> programs. If it were my company I would do what someone else
> mentioned: give a new employee their computer in a box, software on
> diskettes or cd's and then let them put it all together.
Unless your contract/agreement covers such things, I wouldn't touch
it with a ten foot pole. It's a no win deal and I've been burned trying
to be a nice guy.
If there are no problmes with the installation you gain nothing,
except possible the expection to do additional uncompensated work. If
anything goes wrong -- as things tend to do with IE 4.0 -- it's your
fault. There will be finger pointing even if the problem has nothing to
do with your install.
I would simply say, I don't have the authority.
BTW, I disagree with your premise concerning everyone being a
techie. Do you know how to install a new transmission in your car?
The world is divided into two categories. Those who have to know
how things work, not simply that they work, and those who could care
less how they work as long as they work. Peter and I are in the former,
but the majority of people are in the later. God bless them, they keep
food on the table.
Urb, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Visit America's Town Square. Creators of extraordinary Web sites.
http://www.usats.com Build your own Home Page without knowing
any HTML. Many user selectable options. After creation, your page
is e-mailed to you. http://usats.com/homepage
____________________________________________________________________
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Join The Web Consultants Association : Register on our web site Now
Web Consultants Web Site : http://just4u.com/webconsultants
If you lose the instructions All subscription/unsubscribing can be done
directly from our website for all our lists.
---------------------------------------------------------------------