T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3542.1 | | ICS::CROUCH | Subterranean Dharma Bum | Fri Dec 02 1994 07:01 | 11 |
| Yes, thanks go to Steve and also to others such as Matt Thomas who
I see posting good info in some of the technical groups, i.e.
comp.unix.ultrix, comp.unix.osf.osf1, etc..
I agree with others who have suggested the DELL method where it is
someones job to peruse the newsgroups, put out fires where needed,
point people in the proper direction or answer questions, etc.
Jim C.
|
3542.2 | Here, Here, with roses in spades... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Fri Dec 02 1994 15:45 | 1 |
|
|
3542.3 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | Wicked Wench of the Web | Fri Dec 02 1994 17:20 | 5 |
| So what's your point? Steve has been doing this for years.
I'm glad someone's finally given him a kudo for it. Now
maybe Digital management will see how inportant this kind of
presense can be. Yea, Steve, atta boy.
liesl ( a long time admirer)
|
3542.4 | | NETRIX::thomas | The Code Warrior | Fri Dec 02 1994 19:12 | 15 |
| Not only is no one funded to read USENET, the infrastructure that's supports
USENET internally doesn't even really exist. It's all done on the USENET
newskeeper's own time and energy. USENET server are typically obsolete and
under configured hardware that was idle or borrowed which is running at or
above capacity.
I'd like to see some PTB cough some bucks for some decent servers that
actually handle the load that USENET puts on a system (send me mail if
you want to know what I would configure).
Never ever make the USENET infrastructure a corporate function. That would
kill it.
The current USENET server for ZK is now owned by Oracle. Hopefully, someone
will volunteer to bring another one once it disappears.
|
3542.5 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Dec 02 1994 19:32 | 13 |
| Thanks, Liesl. You're right - I have been doing this for a long
time, and I periodically receive nice "ataboys" such as was in the
base note. My immediate management is very supportive of my work
here, but I think there's the more global issue that more Digital
engineers (and managers) need to follow newsgroups relevant to their
products. We had a discussion of this in an earlier note.
Matt's comments about USENET being a "grass roots" effort is on
target, NOTES started that way and is still pretty much uncontrolled
at the corporate level (goodness!) Unfortunately, USENET servers
require more concentrated resources than do most NOTES servers.
Steve
|
3542.6 | Thanks to others, too !! | WBC::DOERING | Wash BM Center 425-3216 | Fri Dec 02 1994 22:19 | 20 |
|
Re: Couple of phone calls I got.
I believe the UWis issue is a done deal. Seems there was a problem
getting a response from the guy that was complaining. I didn't
enter this note as an issue wrt to the UWis, but as a note to
get Steve a raise, or at least a promotion to at least a VP.
Re: Others
Didn't mean to slight others that are doing the same sorta support. I
know there are others, just that Steve seemed the most vocal.
Please, lets all keep it up, in particular the engineers/managers that
can talk to our customers directly. They indeed like that.
Regards,
Randy
|
3542.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sat Dec 03 1994 10:41 | 3 |
| No, please, anything but a VP!
Steve
|
3542.8 | One MCS Service Manager on board! | ODIXIE::PFLANZ | | Sat Dec 03 1994 11:53 | 10 |
| I agree that more Digital Employees should actively read the Usenet.
Personally, I have just activated an internet account, and read through
my first Usenet files today. As a Digital manager, I believe we could
do a lot more in the way of responding and following up on requests.
At least we can channel the information or the requests, perhaps even
gain some "leads" incentive money.
However, the key is in the responsiness and the channeling to the
proper people, which may very well be our Channel Partners. I plan on
staying active if I can make a difference.
|
3542.9 | | ICS::CROUCH | Subterranean Dharma Bum | Mon Dec 05 1994 07:47 | 82 |
| Here are a couple of recent posts in comp.sys.dec which I feel are worthy
of some follow up. These issues have been looked at within the digital
notes file many times. I guess my point is that it's nice that we here in
this notes file seem to be aware of a problem which is also quite visible
to our customers but are the "powers that be" aware of them and are they
doing something about it?
Jim C.
In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] (Steve McKinty - SunSoft ICNC Grenoble) writes:
Path: nntpd.lkg.dec.com!mrnews.mro.dec.com!pa.dec.com!decuac.dec.com!haven.umd.edu!news.umbc.edu!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news.moneng.mei.com!uwm.edu!lll-winken.llnl.gov!koriel!newsworthy.West.Sun.COM!cronkite.Central.Sun.COM!koppel.Ea
From: [email protected] (Steve McKinty - SunSoft ICNC Grenoble)
Newsgroups: comp.sys.dec
Subject: Re: [gripe] ready to buy, but dec won't return calls
Date: Fri, 2 Dec 94 13:49:00 EST
Organization: SunConnect
Lines: 26
Sender: smckinty@hardy (Steve McKinty - SunSoft ICNC Grenoble)
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
References: <[email protected]>
NNTP-Posting-Host: hardy.france.sun.com
In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] (John Beacom) writes:
>
> can anybody at dec rattle his cage for me? anybody have any ideas
> about how to get a response from dec?
I now work for a rival company to DEC (and my comments here are
purely my own opinion), but in times past I was a DEC customer.
I still prefer VMS to Unix (heresy in this office!).
I've heard it said that buying from DEC is like getting a divorce,
you have to prove you really want it. That was certainly my
experience in the past, while most companies would happly bring new
hardware to us (a very large company), DEC always insisted we went
to them. They would never quote prices over the phone, even ballpark
numbers, but insisted in formal quotes (fortunately the receptionist
could usually be talked into checking the price book...)
It was sad for a DEC fan like me to see HP and Sun kit slowly
displacing the VAXes, while DEC salesmen made no attempt to redress
the balance. I still have a great deal of respect for DEC hardware
& software, and the ever-pleasant support people, but sales? never.
Steve
(If it isn't already obvious, these views have nothing to do with my
current employer!)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] (Terry C Shannon) writes:
Newsgroups: comp.sys.dec
Path: nntpd.lkg.dec.com!mrnews.mro.dec.com!pa.dec.com!decuac.dec.com!haven.umd.edu!news.umbc.edu!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!howland.reston.ans.net!pipex!uunet!world!shannon
From: [email protected] (Terry C Shannon)
Subject: Re: [gripe] ready to buy, but dec won't return calls
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Organization: The World Public Access UNIX, Brookline, MA
References: <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <1994Dec1.081719.793@batman> <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, 2 Dec 94 10:32:42 EST
Lines: 17
In article <[email protected]>,
Eric Thomas <[email protected]> wrote:
>One more
>sale, one less, who cares? It wasn't a 9000, so it's not like the company lost
>a lot of money.
A sale here, a sale there... pretty soon you're talking about some real
money. DEC ***still*** needs to get its sales act together.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Terry C. Shannon For a sample of The Newsletter That Takes
Editor, Shannon Knows DEC No Prisoners, email your snailmail address
[email protected] to [email protected]. Do it today.
--
|
3542.10 | | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | Brother, can youse paradigm? | Mon Dec 05 1994 08:41 | 2 |
| Well, not to worry. It's not as if Terry Shannon is anyone important.
|
3542.11 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Dec 05 1994 09:20 | 5 |
| I'd love to be able to figure out whom I can direct such complaints to,
as I'm collecting a pile of them, but I can't figure it out. Who might
be receptive to such a thing?
Steve
|
3542.12 | One suggestion... | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Mon Dec 05 1994 10:12 | 62 |
|
Many issues are often (IMHO) needlessly escalated to the Senior Management
Team in the hope that they can do something that others can't.
However I believe this issue rightly belongs at the highest level
because it really affects the entire corporation and directly
impinges on the corporations image which is of course the
particular responsibility of the Office of the President.
There are two separate issues:
(1) How do you get _these_ particular complaints solved. This
_is_ an issue but I believe it counterproductive to try to
get senior people involved in trying to solve these
particular complaints directly.
and
(2) What is Digital's position with providing support to and
interacting with the Internet News groups?
With respect to this last Intel and its Pentium FDIV problem has done
the believers in maintaining a strong presence on the Internet a
great service since CEO's of other corporations (including our
own) will definitely sit up and listen.
The Intel problem has shown:
- The power of the news groups, the discussion on comp.sys.intel
has provably caused Intel stock price to drop and has forced the
corporation to about face on its Pentium problem positioning.
- For the first time ever, a CEO (Andy Grove) of a large corporation
(Intel) has directly addressed a news group (comp.sys.intel) with
the CEO promising to personally monitor the group!
(I will include the text of that message in the next reply).
This new found power of the Internet, a new trend of a
CEO of a large corporation directly dialogues with an Internet news group
and Digitals' professed closeness to Internet all point to Digitals'
need to take a corporate and clear position on Internet news group
support and interaction.
My suggestion would be to draft a memo to the Senior Management
Team including these points, Andy Grove's text, as well as the
complaints you've compiled due to lack of any Digital policy of
monitoring news groups and request the SMT to formulate a position in
this matter.
Again, with Intel still in the throes of solving an issue which
also includes how to interact with the Internet the timing of
such a memo couldn't be better and I am pretty sure that it _will_
get the SMT's attention at least.
For these actual complaints themselves: the best hope IMO is to drop
them by those people who will can and will interface with
the customer (but you've certainly already done that) and hope
they are willing and able to do something about this...
[If you want, you could also indicate that it is an open memo and
indicate that a copy has been put in this conference under Note
such-and-such.]
re roelof
|
3542.13 | Intel CEO and comp.sys.intel | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Mon Dec 05 1994 10:24 | 120 |
|
Newsgroups: comp.sys.intel
Subject: My Perspective on Pentium - AGS
Date: 27 Nov 1994 19:31:21 GMT
Organization: Netcom
Lines: 102
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
NNTP-Posting-Host: ix-pa3-16.ix.netcom.com
Andy Grove has asked me to post the following for him. Since it is the
weekend and we are out of the office, I am posting from my home system.
Richard Wirt
Director SW Technology
Intel Corp
This is Andy Grove, president of Intel. I'd like to comment a bit on
the conversations that have been taking place here.
First of all, I am truly sorry for the anxiety created among you by
our floating point issue. I read thru some of the postings and it's
clear that many of you have done a lot of work around it and
that some of you are very angry at us.
Let me give you my perspective on what has happened here.
The Pentium processor was introduced into the market in May of '93
after the most extensive testing program we at Intel have ever
embarked on. Because this chip is three times as complex as the 486,
and because it includes a number of improved floating point
algorithms, we geared up to do an array of tests, validation, and
verification that far exceeded anything we had ever done. So did many
of our OEM customers. We held the introduction of the chip several
months in order to give them more time to check out the chip and their
systems. We worked extensively with many software companies to this
end as well.
We were very pleased with the result. We ramped the processor faster
than any other in our history and encountered no significant problems
in the user community. Not that the chip was perfect; no chip ever
is. From time to time, we gathered up what problems we found and put
into production a new "stepping" -- a new set of masks that
incorporated whatever we corrected. Stepping N was better than
stepping N minus 1, which was better than stepping N minus 2. After
almost 25 years in the microprocessor business, I have come to the the
conclusion that no microprocessor is ever perfect; they just come
closer to perfection with each stepping. In the life of a typical
microprocessor, we go thru half a dozen or more such steppings.
Then, in the summer of '94, in the process of further testing (which
continued thru all this time and continues today), we came upon the
floating point error. We were puzzled as to why neither we nor anyone
else had encountered this earlier. We started a separate project,
including mathematicians and scientists who work for us in areas other
than the Pentium processor group to examine the nature of the problem
and its impact.
This group concluded after months of work that (1) an error is only
likely to occur at a frequency of the order of once in nine billion
random floating point divides, and that (2) this many divides in all
the programs they evaluated (which included many scientific
programs) would require elapsed times of use that would be longer than
the mean time to failure of the physical computer subsystems. In
other words, the error rate a user might see due to the floating point
problem would be swamped by other known computer failure mechanisms.
This explained why nobody -- not us, not our OEM customers, not the
software vendors we worked with and not the many individual users --
had run into it.
As some of you may recall, we had encountered thornier problems with
early versions of the 386 and 486, so we breathed a sigh of relief
that with the Pentium processor we had found what turned out to be a
problem of far lesser magnitude. We then incorporated the fix into
the next stepping of both the 60 and 66 and the 75/90/100 MHz Pentium
processor along with whatever else we were correcting in that next
stepping.
Then, last month Professor Nicely posted his observations about this
problem and the hubbub started. Interestingly, I understand from
press reports that Prof. Nicely was attempting to show that
Pentium-based computers can do the jobs of big time supercomputers in
numbers analyses. Many of you who posted comments are evidently also
involved in pretty heavy duty mathematical work.
That gets us to the present time and what we do about all this.
We would like to find all users of the Pentium processor who are
engaged in work involving heavy duty scientific/floating point
calculations and resolve their problem in the most appropriate fashion
including, if necessary, by replacing their chips with new ones. We
don't know how to set precise rules on this so we decided to do it
thru individual discussions between each of you and a technically
trained Intel person. We set up 800# lines for that purpose. It is
going to take us time to work thru the calls we are getting, but we
will work thru them. I would like to ask for your patience here.
Meanwhile, please don't be concerned that the passing of time will
deprive you of the opportunity to get your problem resolved -- we
will stand behind these chips for the life of your computer.
Sorry to be so long-winded -- and again please accept my apologies
for the situation. We appreciate your interest in the Pentium
processor, and we remain dedicated to bringing it as close to
perfection as possible.
I will monitor your communications in the future -- forgive me if I
can't answer each of you individually.
Andy Grove
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
3542.14 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Dec 05 1994 11:10 | 13 |
| Re: .12
I disagree - what senior management needs to be aware of is the pattern of
problems which is driving customers away. Individual problems can be
addressed individually, and I have been successful at doing so when I've
gotten involved. A more formal commitment to newsgroups is another issue
entirely, and not one I'm keen on elevating (nor do I think that would be
a good idea.)
I would like to find someone to whom I can present a list of customer complaints
in the hope that they'll be motivated to try to fix the underlying causes.
Steve
|
3542.15 | My solution? Forward them to Bob | MAASUP::MUDGETT | We Need Dinozord Power NOW! | Mon Dec 05 1994 11:55 | 28 |
| Greetings all,
I've been impressed with Steve and other's imput to the comp.dec.sys
newsgroup. I've seen these problems for years and wholeheartedly
agree that some group somewhere should be watching these newsgroups for
the patterns. Also within DEC I've seen times where dec people will
effortlessly insult significant customers (anyone who gives us money
for a product being signicant in my eyes, though the incidents I speak
of involved US-wide accounts) but would never dream of being late to
a meeting with his/her boss. I can't believe the loyalty DEC customers
show this company and how cavalierly its treated.
My solution? (I have shared this before) Forward the stuff to the
CEO's office. Its never going to be parused through by BP himself but
he should figure out what the pattern is and come up with some sort of
solution.
The oddest part of our customer relations are that there is
nothing gained by treating our customer's this badly. I'm certian Bob
would realize that, us who work with customer's know that, its the
people who say, "we aren't going to take a customer's word that they
have maintenance that they have a contract and are paying Xthousands
per year for it." I hear those remarks and want to cry because we
usually find out that the customer wasn't lying. Oddly whenever I've
seen (they used to call them KO calls) these things brought to the
attention the problem gets resolved the correct way.
Fred Mudgett
|
3542.16 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Mon Dec 05 1994 17:27 | 14 |
| RE: .4
>>The current USENET server for ZK is now owned by Oracle. Hopefully, someone
>>will volunteer to bring another one once it disappears.
I think our group will Matt. We've talked about it a few times,
we're just up to our necks in prepping for SSB right now. See me
after the first of the year.
FWIW, we'll have an Alpha system as the newserver.
mike
|
3542.17 | Seize the case | PERFOM::HENNING | | Thu Dec 08 1994 02:52 | 20 |
| Not to reduce an important topic to a slogan, but
think globally
act locally
The action needs to come from each of us, not the CEO's office. The
place from which we act must be the one we would wish the company to
have at all times: loving its products, loving its customers, caring
about every problem, fixing every problem.
It is a real contribution each time that a Digital empoyee notices a
usenet problem (or any other customer problem) and obtains help from
the lowest-level-person-with-sufficient-power-to-fix-it.
Of course, the individual case should be leveraged to a more general
fix, such as telling the CSCs so they can advise the right customers
if it's a product problem, or addressing the right VP if it is clear
that s/he is the lowest-level-person who can change the process that
led to the unhappy customer.
But it all starts with cherishing the individual case.
|
3542.18 | Steve is awarded DECUS President's Advocacy Award | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Fri May 12 1995 00:38 | 44 |
| I am particularly pleased to pass on this information.
re roelof
The following appeared on the front page of today's
edition (Thursday) of Update.Daily, the Decus daily
newspaper:
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
The DECUS U.S. Chapter President's Advocacy Award
The President's Advocacy Award has been established to recognize
excellence in bridging communications among and between Digital
employees and customers. The first award goes to Steve Lionel,
a Principal Engineer in the FORTRAN Development Group of Digital
Equipment Corporation.
Steve has long been associated with DECUS - making presentations,
staffing campgrounds and booths, and being pigeon-holed in hallways
to respond to an attendee's questions. On the Net, Steve's sage
commentary can be found in any number of newsgroups...answering
for the ump-teenth time where the FAQs are located and responding
to erstwhile queries from users and net surfers. And he douses
minor flame wars with his patient does of clarity and reason.
Steve's responses are timely and always informative.
In being chosen for this, Steve has set an example to be emulated
and admired by his peers. He receives the acknowledgement and thanks
from the DECUS U.S. Chapter on behalf of its members and all Digital
customers.
Congratulations, Steve!!!!
Award presented at DECUS'95 Washington D.C. by: Margaret H. Knox
DECUS U.S. Chapter President
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
I can only add my congratulations!
(And Bob P. , if we have any dormant program lying around for recognizing
outstanding contributions from individual employees now is a good
a time to reactivate it!).
|
3542.19 | | VANGA::KERRELL | DECUS - Coventry May 15-18 1995 | Fri May 12 1995 08:15 | 5 |
| re.18:
Congratulations Steve!
Dave.
|
3542.20 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | An Internaut in CyberSpace | Fri May 12 1995 08:23 | 3 |
| Well done Steve!
Laurie.
|
3542.21 | | CSC32::M_JILSON | Door handle to door handle | Fri May 12 1995 10:18 | 4 |
| Steve, thank you for your contributions and for setting a standard I feel
is worthy of attaining.
Jilly
|
3542.22 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri May 12 1995 11:12 | 1 |
| Pigeon-holed? I think they meant buttonholed.
|
3542.23 | | CFSCTC::SMITH | Tom Smith TAY2-1/L7 dtn 227-3236 | Fri May 12 1995 11:55 | 1 |
| Well deserved! Congratulations, Steve.
|
3542.24 | | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Fri May 12 1995 12:51 | 5 |
|
From ALL of us in the field, Steve, congratulations and THANKS.
the Greyhawk
|
3542.25 | | CALDEC::GOETZE | Walking into a surreal party on HUMANE::DIGITAL | Fri May 12 1995 17:48 | 5 |
|
I can second the kudos for Steve's helpfulness,
congratulations on well-deserved recognition!
erik
|
3542.26 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sun May 14 1995 21:04 | 23 |
| Thank you, all... This honor was a real stunner to me - made even more
so by having it presented to me in front of ELEVEN Digital VPs! What's
more, later that same day I was accorded another honor, a "Job Well
Done" certificate on behalf of the members of DECUSERVE (and I'm not
even a DECUSERVE member!)
I am grateful to my management - William Youngs, Becky Will and Bill
Blake - for supporting the "advocacy" work I do. But I want to
especially thank two former managers who provided early encouragement
and recognition to me - Beth Benoit, my former supervisor, and
Leslie Klein, my former group manager. Beth was active in guiding me
in the direction of greater service to Digital and its customers and
she was the first supervisor to make my customer consulting and
Internet work a formal part of my job description and helped me strike
the proper balance between that work and my engineering tasks. For
many years, Leslie fostered an environment in our group that allowed
me to grow and gave me opportunities to reach out. Through her DECUS
work as Digital's liaison to the Languages and Tools SIG, she often
put me in the spotlight, allowing me to gain recognition among
DECUS members. I feel privileged to have worked with and for both
Beth and Leslie - shining examples of what GOOD managers should be.
Steve
|
3542.27 | ;*) | TINCUP::KOLBE | Wicked Wench of the Web | Tue May 16 1995 20:20 | 2 |
| Steve, what a great, and well deserved honor. And I can
even say I knew him when... liesl
|
3542.28 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Jun 21 1995 11:20 | 19 |
| Another feather in Steve's cap -- one of his posts got chosen for
alt.humor.best-of-usenet:
From: [email protected] (Steve Lionel)
Newsgroups: comp.lang.fortran,comp.os.vms,comp.unix.osf.osf1,vmsnet.alpha
Subject: Re: Announcing DEC Fortran 90 V2.0 for OpenVMS and Digital UNIX Alpha S
|ystems
In article <[email protected]>,
[email protected] (Peter Shenkin) writes:
>Me too. Since the very earliest days of usenet, product announcements
>(as distinct from commercials) have always been welcome. And there's
>no doubt in my mind that this was a product announcement.
Hmm - I guess it would then have been inappropriate to write
NEW DEC Fortran 90 with Extra Zesty Deluxe! Makes all other Fortran
compilers look dingy and gray! MegaOptimization(TM) can run an
infinite loop in 3 seconds!* (* Your values of infinity may vary.)
|