T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3638.1 | | OFOSS1::GINGER | Ron Ginger | Mon Jan 16 1995 13:30 | 14 |
| I recently lost 3 hours of revenue time while in the office trying to
find one printer that would work. All I needed was one simple manual
(probably worth $5 in paper form) but it took three hours and clearing
several paper jams, before I could get the info I needed to return to
my customer site and 'get back on the clock'
Somewhere, somebodys budget looks better because he/she doesnt spend
money servicing those printers any more, and someone else 'saved' a
bundle because we dont distrubute paper docs, but I lost real revenue
from a real customer because of it.
I cite one case, because it was recent enough, and agraviting enough,
that I recall it well. It has happened many times to me, and I m sure
to others.
|
3638.2 | I quit using VTX... | ROMEOS::TREBILCOT_EL | | Mon Jan 16 1995 15:27 | 21 |
| VTX? I quit using that tool months ago...
IF you get in (9 times out of 10 I get the "unavilable" message)
then the systems you have access to have been cut/limited/are almost
never available
Not to mention the fact that due to the work-at-home program what
should have been resolved in about twenty-thirty minutes took over four
hours when I bothered to log a call on some difficulty!
Not to get anyone in trouble here...
I don't need managers calling me up and yelling at me (again) about
what I put in the notes file so they can find out who to blame...
the point is our internal systems are failing to perform the way they
used to and it's sad...
but isn't this reminiscent of another note too?
-omwotd-
|
3638.3 | The sky has fallen!!! | GLDOA::WERNER | | Mon Jan 16 1995 17:46 | 18 |
| Well, it's now 5:30 PM and the AQS system is still not up. I am beyond
amazed. This is like trying to run an airline and you can't get your
reservation system to run. Sigh! Where's Chicken Little when you really
need him...the sky really is falling.
One of my customer measures IM&T failures like this in the number of cars
that don't come off the end of the line. I wonder how we measure the impact
of this failure...in wasted sales time, in business lost because we
couldn't quote anything all day or just, oh well, too bad. As I
understand it, the AQS system was updated over the weekend. I don't
suppose there was any backup/recovery plan in place. Oh well, too bad
no skin off anyone's nose (or any other part of their anatomy, I'd bet).
-OFWAMI-
|
3638.4 | | RCOCER::MICKOL | Now a pooled resource | Tue Jan 17 1995 01:05 | 13 |
| Last night (sunday), I tried to get into AQS at 10:30pm to do an important
quote that was due to a customer on monday. AQS was down. I called the CNS
East Hotline and they didn't really know what AQS was. Then, when they found
it listed somewhere, it only had 8-hour coverage! Three hours later it was
still down, so I got into MS Word and did up my own quote.
Earlier this evening I went into the Integrated Repository and tried to find a
StorageWorks presentation. Use the Keyterm search, it found NO MATCHES for
StorageWorks and only one match for the word Storage.
The more you try to get more morale up, the more you find out that this
company is quite a ways from having its act together.
|
3638.5 | | ALFHUB::WELLS | Cakes useless if you can't eat it too! | Tue Jan 17 1995 04:53 | 21 |
|
AQS was scheduled to be down till 6am monday. The US PASE upgrades
were done this weekend and this affected a lot of applications. What
they basically do is all the upgrades roughly once a year on one
weekend, rather than piecemeal, and this was the one(usually lots of
complications when you do that many applications at once). Plus I believe
this one had been delayed a couple times and so was about 15-18 months
worth of upgrades for many different applications all done in one
swoop.
So for the user sunday night that had been scheduled at least 6 months
ago. Aqs should have been back by 6am monday but complications due to
the upgrade delayed it(mondays also a holiday). I can say that lots
of CNS people did work mega hours this weekend on the problems.
I'm not saying the cutbacks haven't affected levels of service, just
spreading a few facts in this speculating.
Tim
CNS South/Central Command Center
|
3638.6 | | REGENT::BLOCHER | | Tue Jan 17 1995 09:56 | 6 |
| > the upgrade delayed it(mondays also a holiday).
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Not according to the official Digital calendar.
|
3638.7 | ALF apparently was one | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Tue Jan 17 1995 10:13 | 5 |
| re: .6
Some locations had Monday as a site choice holiday for MLK.
Bob
|
3638.8 | | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Tue Jan 17 1995 10:17 | 1 |
| What's InfoBaun anyway? InfoBahn?
|
3638.9 | My razor is IP attached | RDGENG::WILLIAMS_A | | Tue Jan 17 1995 10:53 | 5 |
| presume InfoBahn derived from a german infosuperhighway. In germany,
they have a reasonable speed limit (..er.. none?). Implication may be
a bahn is better than a freeway.
Isn't a baun an electric shaver ?
|
3638.10 | Braun not Baun | SWTHOM::COSTEUX | The Present is already the Past | Tue Jan 17 1995 10:58 | 1 |
| Braun is an electric shaver trademark ...
|
3638.11 | | BHAJEE::JAERVINEN | Ora, the Old Rural Amateur | Tue Jan 17 1995 11:23 | 1 |
| And Baum is a tree... never heard of Baun.
|
3638.12 | | mcis5.mro.dec.com::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Tue Jan 17 1995 11:41 | 3 |
| Should be Bahn, as in autobahn.
Leslie
|
3638.13 | Die Nit, Die! | GLDOA::WERNER | | Tue Jan 17 1995 17:40 | 11 |
| I want to thank the last few Noters for the excrutiating attention to
the detail of what I mistakenly named this particular string. To those
thoughts, I would add...who really cares. A nit well picked is perhaps
worth a chuckle, but a nit picked to the Nth degree is just boring.
Let's get on with some useful discussion here or just let the string
die and get back to asking each other for the names of long lost
product managers, account teams or TFSO'ed friends from the past.
And that's all I have to say about that...
-OFWAMI-
|
3638.14 | Once more down the nitbahn | ANGST::BECK | Paul Beck | Tue Jan 17 1995 17:54 | 1 |
| In re "Die Nit" ... are you sure it's not "Das Nit"?
|
3638.15 | | RCOCER::MICKOL | Now a pooled resource | Tue Jan 17 1995 23:46 | 7 |
| Re: <<< Note 3638.5 by ALFHUB::WELLS >>>
The message on our AQS system said it was to be down until 10pm sunday night.
I'm not complaining about the upgrade, although I think they could have done a
better job of communicating the downtime. I'm really concerned about the
level of support available for AQS.
|
3638.16 | Berichtigung | MINOTR::BANCROFT | | Wed Jan 18 1995 10:49 | 1 |
| InfoBahn, as in AutoBahn Bahn = Path or Road
|
3638.17 | | NWD002::BAYLEY::Randall_do | Software: Making Hardware Useful | Wed Jan 18 1995 11:12 | 6 |
| Ah, yes, but did they say 10PM in which time zone?
Here on the left coast we often get told that we're calling after 5, when
it's really only 3......
They may have meant 10PM in Hawaii...
|
3638.18 | | ALFHUB::WELLS | Cakes useless if you can't eat it too! | Wed Jan 18 1995 21:07 | 22 |
|
The CNS person was correct in that AQS only has 8x5 coverage. This is
a decision made by the business as to what level of service they want
to pay for. You're not the only person I've heard from who thinks
it should be more, so please make your managers aware of this.
Also, I said that these upgrades of over 90 layered products had been put
off over and over by the businesses(not the people installing them)
for 15-18 months, but I've found out it's actually been just about
2 YEARS since the last upgrade. And they include not just the
applications, but also VMS as well as Decnet OSI. That's a lot
of change and pressure to put on for one weekend.
And to further brighten you day, that was only the first wave of upgrades
as this coming weekend all the Champ and Smart clusters have to go through
the same process. Should be interesting...
Not blaming anyone just putting a little perspective on all this.
Tim
|
3638.19 | 8x5?? WHICH 8??? | DECWET::FARLEE | Insufficient Virtual um...er.... | Thu Jan 19 1995 15:12 | 13 |
| ...and here I thought we were a global corporation. Turns out,
we're just a GMA corporation?
If AQS is essential to quoting and closing business, and is used
nationwide if not worldwide (I don't know), just how the heck are you
picking WHICH 8 hours to cover in the 8x5 coverage?
Do you really want folks on the west coast to go home at 2PM?
Do you really think it is valuable to have salesmen have to start their
day at 5AM (when none of their customers are around) just to compensate
for somebody shaving operating costs???
This is really stupid!
|
3638.20 | and stop by Palo Alto on your way to work... | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, AXP-developer support | Thu Jan 19 1995 16:51 | 7 |
| > Do you really want folks on the west coast to go home at 2PM?
please, if you do, come in at 5AM and make sure that your systems are
operating. It's sure hard for us GMA-types to get our work done in the
morning without you.
Mark :-) (kinda)
|
3638.21 | AQS Support Hours | MROA::SNIDERMAN | | Fri Jan 20 1995 11:12 | 29 |
| I would like to clarify the issue around AQS support. It is
not accurate to say that AQS only has 5x8 support.
In the US, AQS shares clusters with other Customer Order
Management applications at four regional data centers. Support
for these computing environments is provided around the clock
by CNS. This includes support for such things as machine
availability, network connectivity, response time, printer
queue problems, fax delays, VMS account creation and modification,
and AQS user registrations.
The only support that is not available outside of regular business
hours is that provided by the AQS Development and Business support
groups. This type of support includes answering questions on
how to use AQS, enhancement requests, and errors caused by the
AQS software. AQS is a remarkably stable system. We have never
heard of a need for these services to be provided after hours, but
this can certainly be revisited if required.
The problem reported in the base note seems to me to be a
training issue. The person handling the call should have routed
it to the local data center personnel for resolution. I am
bringing it to the attention of our CNS contact. Hopefully,
we can prevent this type of response from reoccurring in the
future.
Joe Sniderman
AQS Development
|
3638.22 | | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, AXP-developer support | Fri Jan 20 1995 14:56 | 4 |
| Well, Mr. Werner. Was it a training issue? Did someone forget to tell
you to read the manual?
Mark
|
3638.23 | | MROA::SNIDERMAN | | Fri Jan 20 1995 16:17 | 5 |
| > Well, Mr. Werner. Was it a training issue? Did someone forget to tell
> you to read the manual?
I guess I wasn't clear. I was referring to the training
of the call handler, not the caller.
|
3638.24 | Customers can do it, can we? | BVILLE::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long... | Wed Jan 25 1995 13:10 | 14 |
| Personally I think it's a bit silly to put off doing upgrades for that
long, I'm quite sure that a rolling upgrade kinda plan would have
worked. With all the downsizing going on, I'm sure a spare cluster or
two is laying about somewhere, maybe take in some trade-in systems and
actually use it for "development"?
I'm pretty amazed by the comparisons between our internal systems and
those of the customers I support. If radar systems and submarines can
be designed and documented with little/no downtime, what IS our
problem?
.mike.
(Do we even still support VMS that 2+ years behind?)
|
3638.25 | Not so amazing to me ... | ATLANA::SHERMAN | Debt Free! Thank You, Jesus! | Wed Jan 25 1995 16:05 | 20 |
| Hi Mike,
Regarding putting off upgrades for that long: CNS in the South/Central
Cluster is evaluating a request from a major, Americas-wide customer for
on-site expertise to upgrade a cluster from VMS V5.1 (!) and ALL-IN-1 V2.3
(also !) to OpenVms V6.1 and ALL-IN-1 V3.1, over a week-end ...
Makes one wonder about things such as:
- layered product compatibilities from then until now
- what kind of "system management" has this customer been doing
- when was the most recent Backup done
- in what condition are the systems at this customer's _many_ other
sites across the Americas
- and, to quote you "Customers can do it, can we?" - why hasn't the
customer done this ...
FWIW,
Ron
|
3638.26 | the devil you know | ARCANA::CONNELLY | Don't try this at home, kids! | Wed Jan 25 1995 17:38 | 14 |
|
One could also ask, "are we planning to do any more major application
development on VMS, and if not, why bother to upgrade at all?" In other
words, "what's the *business* justification?" I thought at this point
that VMS was basically where all our legacy applications resided and
that the replacement applications would utilize OSF/1 or NT servers and
Windows PC clients. Same situation with DECnet...if TCP/IP is the future,
can we really make a dollars-and-cents case for going Phase IV to OSI?
I guess it depends on how buggy the older versions are...if all the bugs
are pretty much known at this point and all have workarounds (no show-
stoppers), is losing "supported status" all that big a deal?
- paul
|
3638.27 | | VMSVTP::S_WATTUM | OSI Applications Engineering, West | Wed Jan 25 1995 20:41 | 8 |
| >if TCP/IP is the future,
>can we really make a dollars-and-cents case for going Phase IV to OSI?
Because with DECnet/OSI V6.0, you get DECnet over TCP/IP.
But I digress....
--Scott
|
3638.28 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Jan 26 1995 07:31 | 22 |
| Some customers value stability highly. When this sort of discussion
came up in another forum I received mail from a support specialist
supporting a rather old VMS system. The customer regarded the computer,
its operating system and its peripheral equipment as a single unit that
would be replaced as such when it reached the end of its economic life.
The peripheral equipment in this case happened to be a power
station, with an estimated economic life of 15 to 20 years, and the
customer saw no reason why he should upgrade from VMS 1.6 until that
time was up.
This is an extreme case, of course, but there are many cases where
a customer doesn't want to keep up with the latest in everything. I
visited a large GM factory once. The I.S. staff wasn't allowed to alter
anything on the production systems except during the two weeks in
August when the whole factory closed. With this limitation they were
choosing hardware and software upgrades many months in advance, and
then testing them to death in test environments so they could be sure
that there would be no glitches found in the two weeks they had to make
the changeover. By the next summer all the hardware and software
versions would be *at least* 18 months behind what we were currently
shipping.
|
3638.29 | no risks | PCBUOA::BEAUDREAU | | Thu Jan 26 1995 08:21 | 5 |
|
In some businesses, if it ain't broke... don't fix it.
gb
|
3638.30 | Two WHOLE weeks!!! | TPSYS::BUTCHART | Software Performance Group | Thu Jan 26 1995 08:24 | 14 |
| re .28
And for some companies, two weeks would be considered incredible
luxury! There are some (usually chemical/plastic process control)
applications my group has worked with in the U.S. where there are only
2 times during the year that systems can be taken off line - the 4th of
July weekend, and the Christmas weekend. And the window isn't the
whole weekend either - there's usually a "drop dead" point where, if
the upgrade isn't complete, tested, and stable by then, you have to
cancel it and have time to restore the old system and make sure IT'S
complete, tested, and stable for the start of production. And then you
wait another 6 months for the next window...
/Butch
|
3638.31 | "Oh well" is not an acceptable answer | GLDOA::WERNER | | Fri Jan 27 1995 08:55 | 33 |
| Well, I certainly didn't expect this string to have this long of a
life. The point that I was trying to make, perhaps too gently, is that
we sometimes run our business too much as if it were an engineering lab
environment. By that I mean that too often our IM&T organization seems
to execute ill-planned upgrades or changes to key, mission-critical
systems and the folks not appear to be overly concerned with the resulting
failures and the inconvenience that it causes the users of those
systems.
I have carefully chosen to use words like "appears and seems"
since this is only an impression that one can easily get from talking
to the apparently untrained (see several notes back on that) folks who
have been assigned to respond to the resulting HOTLINE calls. The
example that started all of this off was the recent AQS system failure
that resulted from the latest upgrade. AQS was down across a good part
of the coutry (if not everywhere) all day a that day. I couldn't use it
for critical quotes and the 1-800-DEC-SALE folks could get to it to
answer critical technical support questions. We were effectively
without one of our mission critical systems all day. More recently an
"MCI problem" (at least that was how it was characterized by the
HOTLINE folks) effectively paralyzed many of the critical East Coast
systems, including key VTX nodes. Another day was impacted.
If I was at a customer site and they were telling me these horror
stories, I would sieze the opportunity to pitch Digital's Business
Recovery Services. Internally, however, there seems to be an almost
light-hearted acceptance that this is just the way that Digital runs it
business. Bull! No company should run like that. No company can run
like that and not be in trouble. We can't afford a day here and a day
there of severly crippled administrative system capabilities. As an
employee, I'm frustrated. As a stockholder, I'm appalled.
-OFWAMI-
|
3638.32 | | LNDRFR::ADOERFER | Hi-yo Server, away! | Fri Jan 27 1995 09:45 | 29 |
| well, since this note is becoming more about notification
of services, you might be interested in this (which may
impact vtx services both TCP/IP and Decnet.)(Internaly,
vtx systems typically have 3 server points of failure, and
each can have up to 9 client points of failure, but this
seems to involve at least the last 2 layers of failover (for vtx) )
About easynet backbone outage:
The date and time for the Corporate Backbone upgrade has changed from
February 5th to Saturday, February 18th, to accommodate critical business
processing. Outsourcing Management Services (OMS) recognizes the need for
flexibility in arriving at a scheduled date acceptable to all Digital
businesses. Critical business applications have requirements that impact
different time periods in the fiscal calendar. Through the cooperation
of OMS and the respective Digital business representatives, we have agreed
upon the February 18th date.
What and When
On Saturday, February 18th, 7:30AM-12:30PM EST, the Corporate Data Networks
Backbone will be upgraded to a new routing protocol: Integrated
Intermediate-System to Intermediate-System (Integrated IS-IS). The backbone
routers located at AKO, LKG, MKO, MRO, and PKO, will be unavailable during
this timeframe. This will affect both DECnet and IP network traffic.
Communications between geography portions of the network including
communications within the Americas will be impacted. Communications
within regional distribution networks will not be affected.
|
3638.33 | how much does it cost ? | VNABRW::LNZALI::BACHNER | | Fri Jan 27 1995 10:40 | 11 |
| Well, it's not a matter of technical feasability to do a rolling upgrade, it's
mainly a matter of cost (and organisational prerequisites, which require effort
to implement). It's *much* cheaper to shut a cluster down, upgrade, and make it
available again when the upgrade is done than to do rolling upgrades.
If anybody could come up with numbers how much it costs the company to have some
business support application not available over a weekend, it would be easy to
compare the amount of lost money with the costs of implementing the structures
for rolling upgrades and of performing them.
Hans.
|
3638.34 | I still say internal systems s/b current | BVILLE::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long... | Fri Jan 27 1995 13:02 | 19 |
| Granted, running a nuclear power station or a chemical/plastics factory
or any time-critical application has it's own requirements for absolute
and guaranteed uptime and stability, but Digital Equipment Corporation
does NOT do any of these things internally. (That I know of anyway)
Our internal systems provide information. I see no reason not to
compare what my (large AeroSpace) customer does with their systems to
what our internal systems do. As we (Digital) refuse to support things
that are "x" versions behind, then technology must march forward to
maintain support. I still say that if the BSY-2 team (2 guys) can keep
many hundreds of users happy, still serve hundreds of sun users and
keep VMS and layered products current (Ok VMS 5.5-2 is still pretty
current, isn't it?) then we can too.
That point made, how many spelling and grammar errors do you see in
applications? How cool is that? Yeah, nit-picking, but I just hate it
when an application asks me to "Please enter you selection.".
.mike.
|
3638.35 | | CSEXP2::ANDREWS | I'm the NRA | Fri Jan 27 1995 13:45 | 5 |
| No, we don't run nuclear plants, but I would imagine that both
CHAMP/FLD and CHAMP/CSC need to be guarenteed available and stable.
Can't fix customers systems if they can't report problems. MCS relies
on those systems being available 24 * 7.
|
3638.36 | | CSC32::WILCOX | Acquiring the ORACLE Culture | Fri Jan 27 1995 15:11 | 8 |
| <<< Note 3638.35 by CSEXP2::ANDREWS "I'm the NRA" >>>
>> Can't fix customers systems if they can't report problems. MCS relies
>> on those systems being available 24 * 7.
But we do use hardcopy when they are not available :-(.
Liz
|
3638.37 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat Jan 28 1995 03:56 | 20 |
| re: .34
> keep VMS and layered products current (Ok VMS 5.5-2 is still pretty
> current, isn't it?) then we can too.
I believe VMS 6.0 is now unsupported. The normal rule was that
support for an old version was dropped 6 months after its replacement
version shipped. VMS 6.1 will be unsupported before the end of this
calender year unless there are project slips.
When I ran a support cluster we had most layered products installed
(around 80 of them), and most of these layered products had at least
one release per year, some of them two. If you add to that the fact
that some specialists wanted to go through the field test cycles for
their favourite product then simple arithmetic shows an average of 4
software installations on the cluster in an average week, with peaks
considerably higher.
Admitteldy most customers don't have quite such a range of software
on their sustems, but we can't expect all customers to be running
"supported" versions.
|
3638.38 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sat Jan 28 1995 09:17 | 4 |
| VMS support holds on longer than the standard 6 months. MANY customers
are still at V5.5-2.
Steve
|
3638.39 | We ought to charge on a sliding scale for obsolete SW support | DECCXL::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Sun Jan 29 1995 16:12 | 7 |
| Re .38:
> VMS support holds on longer than the standard 6 months. MANY customers
> are still at V5.5-2.
Is Digital contractually committed to support V5.5-2?
/AHM
|
3638.40 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sun Jan 29 1995 17:22 | 4 |
| I believe that MCS will accept contracts to support V5.5-2 - I don't
know what the terms are. Perhaps someone from MCS can comment.
Steve
|
3638.41 | Mission Critical will support | FOR10::STOBIE | | Sun Jan 29 1995 18:30 | 2 |
| Mission Critical in MCS will provide support.. they do it for MCI under
contract.
|
3638.42 | I want a piece of the action | DECCXX::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Mon Jan 30 1995 08:03 | 3 |
| I wonder if MCS will accept contracts to "support" obsolete versions of *my*
product?
/AHM
|
3638.43 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon Jan 30 1995 09:28 | 10 |
| When whatever has become MCS was first set up they worked on the
principle "We'll support anything, but if you're the only customer in
the world with the thing then the support costs could include training
an engineer on the product, ...".
In 1975 in the U.K. the organsiation was proud that they could and
did still support a PDP-1, and made a point of it with advertising that
with DEC you would never have unsupported hardware or software. It was
about that time that they started to support products from other
manufacturers too.
|
3638.44 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | E&RT -- Embedded and RealTime Engineering | Mon Jan 30 1995 09:49 | 12 |
| Alan:
> -< We ought to charge on a sliding scale for obsolete SW support >-
You mean "We'll charge a lot less to support old, well-known bugs
(where the answers are already also well-known) than for fresh new
mysterious bugs?"
No, I didn't think that's what you meant. Too bad.
Atlant
|