On Wed, 18 Sep 2002 06:22:02 -0400 Alex Chudnovsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > And yes, you may get fully professional support from somebody who > knows both Linux and Windows.
You are probably right that Windows knowledge does not automatically erase ones brain (evidence to the contrary notwithstanding :-), so one can still provide good Linux support alongside Windows -- Assuming he has good Unix/Linux knowledge already! However, to gain any level of knowledge in Unix/Linux someone has to dedicate significant amount of time (and it has to be absorbed over time -- not very compressible). So taking 90% windows people without prior (long) knowledge and make them support Unix/Linux does not work! > I don't believe it's worth for the ISP to keep dedicated Linux support person, for >several reasons : > - Linux users are usually highly literate and may take care of their problems >.... > - There is no reason to keep highly literate person for pretty high salary >.... > Literate person costs a lot of money to train or hire. For the vast majority > of Israeli computer users, "support monkey" is more than enough. Good arguments. Let's start with the last one, because I tend to hear it in many other contexts (Good programmers are expensive, let's throw more "monkeys" at the problem.... "the mythical man-month revisited" :-) What I think is that: - It's important to put "support monkeys" on 1'st level support, to filter and save the precious time of the "gurus". - But if one has an ISP (or any other "high-tech" venture for that matter) than this company must have some "gurus" for its own operations (proof is left as an exercise). So now the problem is -- how to correctly use the "guru" resources we have: - The *internal* support expert can receive Linux support calls (not directly, only through callback through 1'st level support filters). - As you pointed out. Most of these calls would be cluefull enough to help the provider diagnose his problems, so he only gains from this. - If the support load is too high (many calls), than this ISP is big enough to "justify" another support expert... > Unfortunately, THEY would avoid YOU . Your resume just wouldn't pass their > incoming "filter", if it bears no certification. Remember that those are HR > people who do the initial filtering, and not IT people. I know all that too well. That's why all these companies were bringing people via word-of-mount ("Haver Mevi Haver") when they *really* needed them. HR method of selecting people via buzzword-checklists is useless and doesn't bring the right people for the job. So now we have a (temporary) situation of "surplus" in high-tech people (but also the big and costly HR departments are getting shrunk...). Don't let it blur the view -- There aren't so many *good* high-tech people, and when you need one, you don't find them via students lists of MCSE nor RHCE; > It depends. The certification may be very valuable gem for the HR person, who > does the initial CV filtering, and may as well mean nothing for the IT person > who happens to be your manager. Then this IT person let's the HR people make the rules for selecting *his team* I know this is very common. I also know where it leads to... ---------------------------------------------------------------- Oron Peled Voice/Fax: +972-4-8228492 [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.actcom.co.il/~oron "Windows is NOT a virus: a virus is small and efficient." --Jonathan Leffler, Informix
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