T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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269.1 | NO!!!!!! | POTARU::QUODLING | Money for Nothing, Drinks for Free... | Tue Feb 17 1987 01:29 | 47 |
| > Is there a policy concerning the copying of software distribution kits
> over the E-NET?
Yes there is, Network Kits are issued at the discretion of
the product development group concerned. These groups rely
on sales of their product for their continued livelihood.
A large number of the network kits now appear to have Enet
Kits flags set in them. (Obvious, if you know what to look
for.) If a support or even engineering group is called out
on a problem that is found to be a Enet in customer's hands,
You will see bolts of lightning from MLO12/1.
If you have a situation that required urgent delivery of a
kit. Then 1) Contact SDC Dispatch - they can express a replacement
to you. 2) COntact the product manager concerned for the product,
and get his/her approval for either a netkit or alternative.
> I told the customer that I could get a copy of the kit over the E-NET,
> install it on their machine, and return the tape to the Data Center.
> Then the customer and Sales could work out the problem of finding their
> actual copy.
That was magnamimous of you, you have no authority to do that.
Let me describe for you two scenarios. 1) customer is given
non-SDC enet kit. Paper work has Not yet been processed. Customer
withdraws paperwork, keeps software. Digital having 'given'
software to one customer is obliged legally to give it to all
others. Scrap revenue for a major engineering group.
2) Customer receives non-SDC kit from SW Spec. Turns out kit
is not SDC level code. FT S/W Bug causes Customer to lose
business. Customer sues digital (and wins) (This has already
happened once that I am aware of).
In summmary, a) you have no right to give S/W to customer,
b) you threaten Digital's legal standing with regard to ownership
of that S/W, c) you establish a precedent that the customer
knows he can get 'fast' S/W delivery, d) You threaten the
availability of Network Kits for the rest of the Enet community
(and believe me, they are important when you are 12,000 miles
plus from the SDC, like me.
q
|
269.2 | Haven't seen any public terminals in shopping malls yet so... | APOLLO::CASSIDY | How 'bout that stock price, huh? | Tue Feb 17 1987 09:18 | 1 |
| One other nit. THERE ARE NO PUBLICLY ACCESSIBLE NOTES FILES.
|
269.3 | | ULTRA::PRIBORSKY | Tony Priborsky | Tue Feb 17 1987 09:19 | 6 |
| Interesting, the customer is telling you about the resources available
to you...
At least one kit has been withdrawn from network distribution just
because of this. Please don't do it. Follow the channels for
acquiring a replacement kit.
|
269.4 | clarification | MSDSWS::DANTONI | Gaitan D'Antoni | Tue Feb 17 1987 10:41 | 38 |
|
.1 > Customer withdraws paperwork, keeps software.
At this stage there is no paperwork to be withdrawn. All paperwork has
been processed and the customer has taken delivery of the product.
.2 > One other nit. THERE ARE NO PUBLICLY ACCESSIBLE NOTES FILES.
Publicly in the sense of the general E-NET community, i.e. announced in
the EASYNET_CONFERENCES NOTES file, listed in the EASYNOTES.LIS
directory listing file, and not limited to members only.
.3 > Interesting, the customer is telling you about the resources available
to you...
I'm not sure what is meant by this. The customer is not telling me
about the resources available to me.
I can appreciate the concern about non-SDC kits. I know that certain
kits are FT kits and are marked as such and I don't even discuss these
with customers. I was under the assumption, wrongly now I see, that the
other kits were the same ones that go to SDC. In this particular
situation I am on a residency at this customer site so I will be
working with the software daily and should be able to handle any
problems with the software, i.e. removing it if it doesn't work.
I don't make it a habit of getting kits off the E-NET for customers, I
only use this as a last resort when other avenues have been exhausted.
This particular customer situation involves problems related to those
other avenues which I won't go into here since they aren't pertinent to
this discussion.
My biggest problem was my lack of knowledge about the policy. Now I
know how it all works.
Thanks,
Gaitan
|
269.5 | Another approach | IE0002::BEELER | | Wed Feb 18 1987 18:20 | 30 |
| Some additional information, all kits marked SDC release may not
be (as previously noted) be in just the right format for installation
by the field or customer. The VMS 4.4. kit comes to mind physical
save sets for the floppy distribution and getting a patched copy
of loginout for the N user license key.
Having worked for both the regional tbu's and SDC here is what you
might do:
1) if the office is very remote to any other (larger) dec office
get someone in your group to be listed in the automatic
distribution service for high demand software (VMS,LAT and whatever
popular compilers that you support.
2) If it is a product that is not available locally call TSC and
have them work the issue for you.
3) If they cannot handle the request in a reasonable time AS A
LAST RESORT, call the SDC order administration group in WMO
and supply them with all the right part/order information and
they may be able to do somthing.
For the last however your manager shold be involved...
The general rule of thumb
{E-NET KITS ARE FOR INTERNAL USE ONLY}
|
269.6 | The wrong question was asked. | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Pat Sweeney | Wed Feb 18 1987 23:11 | 29 |
| Please refrain from calling proprietary information or private property
of Digital Equipment Corporation "public". When you mean "limited to
the use of Digital employees" use those words. Use "public" specifically
to refer to things in which Digital has no ownership interest.
The only "policy" that's relevant here is how does Digital fulfill
a purchase order for a software product.
If _any_ aspect of the order, hardware or software, isn't properly
delivered, it is a SALES responsibility to "make good delivery". The
manner in which they do this is through their customer administration
contacts who will track the thing all the way through to the SDC.
Each person who manages internal systems ought to have SDC media
and documentation regardless of what group they belong to.
Field Service is responsible in the United States for software
installations. Each field service person installing software ought
to have as a resource SDC media and documentation.
Software Services, with respect to customers, has no role in getting
in between all these other organizations with the funding, charter,
responsibility, etc. for software order fulfillment. Local Software
Services management ought to support their local people by giving
them subscriptions to media and documentation from the SDC through
ADS (Automatic Distribution System).
What does all this have to do with E-NET kits? You tell me. I
thought we were trying to fill the customer's order.
|
269.7 | | MSDSWS::DANTONI | Gaitan D'Antoni | Thu Feb 19 1987 00:34 | 35 |
| RE: All of the above.
This particular situation doesn't really relate to filling an order.
The order has been accepted, filled, delivered, received, etc. The
real problem deals with a misplaced box of software. As I stated
before, we in Digital all believe that the software was shipped.
The system manager even believes that the software was received.
The problem lies in the fact that two items were received, hardware
and software, and only one, hardware, was delivered to his computer room.
Sales is working this problem with the customer and our order
processing people. Apparently this has happened before and something
is now being done about the customer misplacing equipment once it
is received. I have been asked to get another copy of the software
while sales, order processing, and the customer's receiving department
decide how they will resolve the problem of the missing software.
I would love to walk into our software library and get a copy of
the software which we've received through ADS. I would love to go
in there and get a copy of the SPM manual when I go out to a customer
site charging $115/hr to install and run SPM. However, someone else
has determined that it is more cost effective to have a secretary
in a district office make XEROX copies of the manual while I loose
two days waiting for the copies than it is to spend the money for
ADS or any other tools I need to do my job.
I understand and accept all the proper ways of getting software,
but this was one case where I needed something in a hurry. I didn't
completely understand the policy an falsely thought that E-NET kits
could be used in this circumstance. I have requested that my manager
perform the necessary tasks to have the software shipped to me.
I am now waiting for the mailman. In the meantime, the customer
asks me each day about his software and the Customer Satisfaction
Surveys come out in about a month.
Gaitan
|
269.8 | getting software used by the SWS | BEES::SCHLIESMANN | One in a Mill | Thu Feb 19 1987 08:16 | 12 |
| Do YOU need the software to do your job at the customer site?
I may be wrong (and please correct me if I am), but if you need
the software to fullfill your commitment to the customer, you
could get the software and install it yourself... provided that
you remove it from their machine when you are done. In your case,
they would probably have the kit by then. I worked at a customer
site for a year, and we installed CMS and MMS to serve our pur-
poses while writing software for the customer. Once we were done
writing the software, we deleted the products. Also, I believe
we installed FMS during software development, contingent upon the
fact that the customer would purchase it before using the software
we created.
|
269.9 | | HYDRA::ECKERT | Jerry Eckert | Thu Feb 19 1987 08:51 | 9 |
| re: .8
What measures did you take to prevent the customer from using the
software themselves or copying it while it was installed on their
system? I'm not a lawyer, but it sounds like what you did was,
at best, very risky unless their was a written agreement describing
what the "temporary" software could, and could not, be used for.
- Jerry
|
269.10 | A customer machine is a customer machine is a... | THE780::FARLEE | So many NOTES, so little time... | Thu Feb 19 1987 12:51 | 7 |
|
I am working on-site at a facility owned by a customer. When
trying to get software for my own use, I was told that "if
it will be installed on a customer machine, it must PREVIOUSLY
have been purchased by the customer". A bother when you want to
get something done, but I do see the need to do it in that way.
|
269.11 | Simple solutions | SAHQ::MILBERG | Barry Milberg | Thu Feb 19 1987 14:58 | 22 |
| Two avenues are available to 'bring software on site for use by
Digital personnel:
1. there is a Loan of Products agreement that is signed by the
customer that provides for them to use the products on loan and
protects our rights. This is basically a no-charge temporary license.
2. in the SWS Custom Terms and Conditions, there is a paragraph
covering software tools installed for us by Digital personnel only
for which a license has not been obtained by the customer. The
clause clearly states that they are our property and will be removed
by us when we are done with no copies left, etc.
The Loan of Products form should be readily available in local offices
or from your Area Law group.
If you're doing a project on-site and need software to USE for the
project and then take home, it should be covered in the t's and
c's IF the right ones (FOR A PROJECT) are used.
-Barry-
|
269.12 | Use it, abuse it or lose it? | BEES::SCHLIESMANN | I <ESC> from New York | Fri Feb 20 1987 08:08 | 21 |
| RE: .9
> What measures did you take to prevent the customer from using the
> software themselves or copying it while it was installed on their
> system?
I was not one of the orginal people to work on this site (hence do not know
what paper work was done), but in our case, we were the only people (DEC)
using the machine. Yes, it was a customer machine, but DEC maintained the
machine. The customer did not have ANY access to the machine. They were
simply providing facility for us to develop the project. No software became
theirs until it was released by us. Upon release, we installed it on another
machine for their use. In any case, I didn't think this was the issue.
As the notes since yours state, if you need to use the software for
project development, I thought you could install it, use it and delete it.
As far as copying is concerned, what's preventing people who timeshare our
machines from copying software? What's stopping customer's from buying
1 copy of a product and generating 5 or 6 more copies for other machines?
I would think the same type of legal paper work that states that you can't
make dupes would apply to using software that you didn't buy. You can't
STOP it from being done, but at the same time it would be illegal for them
to do so.
|
269.13 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Feb 20 1987 08:31 | 10 |
| >I would think the same type of legal paper work that states that you can't
>make dupes would apply to using software that you didn't buy.
That's exactly what Barry Milberg said -- and he happens to know what he's
talking about. The key is that the customer has to sign a piece of paper
agreeing to the terms of a free, temporary, no-copy-allowed license.
Do it without paper, and you've screwed up.
/john
|
269.14 | ABSOLUTELY FORBIDDEN | PSW::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Sat Feb 21 1987 19:40 | 18 |
| RE: .0
The policy on E-Net distribution kits is that they are for DEC INTERNAL USE
ONLY.
The ***ONLY*** circumstances under which it is permissible to give a copy of
such a kit to a customer is if you have received permission to do so from the
development organization that made the kit available.
Engineering groups take this very seriously. On any of the projects I have
worked for, if we ever found out that somebody had made a copy of a net kit
and given it to a customer without our permission, we would pursue the issue
until we had that employee's head on a platter.
Don't do it, if for no other reason than your own protection. Should you get
caught, you may find some very angry people doing their best to get you fired.
--PSW
|
269.15 | sounds like the right thing IN THIS CASE | VIKING::FLEISCHER | Bob Fleischer | Thu Feb 26 1987 15:26 | 29 |
| re Note 269.1 by POTARU::QUODLING:
> In summary, a) you have no right to give S/W to customer,
From the description of the case, it's obvious that the software wasn't "given"
-- the customer placed a final order for it and we apparently shipped it. Thus
the customer was licensed.
> c) you establish a precedent that the customer knows he can get 'fast' S/W
> delivery,
It sounds as if this was a case of avoiding especially slow delivery, not
providing fast delivery.
I just finished watching an hour-long video tape by Grace Hopper. She must say
"it is easier to apologize than to get permission" at least 5 times in one form
or another. The tape is introduced by Ken Olsen, so I assume he endorses the
general thrust of the message (Grace says that in almost every forum she has
spoken, so it's nothing unexpected of her).
(Note that she says "easier", not "easy".)
Then there's always "Do the right thing".
It may be anarchy, but it has been successful so far.
Bob
|
269.16 | E-net kits often differ from SDC kits | MLOKAI::MACK | Embrace No Contradictions | Thu Feb 26 1987 17:21 | 33 |
| All matters of protocol and legal safety aside...
E-net kits are often special kits, i.e. an E-net kit made available
by the development group when a product is delivered to SDC may
contain things which are not in the SDC kit, like extras useful
to DEC engineers or commands to send mail to the developer.
They provide these things in the expectation that it will only
be used in-house.
Therefore they shouldn't be treated as if they were identical to the
SDC kits. Even when DEC's legal rights to sell the software aren't in
jeapordy, bringing *these* kits to customers is *never* "the right
thing". It's the wrong kit.
--------
Question: In this specific situation (where the customer already
bought the license), DEC's legal right to sell the software isn't
affected if they provide the kit on a different piece of physical
media, right?
However, if a piece of software is given to one customer without paying
for a license, then *technically, legally* DEC can no longer charge
another customer money for that software. Have I got this right? Or
does it just apply to any customer working on a federal or state
government project (which covers many of them)?
How heavily is this law enforced? (Has a case ever come to court?
What happened?)
Ralph
PS. This topic looks like it's headed for the VIKING::LAWS conference.
|
269.17 | | POTARU::QUODLING | Gak! My Brain is fading! | Thu Feb 26 1987 17:53 | 15 |
| There are special conditions for special circumstances.
If I get a request for software because of a foulup, I instruct
the sales person to get in touch with the SD&D (our local SDC),
If they haven't got it, and I have, I will duplicate a kit
(but only with SD&D approval). I will only duplicate SDC media.
No Net Kits or FT software! If I don't have an SDC Kit, then
a priority order is placed on the SDC, and it should be here
in Australia in less than 10 days. I would hazard a guess,
that by contacting the SDC you can organize Overnight delivery
anywhere in the U.S.
q
|
269.18 | Fastest to fix the real problem | HUMAN::CONKLIN | Peter Conklin | Sun Mar 01 1987 14:22 | 13 |
| From the earlier discussions, the problem here started with the
less-than-perfect handling within the customer's site. Given this,
the best (and most likely) way to solve the problem is to have the
*customer* solve the problem. This will put the pain and hence the
corrective pressures in the right place.
I would assume that this software is important to the project. And
that the project is important to the customer's senior management.
Given the re-occurance of this problem, have the customer elevate
the issue within his own organization. If it really is an important
project, it should only take a few days to get the receiving department
really jumping to find the lost box. And they are unlikely to make
the mistake again!
|
269.19 | | SQM::HALLYB | Are all the good ones taken? | Sun Mar 01 1987 17:16 | 12 |
| Back when I was a customer we got a bad FORTRAN-10 tape from SDC,
and were under time pressure to complete a FORTRAN based project.
So I called up our friendly salesman and asked him if we could install
a kit that our crosstown friends had received. The salesman said
sure, we were a licensed customer and there would be no problem.
That worked just fine.
So if the E-net is out, what about borrowing the kit from another
customer? Does the salesman have authority to grant such permission
under specific circumstances?
John
|
269.20 | | POTARU::QUODLING | Gak! My Brain is fading! | Sun Mar 01 1987 17:21 | 10 |
| re .-1
> Does the salesman have authority to grant such permission
> under specific circumstances?
Of course not, but that never stops them....
q
|
269.21 | Do what is right? | ATPS::MALLORY | VAX SPM Engineering | Mon Mar 02 1987 10:41 | 15 |
| This might be considered a flame... so you may want to "NEXT UNSEEN"
here...
NOTHING will stop sales (especially sales management) when it comes
to solving customer problems (or getting specialists to solve their
probelems). I don't mean to apply this generically to "all" sales
people... Only a "few" that I am personally aquainted with.
It is NOT unusual for Specialists in the field to copy kits across the
net to solve customer problems. I know I used to do it. And *with* the
sanction of management... simply because in the field it can take 2-4
weeks to get some kits from the SDC and sometimes customers couldn't
wait... if they had to wait it would mean loosing $$ to digital... and
in the field it's only the $$ that count... you do what you need to
make the $$ come in...
|
269.22 | ? | NACHO::CONLIFFE | Store in a horizontal position | Mon Mar 02 1987 12:26 | 10 |
| re:< Note 269.21 by ATPS::MALLORY "VAX SPM Engineering" >
| NOTHING will stop sales (especially sales management) when it comes
| to solving customer problems (or getting specialists to solve their
| probelems).
Are you saying that this is a bad thing? or am I misinterpreting your
self-designated "flame"?
Nigel
|
269.23 | The system works if you use it! | USWAV3::GOLDBERG | Len Goldberg | Mon Mar 02 1987 16:46 | 22 |
| <flame on>
The "right" thing to do in a situation like this is let the people
who are supposed to handle it, handle it. You can help by making
the appropriate organizations aware that a problem exists, get the
customer in contact with some one who's job it is to help them.
The Customer Admin groups work hard to get satisfaction for the
customer, but if no one informs them there is a problem, or that
it is critical to the customer there is no way they can help.
We are so used to working around the process at Digital, we never
give the process a chance to work. I have a notebook, as does every
manager in the field called: "US Area Post Delivery Problem Resolution
Process Reference Manual." Your managers should help you find
the way to do things within the system, rather than encourage you
to go around it and potentially get everyone in trouble.
In the case of mis-shipped or bad software kits there is a P1 re-order
process that can be used for by both CAS and SPS admin. As of the
last report I heard on this process about a month ago, SDC had shipped
every P1 request received within 8 hours since the process was put
in place at the end of December.
|
269.24 | | HOMBRE::CONLIFFE | Store in a horizontal position | Tue Mar 03 1987 09:41 | 7 |
| re:.23 applied to my .22
Makes sense. Let's use the system if it works. If it doesn't work,
let's fix it!
Nigel
|
269.25 | Until the system is fixed... | GOBLIN::MCVAY | Pete McVay, VRO Telecom | Tue Mar 03 1987 10:31 | 10 |
| re: .22-.24
I agree, Nigel. If it doesn't work, let's fix it.
In the meantime, I typically use every means at my disposal to get
the job done, if the official version doesn't work.
I can't prove it, but I may be responsible for Grace Hopper's
expression "It is easier to ask for forgiveness than for permission."
The job's more important than the process in most cases.
|
269.26 | | USWAV3::GOLDBERG | Len Goldberg | Tue Mar 03 1987 11:21 | 16 |
| The point I was trying to make in .23 is that, in this case anyway,
the system IS fixed. But if you assume it is broken and don't try
to use it you'll never know.
SDC was confused that what had been touted as such a large problem,
that is the mis-shipment of SW kits, had resulted in such a small
response to their "new" P1 procedure. They were convinced that
once people in the field understood that the system was working
again, the volume would pick up.
I think we are all in agreement here. Do what you need to do for
the customer. But at the same time, you have to put enough heat
into the system to get the problems fixed, otherwise you are just
hiding the problems from anyone who can fix them. Once the problem
is fixed you can get the best, (in this case fastest and legal),
results through the system.
|
269.27 | | ATPS::MALLORY | VAX SPM Engineering | Tue Mar 03 1987 21:58 | 9 |
| IF it's only been in place since December, then that is why I don't
know about it since I left the field in November.
Len: has there been some kind of "update" to the SPS and SWS management
about this? Before I left I saw nothing...
Just wonderin'
Kevin
|
269.28 | | USWAV3::GOLDBERG | Len Goldberg | Wed Mar 04 1987 12:09 | 11 |
| > Has there been some kind of "update" to the SPS and SWS management
> about this? Before I left I saw nothing...
I know SPS management has been infromed about the procedures, required
approvals etc. I doubt SWS got much information since SPS is now
part of Field Service. SWS should know, however, that Field Service
is now responsible.
Perhaps we should move continued discussion of how to handle bad SW
shipments to the Integrated Service Delivery Program
conference: USMRW7::ISD_PROGRAM.
|
269.29 | Ned some more info! | ODIXIE::COLE | Jackson T. Cole | Thu Mar 05 1987 11:47 | 7 |
| Just tried to access the ISD conference and got a "Invalid login
information..." error. Do we need some "username password" stuff in the node
name? Is it restricted?
Or maybe you give a capsule sumary of ISD, as this is the first I have
heard of it. "Integrated Service Delivery" sort of sounds like what we had
before Field Service took the cash cow away from SWS!
|
269.30 | Oops. | USWAV3::GOLDBERG | Len Goldberg | Thu Mar 05 1987 15:05 | 9 |
| Sorry about that, I got the node name wrong. It should be:
USMRW6::ISD_PROGRAM.
^
Part of the ISD Program is the transition of the SPS business, (the
cash cow you refer to), to Field Service. The rest of the program is
involved with improvements to how we service "Systems" rather than
Hardware and Software. More information on the program can be found in
the conference.
|
269.31 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Pat Sweeney | Thu Mar 05 1987 16:49 | 2 |
| Two weeks ago in 269.6 I mentioned that Field Service is responsible,
but who pays attention to what I'm writing anyway?
|
269.35 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Mar 06 1987 13:31 | 6 |
| I'm strongly tempted to start pushing for the Easynet kits to
be identifiable as such. The recognized way of doing so is
an image ident that starts with E instead of V. Maybe this would
reduce the temptation to take network kits and give them to
customers.
Steve
|
269.36 | | POTARU::QUODLING | Nostalgia ain't what it used to be... | Sun Mar 08 1987 02:51 | 8 |
| From my experience, a number of Enet kits are already quite
readily identifiable as such. I can't think of specific
circumstances, but one struck me a few months ago as being
significantly different from an SDC kit.(I think I was checking
out an un-labelled tape at the time...)
q
|
269.37 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Sun Mar 08 1987 18:58 | 33 |
| RE: "doing the right thing" and maximizing $$
In the past, bootleg software kits have lost the corporation a lot
of time, money, future revenue, and customer goodwill. What looks
like a reasonable thing to do to prevent a lost sale right now may
come back to haunt you (or more usually, somebody else and DEC as
a whole) in the future. I know of several cases where the end result
of a bootleg distribution was an incredible maintenance headache
for software services and engineering. There have even been cases
where experimental features enabled on the EasyNet kit got in customer
hands, and generated a lot of ill will when later the customer found
out that the features weren't and never would be available in the SDC
version. The cost to DEC in these cases far exceeded the revenue
that was gained by the original circumvention of normal order
processing.
This is why Engineering is so adamantly against giving EasyNet
kits to customers. Sales is very narrowly focused on the short-term
gain. Engineering and SWS have to live with the long-term loss.
RE: Grace Hopper quote
Yes, sometimes "it's easier to ask for foregiveness later than to ask
permission," but remember that sometimes, forgiveness is not
forthcoming. Giving an EasyNet kit out to customers may wind up
costing you your job or your career future at DEC, if you get caught.
It's certainly one of the best ways I know to assure that the affected
Engineering group never lifts a finger to help you again. Those who
insist on going ahead with giving out EasyNet kits should be aware of
the risk.
--PSW
|
269.38 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Sun Mar 08 1987 19:04 | 13 |
| I should point out that there *IS* one legitimate means for giving an
EasyNet kit to a customer. The Engineering group that made the kit available
has the authority to permit this. If you really are in an emergency situation,
and you're contemplating giving the customer an EasyNet kit, *ASK THE
DEVELOPMENT GROUP FIRST*. The developers know what differences (if any)
exist between the EasyNet kit and the SDC version, and what the long-term
impact of releasing the EasyNet kit to the customer is likely to be. The
development group also generates the master kit from which the SDC manufactures
its copies. Having them make a copy for you and sending it via Federal
Express is also an option. Engineering can be very cooperative, if we're
asked.
--PSW
|
269.39 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Sun Mar 08 1987 19:44 | 13 |
| >The development group also generates the master kit from which the SDC
>manufactures its copies. Having them make a copy for you and sending it
>via Federal Express is also an option. Engineering can be very cooperative,
>if we're asked.
If asked, engineering could even put the save sets for the SDC kit up on the
network so you could copy them rather then Federal Expressing them.
But favors like this should be reserved for *really* critical situations.
Save this sort of request for the true life and death situation so that
engineering doesn't get so many of these requests that they have to be stopped.
/john
|