service 
problems resulted in an up-sell, but only because you were persistent 
enough to fight through the system. 


Plausible interpretation, but not really accurate.  An upsell would
normally be convincing someone to buy something that they would not
otherwise have thought to be useful; is it really an upsell when
you fail to advertise your new service offerings on your web site, 
and so leave your potential business customers with the impression 
that the only offerings you have are the same in-excess-of-T1 prices

that you offered last time they talked to you?


You remained a customer and signed up for for a higher tier of services 
at increased cost based on a conversation with a clueful person, and you 
were only able to reach that person after some persistence.  How many 
others gave up before getting that far and went elsewhere?


--
Jay Hennigan - CCIE #7880 - Network Engineering - j...@impulse.net
Impulse Internet Service  -  http://www.impulse.net/
Your local telephone and internet company - 805 884-6323 - WB6RDV



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-27 Thread Andy Davidson


On 27 Dec 2008, at 05:59, JF Mezei wrote:

The problem with oursourced first level support is that they are  
totally disconnected from real time operations and wouldn't be aware  
of problems that network engineers are currently working on.


That's a problem with a lot of internal first line teams too..

Offshore and outsource are different things, and when done right are  
irrelevant to the quality of service delivered.  A willingness to  
offshore means you can deliver follow-the-sun NOC or support service,  
which can drive down delivery costs and health/safety risks for the  
organisation and drive up service quality by meaning that callers  
reach someone alert and awake ;-).  Outsourcing offshore service makes  
it cheap and easy to do that.


Doing this well relies on building a process, and actually a different  
process for each network being supported, though I don't want to give  
away all the hints that I learned the hard way !



Andy



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-27 Thread Steven M. Bellovin
On Fri, 26 Dec 2008 19:10:13 -0600 (CST)
Joe Greco jgr...@ns.sol.net wrote:

 I did ask, and all the local people are, in fact, local.  It's a
 matter of training and technical knowledge.  None of them was really
 putting together the fact that the modem was sketchy for the service
 class we had.

Yup -- I've had similar fun with Comcast.  Once, I was seeing 15-20%
packet loss on the local loop and 90% (you read that correctly) packet
duplication. The advice I received translated to clear your IE browser
cache.  I demurred, and I was told that (a) generally, performance
problems were solvable that way, and (b) 15% packet loss was pretty
good.  I escalated...

Then there was the time they upgraded the firmware in my cable
modem/NAT to a buggy release that didn't understand the activity timer
in the NAT table.  Every 30 minutes, like clockwork, my ssh sessions
would die.  I had to try to explain that to someone who didn't know how
to spell IP, let alone TCP.

Oh yes -- judging from their accents, everyone I spoke with was
American.  In both cases, once I reached the clueful people, things
were resolved pretty quickly.  (Well, not the packet duplication; that
took *weeks* to resolve, but once the packet loss problem was solved I
could at least get decent throughput.)
 
 My point is that you not only need the language skills and a good
 phone connection, but also a reasonable process to deal with
 knowledgeable people.  I understand the need to provide scripted
 support, but there should also be a reasonable path to determine that
 someone has an exceptional problem and isn't being well-served by the
 script.

Customer records often include an optional data field that says things
about particular customers.  I heard a story -- and I'll leave out the
names, since it's second- or third-hand and it does involve people and
companies most of us know -- that one very clueful person's record had
a note saying more or less if you don't understand what he's saying,
he's right and you're wrong, and you should route his call immediately
to Tier N, where N is large...  But getting on that list is the hard
part.

--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb



RE: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-27 Thread Richey
I once had an @home rep insist that my connection was down because there was
ice in the lines.   No matter how many times I told him it was 58 degrees
outside he stuck to his guns and insisted that was the problem.

Richey

-Original Message-
From: Steven M. Bellovin [mailto:s...@cs.columbia.edu] 
Sent: Saturday, December 27, 2008 3:35 PM
To: Joe Greco
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

On Fri, 26 Dec 2008 19:10:13 -0600 (CST)
Joe Greco jgr...@ns.sol.net wrote:

 I did ask, and all the local people are, in fact, local.  It's a
 matter of training and technical knowledge.  None of them was really
 putting together the fact that the modem was sketchy for the service
 class we had.

Yup -- I've had similar fun with Comcast.  Once, I was seeing 15-20%
packet loss on the local loop and 90% (you read that correctly) packet
duplication. The advice I received translated to clear your IE browser
cache.  I demurred, and I was told that (a) generally, performance
problems were solvable that way, and (b) 15% packet loss was pretty
good.  I escalated...

Then there was the time they upgraded the firmware in my cable
modem/NAT to a buggy release that didn't understand the activity timer
in the NAT table.  Every 30 minutes, like clockwork, my ssh sessions
would die.  I had to try to explain that to someone who didn't know how
to spell IP, let alone TCP.

Oh yes -- judging from their accents, everyone I spoke with was
American.  In both cases, once I reached the clueful people, things
were resolved pretty quickly.  (Well, not the packet duplication; that
took *weeks* to resolve, but once the packet loss problem was solved I
could at least get decent throughput.)
 
 My point is that you not only need the language skills and a good
 phone connection, but also a reasonable process to deal with
 knowledgeable people.  I understand the need to provide scripted
 support, but there should also be a reasonable path to determine that
 someone has an exceptional problem and isn't being well-served by the
 script.

Customer records often include an optional data field that says things
about particular customers.  I heard a story -- and I'll leave out the
names, since it's second- or third-hand and it does involve people and
companies most of us know -- that one very clueful person's record had
a note saying more or less if you don't understand what he's saying,
he's right and you're wrong, and you should route his call immediately
to Tier N, where N is large...  But getting on that list is the hard
part.

--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb




Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-27 Thread Eddie
Matthew Black wrote:
 On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 10:10:33 -0800
  Etaoin Shrdlu shr...@deaddrop.org wrote:
 Matthew Black wrote:

 On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:51:41 -0800
  Tomas L. Byrnes t...@byrneit.net wrote:

 Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are
 actually LOCAL.

 In Verizon land, residential customers do not have
 CLEC voice or DSL alternatives. We do not have Cox.
 Our area is served by Charter Communications who has
 the broadband cable monopoly. Verizon has the fiber
 monopoly with their FIOS. ATT fiber is not possible
 in Verizon land. Nobody competes against Verizon for
 residential service in Southern California.

 Sir, both COVAD and DSLExtreme beg to differ. Seriously. I just checked.

 -- 
 The histories of mankind are histories only of the higher classes.

 Thomas Malthus
 
 
 Going through COVAD's interactive DSL chooser,
 there are no options for RESIDENTIAL service.
 
 http://covad.com/web/index.html
 
 
 DSLextreme is charging a higher price than Verizon
 and I suspect they are simply reselling Verizon's
 DSL rather than connecting my copper to their
 network. That's hardly what I consider CLEC service.
 I could be wrong and would switch if I could. But I
 don't see them offering voice and that's why I conclude
 they are reselling Verizon's DSL service.
 
 matthew black
 california state university, long beach
 
 

I have 25 DSLExtreme lines along with 3 other providers in businesses
all around the SoCal area. The local loop is whatever the telco is, but
the network is their own.

The service was better a few years ago, but it's still far exceeds what
the big telco provides. The DSLX techs know their stuff and only once
did I have a tech not believe me. On the last call, the tech asked me if
I checked the DSL filters and I told them I had a hole house Selco box
at the MPOE and ran a dedicated cat5 wire as the phone like for the DSL
modem. The tech understood what I had did. No ATT, SBC, or Verizon tech
has ever understood that.

For one location, because of the distance, I had to order an IDSL line
from Covad (SBC owned the wires). I ran a cat5 drop from MPOE to the
office to make the tech's job easier. (yes I use cat5 for phone and
everything. Why not?)

Well, the install date came, the Covad tech came out and installed it,
but left with it not working.

So the blame game went on between SBC and Covad for 2 months before a
time could be arranged when both could be at the location at the same time.

When Covad connects the DSL modem to the pair at the MPOE the modem
makes a hissing sound. Covad proclaims the pair is bad. SBC guy says the
pair test good. SBC swaps to a new pair, but hissing remains. During
this time they are both on hold to the same call center, with their cell
phones on speaker. It was the same on hold music so it was sort of like
listening in stereo.  Both basically sat around for 3 hours on hold
until the SBC guy gave up and left. Covad guy's phone battery went dead
10 minutes later. Nobody ever got a tech on the phone.

To prove that the hissing noise was causing the problem, Covad guy
connected his laptop up and quickly got on the internet. Everything was
working fine. I guess nobody checked 3 hours ago and just assumed it
didn't work.

He tossed me a box with the modem and left. I was left to punch down the
phone lines and put the modem in the office. It was then I discovered
IDSL has about 130 volts running in the lines. Outch.

The IDSL line stopped working 2 years later so I replaced it with an
EVDO modem. Been fine since.

ATT is worse. I had a DSL guy install the DSL in a vacant abandoned
building twice. The business moved down the block, but the ATT guy just
went to the old building again and again. it took 4 months for that ATT
install.








signature.asc
Description: PGP signature


signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature


Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-27 Thread Steve Bertrand
Matthew Black wrote:
 I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
 at my DSL provider Verizon California.
 
 I can reliably ping the first hop from my home to
 the CO with a 25ms delay. But if I ping any other
 location, packets get dropped or significantly
 delayed. To me, this sounds like Verizon has an
 internal routing problem rather than a problem
 with my phone line. Note that it rained recently
 in our area and the cable vault in front of my
 is usually covered with stagnant water because
 the gutters don't drain it away.
 
 I have tried to explain this to tech support but
 they refuse to go off script, even the supervisors.
 They keep insisting on sending a tech to my home
 when I suggest this should be escalated to their
 network operations team.
 
 Anyhow, if I can reliably ping the first hop
 from my home, would that eliminate my telephone
 connection as part of the problem? Just a sanity
 check on my part. Thanks.

Is your DSL modem of the type that you can log into and check the line
stats?

Even if there are phone line problems, you still have sync, and
regardless what the sync rate, line noise etc are, if you can ping
across the link and get a reply, replies should come back from distant
gear as well.

Perhaps an op from another relatively local provider could supply you
with a temporary DSL auth account to see if that will route you around
the problem.

I could supply you one, but I'm in southern Ontario, Canada, so I don't
know if the realm would properly route all the way back here or not.

Steve



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-26 Thread Todd Vierling
On Fri, Dec 26, 2008 at 2:01 AM, Mark Foster blak...@blakjak.net wrote:
 Aside from the typical Degree or Diploma that tertiary outfits offer,
 there's not a lot of good ways to 'break in' to the Network and Systems
 Operations communities other than good ol experience,
 working-from-the-bottom-up.

I'm working in management of software engineering now, and in my
experience, the only worthwhile candidates for hiring -- who have not
gone through the self-teaching and self-experimentation phases that
mirror working at a helpdesk on a small scale -- have progressed
through exactly this chain.  They have developed the necessary
instincts to know when a bug could become a serious problem at 2 a.m.
on a Sunday, instincts that are an absolute prerequisite to working on
software intended to be used 24/7.

In software development, new college grads can be OK for
non-operationally-facing applications, but they tend to have high
ideals, and just haven't had their hearts broken by business
contradictions or operational emergencies yet.  On the opposite side
of the spectrum, those who have gone through only regimented software
processes between school and the present tend not to be aware of
operational impacts at all, as they've been shielded from that aspect
all along.

 So as you move your Tier 1's offshore, you cut off the channel by which
 people can gain experience and move on up the chain...

We're seeing this more and more as time goes on.  What's worse is that
offshoring of software development was becoming just as rampant,
resulting in the double-whammy of engineers not knowing the
consequences of their actions, and operations caught unaware when
those consequences manifest as critical problems.

Many businesses have at least partially learned from this mistake the
Hard Way, by losing customers when there was no one capable of fixing
a critical problem within 24 or even 72 hours.  Alas, this hasn't been
heeded by all of the market yet.

All of the above is solely my opinion, and definitely represents an
experience-diluted version of my personal ideals.  While I generally
agree from a business perspective that offshoring of operations can be
a lucrative cost-cutting measure, the key problem in most such
arrangements is that the operations and systems
(hardware/software/networks as applicable) are not *all* offshored at
once.  When these bits do not exist in relatively close proximity to
each other, communications between their responsible folks grinds to a
halt.

-- 
-- Todd Vierling t...@duh.org t...@pobox.com t...@vierling.name



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-26 Thread Josh Potter
I think I've touched at least 15+ countries with Cisco HTTPS, and minus a
few language issues, they're pretty decent.

On Thu, Dec 25, 2008 at 4:37 PM, Jay Hennigan j...@west.net wrote:

 Martin Hannigan wrote:

  Hi Jay:

 Is there really anything wrong with sending first-level technical support
 offshore?


  Macs are macs, Windows is windows and mail is mail whether you're in
 Mumbai or Memphis. As long as the language skills are good and the people
 are well trained, it should be mostly irrelevant, IMHO.


 In and of itself and setting aside patriotic/nationalistic issues, probably
 not, assuming adequate technical and product knowledge and language skills.
  I suppose that it would be possible that if it were done well enough one
 wouldn't be able to tell.

 However, there is something about dealing with a local company that adds
 value.  People seem to care more about their community and neighbors than a
 random, barely understandable voice on a G.729 8k codec at the other end of
 a satellite link.

 I have generally found dealing with most offshore tech support to be very
 frustrating.  The language issues are burdensome, some accents so thick as
 to be barely understandable, and the lack of clue and scripted menu-driven
 responses are obvious and usually of no value.  I wouldn't be calling if the
 problem could be solved by reading the documentation and some judicious web
 searching.  There are some exceptions, including Cisco TAC which is very
 good.  I've talked to Cisco engineers in Australia and Europe on occasion.
  I've had mixed results with Linksys support, which I believe is in the
 Philippines.

 Dealing with one offshore ATT billing representative who was clearly a
 non-English speaker was extremely painful.  The latency and nonsense of the
 person's responses suggested either some type of auto-translator or
 satellite link, or both.  The person wasn't capable of getting the hint when
 I asked after several minutes of frustration what the A in ATT stood
 for, and in fact claimed to have no idea.  I suspect that this level of
 disservice may be deliberate so that people will pay bogus charges on bills
 because the frustration level of disputing them is intentionally high.


 --
 Jay Hennigan - CCIE #7880 - Network Engineering - j...@impulse.net
 Impulse Internet Service  -  http://www.impulse.net/
 Your local telephone and internet company - 805 884-6323 - WB6RDV




-- 
Josh Potter


Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-26 Thread Martin Hannigan
On Fri, Dec 26, 2008 at 2:14 PM, Todd Vierling t...@pobox.com wrote:

 On Fri, Dec 26, 2008 at 2:01 AM, Mark Foster blak...@blakjak.net wrote:





 All of the above is solely my opinion, and definitely represents an
 experience-diluted version of my personal ideals.  While I generally
 agree from a business perspective that offshoring of operations can be
 a lucrative cost-cutting measure, the key problem in most such
 arrangements is that the operations and systems
 (hardware/software/networks as applicable) are not *all* offshored at
 once.  When these bits do not exist in relatively close proximity to
 each other, communications between their responsible folks grinds to a
 halt.


Thanks, this makes sense. I'm not sure if I support off shoring or not as
related to quality, but there is certainly a a business case to to be made
supporting it as this thread ending up pointing out. There are trade offs
which matter more to some than others.

Overall, my own off shoring experience is a mixed bag. United Airlines does
it and I usually suspect they are off shored when bad recommendations for
reservations or changes are relayed and I end up asking the possibly off
shore agents to make no changes and let me get online or stand in line to
get it done right. Cisco does this and while I haven't spoken to the Belgium
TAC in some time, it was pretty darn good and an example of how to do it
right.

YMMV,

Martin



-- 
Martin Hannigan   mar...@theicelandguy.com
p: +16178216079


Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-26 Thread Matthew Moyle-Croft

Martin Hannigan wrote:


I'm not sure if I support off shoring or not as
related to quality, but there is certainly a a business case to to be made
supporting it as this thread ending up pointing out. There are trade offs
which matter more to some than others.

  
I'm quite fascinated by some of the examples given of offshoring.   
Cisco use Sydney as one of their locations for around the world 
coverage.   From our point of view (being Australians) this isn't 
offshore - we have a local TAC who are closer and we tend to be able to 
get the same group of SP TAC people everytime to deal with our issues.   
My experience is that, given global companies like Cisco rely on 
locations to provide wide language support to people everywhere that the 
language issue is a bit moot.   Some people in the Belgium TAC are 
easier to understand over the phone then people in the US TAC because 
the US TAC people have been employed for their Spanish skills or other 
language skills where as many Europeans have better English skills than, 
well, a lot of people.   Some of the people in the TAC in Australia 
don't have English as their first language and are tricky to explain why 
my GSR crashed with an IPv6 issue over the phone (but fine via 
email). Some people on the other end of the phone just suck no 
matter which country or land of origin.


(I use Cisco's TAC as an example purely because I'm familar - but the 
example can be reused).


I think offshoring is more an issue because often it's built around a 
lie.  If I'm talking to someone in another country, then I'm okay with 
that but I hate it when they're forced to lie about who they are and 
where they are.  They're representing a company I deal with and as a 
customer I want it to be a good experience - if a company doesn't care 
about the overall customer experience and looks at it as a cost to be 
squashed and reduced then that (as someone else has said) is really the 
problem.   Give them the tools and desire to help me as a customer no 
matter where they are or which god they pray to.


The offshoring I think can be a problem isn't the customer facing part, 
but the anonymous part where backends of companies are taken offshore 
where data privacy laws etc aren't the same and suddenly my private data 
can be compromised in a way that is out of control of the laws of the 
country where I live.  (I'm thinking banks, health care etc).


Matthew









Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-26 Thread Andrew Matthews
I used to work for DSL Extreme for about just over 3 years. They use
local loops and connect via DS3's and OC3's to get into the partners
networks. In area's outside of california they may resell, but at
least in norcal and socal they run their own network.



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-26 Thread Joe Greco
 Martin Hannigan wrote:
  Hi Jay:
  
  Is there really anything wrong with sending first-level technical 
  support offshore?
 
  Macs are macs, Windows is windows and mail is mail whether you're in 
  Mumbai or Memphis. As long as the language skills are good and the 
  people are well trained, it should be mostly irrelevant, IMHO.
 
 In and of itself and setting aside patriotic/nationalistic issues, 
 probably not, assuming adequate technical and product knowledge and 
 language skills.  I suppose that it would be possible that if it were 
 done well enough one wouldn't be able to tell.

Sure.  Blaming off-shore tech support is pretty easy stuff, but the
reality is that the trouble is more along the line of appropriate
training.

For example, we maintain a Road Runner connection at the house, which
has been generally flawless over the years, with some notable exceptions.

I'll skip the DHCP-server-allocating-an-IP-address-from-a-netblk-recently-
vanished-from-the-global-routing-table story.  Just *try* explaining that
to a tier 1...  apparently my UNIX box was one of only a very few boxes
that hadn't re-DHCP'd in a year or two :-)

At one point, Road Runner introduced their turbo service here for a mere
$10/month more.  Since it's nice to be able to download the occasional ISO
at high speed, and because it included a greater upstream speed, it was a
no-brainer.  Worked great for maybe about a year.  Then, suddenly, one day,
I began to see the modem crash anytime a largish amount of data was being
pushed through it.  Spend time characterizing the problem.  Spend time on
the phone.  Get told the modem must be bad, get a replacement.  You know
the runaround, so I'll omit the gory details.  After a replacement modem 
and the same problem, having spent several hours over the period of two 
days on it, start raising enough noise through both the local and national
support services, talked to even the supposedly clueful people who were 
puzzled, and one finally suggested calling some direct line to a network 
engineer.

Well, that actually turned out to be TWC Business.  The guy was a bit
puzzled why I was calling *him*, but a brief explanation sufficed, and
within a minute or two he had the problem located ...  the modem had been
only marginally sufficient for Turbo, and they had changed something on
the local cable that had broken it.  Needed a *different* kind of modem. 
Told me what to demand from the local cableco store, provided a ticket 
number and everything. 

Some discussion suggested that the RR people were highly script-oriented
and not necessarily capable of complicated problem solving.  It appears
that the TWC Business tier 1 people actually have a fair amount of
technical training and clue, and resources to tap if that's not good
enough.  Further, he was bright enough to let me know that they had a
better than turbo package available with a higher upstream speed, for
only a little more, that'd make me a business customer, so I'd never have
to deal with Road Runner again.  Based on this one experience, we were
more than happy to sign an annual contract and pay just $10/mo more, and
have direct access to people who know what words like DHCP and route
actually mean.

I did ask, and all the local people are, in fact, local.  It's a matter 
of training and technical knowledge.  None of them was really putting 
together the fact that the modem was sketchy for the service class we
had.

My point is that you not only need the language skills and a good phone
connection, but also a reasonable process to deal with knowledgeable 
people.  I understand the need to provide scripted support, but there 
should also be a reasonable path to determine that someone has an 
exceptional problem and isn't being well-served by the script.

 However, there is something about dealing with a local company that adds 
 value.  People seem to care more about their community and neighbors 
 than a random, barely understandable voice on a G.729 8k codec at the 
 other end of a satellite link.
 
 I have generally found dealing with most offshore tech support to be 
 very frustrating.  The language issues are burdensome, some accents so 
 thick as to be barely understandable, and the lack of clue and scripted 
 menu-driven responses are obvious and usually of no value.  I wouldn't 
 be calling if the problem could be solved by reading the documentation 
 and some judicious web searching.  

That'll be the typical problem for this audience, yes.

 There are some exceptions, including 
 Cisco TAC which is very good.  I've talked to Cisco engineers in 
 Australia and Europe on occasion.  I've had mixed results with Linksys 
 support, which I believe is in the Philippines.
 
 Dealing with one offshore ATT billing representative who was clearly a 
 non-English speaker was extremely painful.  The latency and nonsense of 
 the person's responses suggested either some type of auto-translator or 
 satellite link, or both.  The person 

Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-26 Thread Jay Hennigan

Joe Greco wrote:


Sure.  Blaming off-shore tech support is pretty easy stuff, but the
reality is that the trouble is more along the line of appropriate
training.


But, the reason that US-based $TELCO and $CABLECO use off-shore tech 
support is that they don't want to pay for the training and supervision 
to do it right in-house.  The same person diagnosing your IP routing 
issues may indeed be asking, Would you like fries with that? thirty 
seconds later. [1] And, for purposes of, Would you like fries with 
that?, off-shore is good enough that most customers can't tell, nor do 
they care.  It may often be better than a newbie local ten feet from 
you.  It's the ultimate scripted application, a literal menu.  People 
expect half-duplex-low-fi audio when talking to a tin speaker buried 
inside of a plastic clown.  ;-)



Some discussion suggested that the RR people were highly script-oriented
and not necessarily capable of complicated problem solving. 


And they are afraid to admit (or don't realize) that they are not 
capable of complicated problem solving.  They're following a script, 
just like the fast food order-takers.  Or maybe they don't have the 
authority to escalate it to someone with clue, even if/when they do 
realize they're over their heads.



It appears
that the TWC Business tier 1 people actually have a fair amount of
technical training and clue, and resources to tap if that's not good
enough.  Further, he was bright enough to let me know that they had a
better than turbo package available with a higher upstream speed, for
only a little more, that'd make me a business customer, so I'd never have
to deal with Road Runner again.  Based on this one experience, we were
more than happy to sign an annual contract and pay just $10/mo more, and
have direct access to people who know what words like DHCP and route
actually mean.

I did ask, and all the local people are, in fact, local.  It's a matter 
of training and technical knowledge.  None of them was really putting 
together the fact that the modem was sketchy for the service class we

had.


So, regardless of geographic location, using scripted clueless 
order-takers without the ability to escalate for customer support is a 
bad thing.  And, scripted clueless order-takers exist solely because 
they're cheap, not because they provide anything remotely resembling 
good service.  Cheap, from a US-centric perspective, generally means 
offshore.


The interesting thing about your experience is that your service 
problems resulted in an up-sell, but only because you were persistent 
enough to fight through the system.  Furthermore, it took a person with 
clue to do the up-sell.  How many customers and up-sell opportunities 
does RR lose because of their decision to go with cheap, scripted, 
clueless off-shore support?



My point is that you not only need the language skills and a good phone
connection, but also a reasonable process to deal with knowledgeable 
people.  I understand the need to provide scripted support, but there 
should also be a reasonable path to determine that someone has an 
exceptional problem and isn't being well-served by the script.


Precisely.  Or for better service have reasonably clueful people at 
level 1 so that they can quickly and expeditiously deal with the easy 
problems that could be scripted.


The scripted part could (and often is) being done with IVR, no humans at 
all.  But, please, if you do this, use DTMF menus and not that God-awful 
worthless Tell-me speech-guessing machine.  And make sure that every 
menu has a 0-to-human-being option.



[1] http://broncocommunications.com/
--
Jay Hennigan - CCIE #7880 - Network Engineering - j...@impulse.net
Impulse Internet Service  -  http://www.impulse.net/
Your local telephone and internet company - 805 884-6323 - WB6RDV



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-26 Thread Joe Greco
 Joe Greco wrote:
  Sure.  Blaming off-shore tech support is pretty easy stuff, but the
  reality is that the trouble is more along the line of appropriate
  training.
 
 But, the reason that US-based $TELCO and $CABLECO use off-shore tech 
 support is that they don't want to pay for the training and supervision 
 to do it right in-house. 

Jay, that's an interesting misstatement.  It implies that they're going to
be paying a lesser rate to do it right somewhere else, which typically does
not seem to be what happens.

 The same person diagnosing your IP routing 
 issues may indeed be asking, Would you like fries with that? thirty 
 seconds later. [1] 

Does Bronco actually do that?  :-)

 And, for purposes of, Would you like fries with 
 that?, off-shore is good enough that most customers can't tell, nor do 
 they care.  It may often be better than a newbie local ten feet from 
 you.  It's the ultimate scripted application, a literal menu.  People 
 expect half-duplex-low-fi audio when talking to a tin speaker buried 
 inside of a plastic clown.  ;-)

Right.

  Some discussion suggested that the RR people were highly script-oriented
  and not necessarily capable of complicated problem solving. 
 
 And they are afraid to admit (or don't realize) that they are not 
 capable of complicated problem solving.  They're following a script, 
 just like the fast food order-takers. 

Don't-realize.  The number of times I've been talked down to by people who
don't have any clue what the 4 in IPv4 means is depressingly high.  I
do not need to reboot my Windows PC to know that the DHCP answer my UNIX
box is getting from the DHCP server, dumped in gory detail, is providing an 
IP address in a prefix that's not appearing in the global routing table now.

 Or maybe they don't have the 
 authority to escalate it to someone with clue, even if/when they do 
 realize they're over their heads.

That's definitely a problem.

  It appears
  that the TWC Business tier 1 people actually have a fair amount of
  technical training and clue, and resources to tap if that's not good
  enough.  Further, he was bright enough to let me know that they had a
  better than turbo package available with a higher upstream speed, for
  only a little more, that'd make me a business customer, so I'd never have
  to deal with Road Runner again.  Based on this one experience, we were
  more than happy to sign an annual contract and pay just $10/mo more, and
  have direct access to people who know what words like DHCP and route
  actually mean.
  
  I did ask, and all the local people are, in fact, local.  It's a matter 
  of training and technical knowledge.  None of them was really putting 
  together the fact that the modem was sketchy for the service class we
  had.
 
 So, regardless of geographic location, using scripted clueless 
 order-takers without the ability to escalate for customer support is a 
 bad thing.  And, scripted clueless order-takers exist solely because 
 they're cheap, not because they provide anything remotely resembling 
 good service.  Cheap, from a US-centric perspective, generally means 
 offshore.
 
 The interesting thing about your experience is that your service 
 problems resulted in an up-sell, but only because you were persistent 
 enough to fight through the system. 

Plausible interpretation, but not really accurate.  An upsell would
normally be convincing someone to buy something that they would not
otherwise have thought to be useful; is it really an upsell when
you fail to advertise your new service offerings on your web site, 
and so leave your potential business customers with the impression 
that the only offerings you have are the same in-excess-of-T1 prices
that you offered last time they talked to you?

Come to think of it, I just looked and I still can't find any solid
information about the plan we've got.  I *think* it's some variation
on the teleworker package.  There's a home business solution pkg
for $100/mo that includes 15M/2M broadband, but we're paying less
than that...

 Furthermore, it took a person with 
 clue to do the up-sell.  How many customers and up-sell opportunities 
 does RR lose because of their decision to go with cheap, scripted, 
 clueless off-shore support?

... or in this case, cheap, scripted, clueless in-house support ...

The thing that is really unfortunate is that I had told the agent at the
time we went to Turbo that I was primarily interested in upstream speed.

  My point is that you not only need the language skills and a good phone
  connection, but also a reasonable process to deal with knowledgeable 
  people.  I understand the need to provide scripted support, but there 
  should also be a reasonable path to determine that someone has an 
  exceptional problem and isn't being well-served by the script.
 
 Precisely.  Or for better service have reasonably clueful people at 
 level 1 so that they can quickly and expeditiously deal with the easy 
 problems that could 

Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-26 Thread david raistrick

On Sat, 27 Dec 2008, JF Mezei wrote:


The problem with oursourced first level support is that they are totally
disconnected from real time operations and wouldn't be aware of problems
that network engineers are currently working on.


Not always true.  Our outsourced support in India were also our first 
layer of network troubleshooting, and they monitored everything related to 
the products they supported.They were almost always the first to call 
the engineers (in .us and .ca) to alert them of issues.


It's all about /what/ you hire them to do.


...david

---
david raistrickhttp://www.netmeister.org/news/learn2quote.html
dr...@icantclick.org http://www.expita.com/nomime.html




Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-25 Thread Tom Hutton
I believe they are using SBC and Verizon's dslams and just have an ATM
cloud that touches their routers.  Still,  I see better throughput
from them than I did from SBC.   When I had my own RLAN (private DSL
network on SBC dslams)  I actually got great bandwidth.



On Wed, Dec 24, 2008 at 10:36 AM,  chaim.rie...@gmail.com wrote:
 Actually the resell sbc primarily.


 Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

 -Original Message-
 From: Matthew Black bl...@csulb.edu

 Date: Wed, 24 Dec 2008 10:31:42
 To: Etaoin Shrdlushr...@deaddrop.org; nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support


 On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 10:10:33 -0800
  Etaoin Shrdlu shr...@deaddrop.org wrote:
 Matthew Black wrote:

 On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:51:41 -0800
  Tomas L. Byrnes t...@byrneit.net wrote:

 Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are
 actually LOCAL.

 In Verizon land, residential customers do not have
 CLEC voice or DSL alternatives. We do not have Cox.
 Our area is served by Charter Communications who has
 the broadband cable monopoly. Verizon has the fiber
 monopoly with their FIOS. ATT fiber is not possible
 in Verizon land. Nobody competes against Verizon for
 residential service in Southern California.

 Sir, both COVAD and DSLExtreme beg to differ. Seriously. I just checked.

 --
 The histories of mankind are histories only of the higher classes.

 Thomas Malthus


 Going through COVAD's interactive DSL chooser,
 there are no options for RESIDENTIAL service.

 http://covad.com/web/index.html


 DSLextreme is charging a higher price than Verizon
 and I suspect they are simply reselling Verizon's
 DSL rather than connecting my copper to their
 network. That's hardly what I consider CLEC service.
 I could be wrong and would switch if I could. But I
 don't see them offering voice and that's why I conclude
 they are reselling Verizon's DSL service.

 matthew black
 california state university, long beach





Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-25 Thread William Warren

Matthew Black wrote:

On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 10:10:33 -0800
 Etaoin Shrdlu shr...@deaddrop.org wrote:

Matthew Black wrote:


On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:51:41 -0800
 Tomas L. Byrnes t...@byrneit.net wrote:


Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are
actually LOCAL.



In Verizon land, residential customers do not have
CLEC voice or DSL alternatives. We do not have Cox.
Our area is served by Charter Communications who has
the broadband cable monopoly. Verizon has the fiber
monopoly with their FIOS. ATT fiber is not possible
in Verizon land. Nobody competes against Verizon for
residential service in Southern California.


Sir, both COVAD and DSLExtreme beg to differ. Seriously. I just checked.

--
The histories of mankind are histories only of the higher classes.

Thomas Malthus



Going through COVAD's interactive DSL chooser,
there are no options for RESIDENTIAL service.

http://covad.com/web/index.html


DSLextreme is charging a higher price than Verizon
and I suspect they are simply reselling Verizon's
DSL rather than connecting my copper to their
network. That's hardly what I consider CLEC service.
I could be wrong and would switch if I could. But I
don't see them offering voice and that's why I conclude
they are reselling Verizon's DSL service.

matthew black
california state university, long beach


voice on landline?  drop it..go cellular.  I'm totally verizon free.  
Comcast does my internet and tv and sprint does my three business lines.




Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-25 Thread Ben Scott
On Wed, Dec 24, 2008 at 1:31 PM, Matthew Black bl...@csulb.edu wrote:
 Going through COVAD's interactive DSL chooser,
 there are no options for RESIDENTIAL service.

  So choose business.  In the world of mass-market ISPs,
residential means end-user without clue who cares only about price,
not service.  You actually want business.

  Yes, you will pay more.  You've established that you don't like the
service level you receive at the rate you are currently paying.

 DSLextreme is charging a higher price than Verizon
 and I suspect they are simply reselling Verizon's
 DSL ...

  If their customer service/tech support is better, why do you care
how they get the packets to your equipment?

 I don't see them offering voice and that's why I conclude
 they are reselling Verizon's DSL service.

  Pure speculation on my part, but maybe they just aren't interested
in the voice market.

-- Ben



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-25 Thread Martin Hannigan
On Wed, Dec 24, 2008 at 12:43 PM, Jay Hennigan j...@west.net wrote:

 Matthew Black wrote:

 I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
 at my DSL provider Verizon California.


 Switch to a local ISP with local tech support.




Hi Jay:

Is there really anything wrong with sending first-level technical support
offshore?

Macs are macs, Windows is windows and mail is mail whether you're in Mumbai
or Memphis. As long as the language skills are good and the people are well
trained, it should be mostly irrelevant, IMHO.

Happy Holidays,

-M


Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-25 Thread Simon Lockhart
On Thu Dec 25, 2008 at 04:54:37PM -0500, Martin Hannigan wrote:
 As long as the language skills are good [...]

Because, generally, this is not the case.

Oh, and when there's 3 fibre cuts between you and India, and your voice gets 
shrunk to a 9kbps VoIP channel, it's doubly bad.

Simon



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-25 Thread Jay Hennigan

Martin Hannigan wrote:


Hi Jay:

Is there really anything wrong with sending first-level technical 
support offshore?


Macs are macs, Windows is windows and mail is mail whether you're in 
Mumbai or Memphis. As long as the language skills are good and the 
people are well trained, it should be mostly irrelevant, IMHO.


In and of itself and setting aside patriotic/nationalistic issues, 
probably not, assuming adequate technical and product knowledge and 
language skills.  I suppose that it would be possible that if it were 
done well enough one wouldn't be able to tell.


However, there is something about dealing with a local company that adds 
value.  People seem to care more about their community and neighbors 
than a random, barely understandable voice on a G.729 8k codec at the 
other end of a satellite link.


I have generally found dealing with most offshore tech support to be 
very frustrating.  The language issues are burdensome, some accents so 
thick as to be barely understandable, and the lack of clue and scripted 
menu-driven responses are obvious and usually of no value.  I wouldn't 
be calling if the problem could be solved by reading the documentation 
and some judicious web searching.  There are some exceptions, including 
Cisco TAC which is very good.  I've talked to Cisco engineers in 
Australia and Europe on occasion.  I've had mixed results with Linksys 
support, which I believe is in the Philippines.


Dealing with one offshore ATT billing representative who was clearly a 
non-English speaker was extremely painful.  The latency and nonsense of 
the person's responses suggested either some type of auto-translator or 
satellite link, or both.  The person wasn't capable of getting the hint 
when I asked after several minutes of frustration what the A in ATT 
stood for, and in fact claimed to have no idea.  I suspect that this 
level of disservice may be deliberate so that people will pay bogus 
charges on bills because the frustration level of disputing them is 
intentionally high.


--
Jay Hennigan - CCIE #7880 - Network Engineering - j...@impulse.net
Impulse Internet Service  -  http://www.impulse.net/
Your local telephone and internet company - 805 884-6323 - WB6RDV



RE: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-25 Thread Frank Bulk - iName.com
I don't think there would be a concern about off-shore support if we
couldn't tell it was off-shore.  That term has all derogatory bias of
describing of persons with foreign accents who are difficult to understand
and provide support for consumer-oriented products but have the most
rudimentary knowledge of the product and how to support/fix it.

I had a most positive experience on a weekend a few months ago when I
received support from Microsoft technician who was working on the other side
of the world, and although was difficult to understand (I had to ask him to
repeat himself two or three times on many occasions), knew the product and
helped me out of a tight spot.  I've had similar positive experiences
working with Motorola personnel out of Australia, and Cisco personnel out of
Belgium, the Middle East, and Australia. 

Frank

-Original Message-
From: Martin Hannigan [mailto:mar...@theicelandguy.com] 
Sent: Thursday, December 25, 2008 3:55 PM
To: Jay Hennigan
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

On Wed, Dec 24, 2008 at 12:43 PM, Jay Hennigan j...@west.net wrote:

 Matthew Black wrote:

 I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
 at my DSL provider Verizon California.


 Switch to a local ISP with local tech support.

Hi Jay:

Is there really anything wrong with sending first-level technical support
offshore?

Macs are macs, Windows is windows and mail is mail whether you're in Mumbai
or Memphis. As long as the language skills are good and the people are well
trained, it should be mostly irrelevant, IMHO.

Happy Holidays,

-M




Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-25 Thread Martin Hannigan
On Thu, Dec 25, 2008 at 6:00 PM, Frank Bulk - iName.com
frnk...@iname.comwrote:

 I don't think there would be a concern about off-shore support if we
 couldn't tell it was off-shore.


You can't tell most of the time.

The point that is relevant operationally is that off shoring can be a solid
method to help significantly reduce costs. It can work easier for some
functions than others. Level 1/Tier1 support seems like an excellent
candidate for off shoring and I think that the measure is still quality of
service from the provider verses if they off shore or not.

Just my humble opinion.


Happy Holidays!

-M


Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-25 Thread Mark Foster



On Fri, 26 Dec 2008, Martin Hannigan wrote:


On Thu, Dec 25, 2008 at 6:00 PM, Frank Bulk - iName.com
frnk...@iname.comwrote:


I don't think there would be a concern about off-shore support if we
couldn't tell it was off-shore.



You can't tell most of the time.

The point that is relevant operationally is that off shoring can be a solid
method to help significantly reduce costs. It can work easier for some
functions than others. Level 1/Tier1 support seems like an excellent
candidate for off shoring and I think that the measure is still quality of
service from the provider verses if they off shore or not.

Just my humble opinion.



Hi Martin,
Seemingly a rational viewpoint (what, on NANOG? Surely not!) but the 
problem with the gradual depletion of Level/Tier 1 support environments in 
your home country is the (eventual) gradual depletion of expertise 
available to the higher levels.


A hellovalot of the clueful engineers that i've come to know over the past 
few years are people who started off on Helpdesks, and moved up the tiers, 
to finally land in NOC type slots and from there to engineering and 
design, perhaps skipping some or all of the 'tiers'... but you've gotta 
start somewhere.


Aside from the typical Degree or Diploma that tertiary outfits offer, 
there's not a lot of good ways to 'break in' to the Network and Systems 
Operations communities other than good ol experience, 
working-from-the-bottom-up.


So as you move your Tier 1's offshore, you cut off the channel by which 
people can gain experience and move on up the chain...


(The issues around the advantages from a cultural sense of having access 
to people who actually know your environs, current events, etc, are 
probably far more obvious..)


Could offshoring be considered a 'short term fix' and be hindering our 
ability to employ clooful operators in a few years time? (else, are we 
limiting ourselves to employing immigrants from 'offshore locations' 
because we don't locally build the right experience?)


Mark.



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Jay Hennigan

Matthew Black wrote:

I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
at my DSL provider Verizon California.


Switch to a local ISP with local tech support.

--
Jay Hennigan - CCIE #7880 - Network Engineering - j...@impulse.net
Impulse Internet Service  -  http://www.impulse.net/
Your local telephone and internet company - 805 884-6323 - WB6RDV



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread chaim . rieger
In socal switch to dslextreme


--Original Message--
From: Jay Hennigan
To: Matthew Black
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support
Sent: Dec 24, 2008 09:43

Matthew Black wrote:
 I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
 at my DSL provider Verizon California.

Switch to a local ISP with local tech support.

--
Jay Hennigan - CCIE #7880 - Network Engineering - j...@impulse.net
Impulse Internet Service  -  http://www.impulse.net/
Your local telephone and internet company - 805 884-6323 - WB6RDV



Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Randy Bush

On 08.12.24 12:43, Jay Hennigan wrote:

Matthew Black wrote:

I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
at my DSL provider Verizon California.

Switch to a local ISP with local tech support.


bingo.

i have multiple offices.  in each case, i buy layers one and two from 
the copper/fiber monopoly and layer three from local folk with clue and 
caring: lavanet (hawai`i), infinitiy internet (pnw), and iij (tokyo, and 
yes i work for iij).


local packet pushers with clue are not only better at layer three 
support and delivery, but they carry more weight with the hellco to get 
your layer one and two problem fixed.


randy



RE: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Tomas L. Byrnes
Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are
actually LOCAL.

Their TS staff are responsive and courteous. I only wish their network
were more reliable. (They're better than SBC in my experience, however.)



-Original Message-
From: chaim.rie...@gmail.com [mailto:chaim.rie...@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, December 24, 2008 9:47 AM
To: Jay Hennigan; Matthew Black
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

In socal switch to dslextreme


--Original Message--
From: Jay Hennigan
To: Matthew Black
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support
Sent: Dec 24, 2008 09:43

Matthew Black wrote:
 I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
 at my DSL provider Verizon California.

Switch to a local ISP with local tech support.

--
Jay Hennigan - CCIE #7880 - Network Engineering - j...@impulse.net
Impulse Internet Service  -  http://www.impulse.net/
Your local telephone and internet company - 805 884-6323 - WB6RDV



Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile




Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Etaoin Shrdlu

Randy Bush wrote:


On 08.12.24 12:43, Jay Hennigan wrote:


Matthew Black wrote:


I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
at my DSL provider Verizon California.


Switch to a local ISP with local tech support.



bingo.


Uh, ditto? Having left SoCal a couple of years ago, my data is a bit 
stale. However, I happily used XO+Covad in three separate locations (in 
SoCal). DSLExtreme also has (or at least had) a good reputation. Verizon 
sucks. In fact, since you are in the Long Beach area, they suck even 
more than they do other places. Vote with your feet.


--
The histories of mankind are histories only of the higher classes.

Thomas Malthus



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Matthew Black

On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:51:41 -0800
 Tomas L. Byrnes t...@byrneit.net wrote:

Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are
actually LOCAL.

Their TS staff are responsive and courteous. I only wish their network
were more reliable. (They're better than SBC in my experience, however.)



In Verizon land, residential customers do not have
CLEC voice or DSL alternatives. We do not have Cox.
Our area is served by Charter Communications who has
the broadband cable monopoly. Verizon has the fiber
monopoly with their FIOS. ATT fiber is not possible
in Verizon land. Nobody competes against Verizon for
residential service in Southern California. However,
Charter cable customers can get dial tone and data
services.

matthew black
e-mail postmaster

bargaining unit 9 representative
csueu chapter 315

network services BH-188
california state university, long beach
1250 bellflower boulevard
long beach, ca  90840-0101

work phone: 562-985-5144



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread S. Ryan
Much easier said than done.  Verizon has a small territory within 
Qwest's 14 state region -- it's in Grants Pass, Oregon.


No local ISP partners with Verizon because it's hideously expensive and 
obviously not enough of a demand or even a big enough service area for 
an ISP to partner with VZ.


Not sure where Mr. Black is from but he's probably in the same boat.

Regards,

Steve

Jay Hennigan wroteth on 12/24/2008 9:43 AM:

Matthew Black wrote:

I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
at my DSL provider Verizon California.


Switch to a local ISP with local tech support.

--
Jay Hennigan - CCIE #7880 - Network Engineering - j...@impulse.net
Impulse Internet Service  -  http://www.impulse.net/
Your local telephone and internet company - 805 884-6323 - WB6RDV






Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Etaoin Shrdlu

Matthew Black wrote:


On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:51:41 -0800
 Tomas L. Byrnes t...@byrneit.net wrote:


Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are
actually LOCAL.



In Verizon land, residential customers do not have
CLEC voice or DSL alternatives. We do not have Cox.
Our area is served by Charter Communications who has
the broadband cable monopoly. Verizon has the fiber
monopoly with their FIOS. ATT fiber is not possible
in Verizon land. Nobody competes against Verizon for
residential service in Southern California.


Sir, both COVAD and DSLExtreme beg to differ. Seriously. I just checked.

--
The histories of mankind are histories only of the higher classes.

Thomas Malthus



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Matthew Black

On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 10:10:33 -0800
 Etaoin Shrdlu shr...@deaddrop.org wrote:

Matthew Black wrote:


On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:51:41 -0800
 Tomas L. Byrnes t...@byrneit.net wrote:


Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are
actually LOCAL.



In Verizon land, residential customers do not have
CLEC voice or DSL alternatives. We do not have Cox.
Our area is served by Charter Communications who has
the broadband cable monopoly. Verizon has the fiber
monopoly with their FIOS. ATT fiber is not possible
in Verizon land. Nobody competes against Verizon for
residential service in Southern California.


Sir, both COVAD and DSLExtreme beg to differ. Seriously. I just checked.

--
The histories of mankind are histories only of the higher classes.

Thomas Malthus



Going through COVAD's interactive DSL chooser,
there are no options for RESIDENTIAL service.

http://covad.com/web/index.html


DSLextreme is charging a higher price than Verizon
and I suspect they are simply reselling Verizon's
DSL rather than connecting my copper to their
network. That's hardly what I consider CLEC service.
I could be wrong and would switch if I could. But I
don't see them offering voice and that's why I conclude
they are reselling Verizon's DSL service.

matthew black
california state university, long beach



RE: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Michael K. Smith - Adhost


 -Original Message-
 From: Matthew Black [mailto:bl...@csulb.edu]
 Sent: Wednesday, December 24, 2008 10:32 AM
 To: Etaoin Shrdlu; nanog@nanog.org
 Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support
 
 On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 10:10:33 -0800
   Etaoin Shrdlu shr...@deaddrop.org wrote:
  Matthew Black wrote:
 
  On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:51:41 -0800
   Tomas L. Byrnes t...@byrneit.net wrote:
 
  Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are
  actually LOCAL.
 
  In Verizon land, residential customers do not have
  CLEC voice or DSL alternatives. We do not have Cox.
  Our area is served by Charter Communications who has
  the broadband cable monopoly. Verizon has the fiber
  monopoly with their FIOS. ATT fiber is not possible
  in Verizon land. Nobody competes against Verizon for
  residential service in Southern California.
 
  Sir, both COVAD and DSLExtreme beg to differ. Seriously. I just checked.
 
  --
  The histories of mankind are histories only of the higher classes.
 
  Thomas Malthus
 
 
 Going through COVAD's interactive DSL chooser,
 there are no options for RESIDENTIAL service.
 
 http://covad.com/web/index.html
 
 
 DSLextreme is charging a higher price than Verizon
 and I suspect they are simply reselling Verizon's
 DSL rather than connecting my copper to their
 network. That's hardly what I consider CLEC service.
 I could be wrong and would switch if I could. But I
 don't see them offering voice and that's why I conclude
 they are reselling Verizon's DSL service.
 
 matthew black
 california state university, long beach

They are probably using Verizon for the local loop, but they also hopefully 
have their own DSLAM's and Layer 3 network to transport your data.  That would 
be a good question to ask them.  It sounds like you have a price/quality issue 
going on.  Do you want to pay a little more for better service?  If price is 
your main qualifier then you may be stuck vis a vis quality.

Mike


PGP.sig
Description: PGP signature


Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread chaim . rieger
Actually the resell sbc primarily.


Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile

-Original Message-
From: Matthew Black bl...@csulb.edu

Date: Wed, 24 Dec 2008 10:31:42 
To: Etaoin Shrdlushr...@deaddrop.org; nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support


On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 10:10:33 -0800
  Etaoin Shrdlu shr...@deaddrop.org wrote:
 Matthew Black wrote:
 
 On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:51:41 -0800
  Tomas L. Byrnes t...@byrneit.net wrote:
 
 Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are
 actually LOCAL.
 
 In Verizon land, residential customers do not have
 CLEC voice or DSL alternatives. We do not have Cox.
 Our area is served by Charter Communications who has
 the broadband cable monopoly. Verizon has the fiber
 monopoly with their FIOS. ATT fiber is not possible
 in Verizon land. Nobody competes against Verizon for
 residential service in Southern California.
 
 Sir, both COVAD and DSLExtreme beg to differ. Seriously. I just checked.
 
 -- 
 The histories of mankind are histories only of the higher classes.
 
 Thomas Malthus


Going through COVAD's interactive DSL chooser,
there are no options for RESIDENTIAL service.

http://covad.com/web/index.html


DSLextreme is charging a higher price than Verizon
and I suspect they are simply reselling Verizon's
DSL rather than connecting my copper to their
network. That's hardly what I consider CLEC service.
I could be wrong and would switch if I could. But I
don't see them offering voice and that's why I conclude
they are reselling Verizon's DSL service.

matthew black
california state university, long beach



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread David W. Hankins
On Wed, Dec 24, 2008 at 09:43:20AM -0800, Jay Hennigan wrote:
 Matthew Black wrote:
 I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
 at my DSL provider Verizon California.

 Switch to a local ISP with local tech support.

Actually, and I know this kind of experience is really subjective, but
lately I have been getting better service from residents of India via
web-based chat tools than I have been getting from residents of the US
via telephone.  At the same company.

My impression as a customer is that only one of these two individuals
genuinely wanted to do or keep the job they were given, and desired to
do it well.

That's really what you should be looking for, locality is irrelevant.

-- 
Ash bugud-gul durbatuluk agh burzum-ishi krimpatul.
Why settle for the lesser evil?  https://secure.isc.org/store/t-shirt/
-- 
David W. HankinsIf you don't do it right the first time,
Software Engineeryou'll just have to do it again.
Internet Systems Consortium, Inc.   -- Jack T. Hankins


pgpOyocNFm1nW.pgp
Description: PGP signature


RE: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Tomas L. Byrnes
Sounds like a business opportunity to me.

Given any thought to Sprint EV-DO?


-Original Message-
From: Matthew Black [mailto:bl...@csulb.edu]
Sent: Wednesday, December 24, 2008 10:02 AM
To: Tomas L. Byrnes; chaim.rie...@gmail.com; Jay Hennigan
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:51:41 -0800
  Tomas L. Byrnes t...@byrneit.net wrote:
 Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are
 actually LOCAL.

 Their TS staff are responsive and courteous. I only wish their network
 were more reliable. (They're better than SBC in my experience,
however.)


In Verizon land, residential customers do not have
CLEC voice or DSL alternatives. We do not have Cox.
Our area is served by Charter Communications who has
the broadband cable monopoly. Verizon has the fiber
monopoly with their FIOS. ATT fiber is not possible
in Verizon land. Nobody competes against Verizon for
residential service in Southern California. However,
Charter cable customers can get dial tone and data
services.

matthew black
e-mail postmaster

bargaining unit 9 representative
csueu chapter 315

network services BH-188
california state university, long beach
1250 bellflower boulevard
long beach, ca  90840-0101

work phone: 562-985-5144


RE: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Skywing
The 5GB/month cutoff would be a bit of a damper there...

– S

-Original Message-
From: Tomas L. Byrnes t...@byrneit.net
Sent: Wednesday, December 24, 2008 12:58
To: Matthew Black bl...@csulb.edu; chaim.rie...@gmail.com 
chaim.rie...@gmail.com; Jay Hennigan j...@west.net
Cc: nanog@nanog.org nanog@nanog.org
Subject: RE: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support


Sounds like a business opportunity to me.

Given any thought to Sprint EV-DO?


-Original Message-
From: Matthew Black [mailto:bl...@csulb.edu]
Sent: Wednesday, December 24, 2008 10:02 AM
To: Tomas L. Byrnes; chaim.rie...@gmail.com; Jay Hennigan
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:51:41 -0800
  Tomas L. Byrnes t...@byrneit.net wrote:
 Cox Communications has fully on-shore support. Here in SD they are
 actually LOCAL.

 Their TS staff are responsive and courteous. I only wish their network
 were more reliable. (They're better than SBC in my experience,
however.)


In Verizon land, residential customers do not have
CLEC voice or DSL alternatives. We do not have Cox.
Our area is served by Charter Communications who has
the broadband cable monopoly. Verizon has the fiber
monopoly with their FIOS. ATT fiber is not possible
in Verizon land. Nobody competes against Verizon for
residential service in Southern California. However,
Charter cable customers can get dial tone and data
services.

matthew black
e-mail postmaster

bargaining unit 9 representative
csueu chapter 315

network services BH-188
california state university, long beach
1250 bellflower boulevard
long beach, ca  90840-0101

work phone: 562-985-5144


Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Martin List-Petersen
Tomas L. Byrnes wrote:
 Sounds like a business opportunity to me.
 
 Given any thought to Sprint EV-DO?


You can not seriously consider a 3G technology as broadband replacement.
It is midband at best, especially because there is no control on contention.

Kind regards,
Martin List-Petersen
Airwire
-- 
Airwire - Ag Nascadh Pobal an Iarthar
http://www.airwire.ie
Phone: 091-865 968



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Roy
Etaoin Shrdlu wrote:
 Randy Bush wrote:

 On 08.12.24 12:43, Jay Hennigan wrote:

 Matthew Black wrote:

 I've had difficulties reaching anyone with a brain
 at my DSL provider Verizon California.

 Switch to a local ISP with local tech support.

 bingo.

 Uh, ditto? Having left SoCal a couple of years ago, my data is a bit
 stale. However, I happily used XO+Covad in three separate locations
 (in SoCal). DSLExtreme also has (or at least had) a good reputation.
 Verizon sucks. In fact, since you are in the Long Beach area, they
 suck even more than they do other places. Vote with your feet.

I am pretty sure that COVAD is offshore now



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Etaoin Shrdlu

Roy wrote:


Etaoin Shrdlu wrote:



...However, I happily used XO+Covad in three separate locations
(in SoCal). DSLExtreme also has (or at least had) a good reputation.
Verizon sucks. In fact, since you are in the Long Beach area, they
suck even more than they do other places. Vote with your feet.



I am pretty sure that COVAD is offshore now


Might be, but the quality of customer service was the issue, I believe, 
not just where it was located (at least I hope that wasn't the only 
objection). I think Mr. Black has already made plain that cost is an 
issue, in any case. I used to have the lowest business class they 
provided (even though it was just to my house). Currently, I am the only 
customer for my local ISP with the service level I have, going to a 
residential address. We all spend our $$$ on what's important to us. 
Packets are important to me. I like 'em.


--
Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place.
Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are,
by definition, not smart enough to debug it.
  Brian W. Kernighan



RE: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Tomas L. Byrnes
Hence my positing that there was a business opportunity, for real wireless 
broadband.

He's in Long Beach CA. The Verizon service are in So-Cal is actually many of 
the most affluent communities.

Nollaig Shona Duit!



-Original Message-
From: Martin List-Petersen [mailto:mar...@airwire.ie]
Sent: Wednesday, December 24, 2008 11:06 AM
To: Tomas L. Byrnes
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

Tomas L. Byrnes wrote:
 Sounds like a business opportunity to me.

 Given any thought to Sprint EV-DO?


You can not seriously consider a 3G technology as broadband replacement.
It is midband at best, especially because there is no control on
contention.

Kind regards,
Martin List-Petersen
Airwire
--
Airwire - Ag Nascadh Pobal an Iarthar
http://www.airwire.ie
Phone: 091-865 968


Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Seth Mattinen

Matthew Black wrote:



Going through COVAD's interactive DSL chooser,
there are no options for RESIDENTIAL service.

http://covad.com/web/index.html


DSLextreme is charging a higher price than Verizon
and I suspect they are simply reselling Verizon's
DSL rather than connecting my copper to their
network. That's hardly what I consider CLEC service.
I could be wrong and would switch if I could. But I
don't see them offering voice and that's why I conclude
they are reselling Verizon's DSL service.




You get what you pay for (most of the time).

Most locals do resell the ILEC service. However, they have more access 
to the ILEC than you do (bigger customer and all that), and they take 
over at layer 2. If you think you'll get worse service from a local ISP 
because they aren't a CLEC, you'd be dead wrong.


~Seth



Re: What to do when your ISP off-shores tech support

2008-12-24 Thread Dave Pooser
 Uh, ditto? Having left SoCal a couple of years ago, my data is a bit
 stale. However, I happily used XO+Covad in three separate locations
 (in SoCal). DSLExtreme also has (or at least had) a good reputation.
 Verizon sucks. In fact, since you are in the Long Beach area, they
 suck even more than they do other places. Vote with your feet.
 
 I am pretty sure that COVAD is offshore now

Last time I talked to them the helpdesk people were Canadian. That's for
T1s; I'm not sure if they do DSL support in the same location.
-- 
Dave Pooser, ACSA
Manager of Information Services
Alford Media  http://www.alfordmedia.com