T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3925.1 | TOEM Germany, are you receiving me ? | BBPBV1::WALLACE | dtn 841 3425 | Wed Jun 07 1995 19:45 | 9 |
| Paul, thanks for helping out. He's perhaps looking for some RAM for
Digital's AXPpci33 board (aka Noname). The Noname is sold by the
techOEM (aka E+RT) bit of Digital's Components and Peripherals
StovePipe. I'm in the UK bit of that, brian wants someone in sales in
the German bit. I'm afraid I don't have names in sales (but I know
some tech support people who will help if no-one else has volunteered).
regards
john
|
3925.2 | if needed, try this | DECWET::BERKUN | A False Sense of Well-Being | Thu Jun 08 1995 00:39 | 8 |
| if nothing else works, try sending email to Derek Sanders at
welclu::sandersd. Derek works in our Digital/Microsoft Alliance
group (marketing) in Basingstoke (sp?) England.
He really has nothing to do with sales, but he
seems to be connected to everybody and he always gets his man (person).
He should at least be able to point you in the right direction.
ken b.
|
3925.3 | | VANGA::KERRELL | DECUS Dublin 11-15 September'95 | Thu Jun 08 1995 04:34 | 4 |
| Instead of calling up people that know people, why not just ring the
Munich DTN and ask for help?
Dave.
|
3925.4 | Solved | FSAEUR::ROE | | Thu Jun 08 1995 05:26 | 2 |
| I have spoken to the Customer and to Muhich support who will contact
the customer directly.
|
3925.5 | Disaster Recovery?? | WONDER::MAKRIANIS | Patty | Thu Jun 08 1995 10:36 | 20 |
|
Well, since this person's problem got handled so quickly, maybe someone
can help me with mine.
My workmate keeps getting calls from people looking for "Disaster
Recovery". We checked the Digital phonebook (Nov 1992 - latest one we
have) and sure enough if you look up Disaster Recovery there's her
DTN. We're located in PK03, moved in last Aug/Sep. They are stated
in the phonebook to be located in PK01, but with all the moving that's
gone on recently who knows where they are now or if they even exist.
If anyone can give me some insight as to what Disaster Recovery is
and how to redirect the people calling us, we would greatly appreciate
it. Right now we just call the people back and let them know that we
have no idea how to help them or redirect them.
Thanks.
Patty Makrianis (TurboLaser Systems Integration....
...not Disaster Recovery)
|
3925.6 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | E&RT -- Embedded and RealTime Engineering | Thu Jun 08 1995 10:40 | 15 |
| Patty:
For what it's worth, $ VTX TEL shows the following entries:
DISASTER MANAGEMENT
Disaster Management MSO2-1/B6 223-8452
Business Recovery Planning MSO2-1/B6 223-8452
DISASTER RECOVERY
General Information PKO1-1/D1 223-4247
DCP PKO1-1/D1 223-4247
Atlant
|
3925.7 | Business Protection Services Contact in Stow | GRANPA::LSEARS | | Thu Jun 08 1995 10:44 | 5 |
| According to the OMS Powerpack the contact for Business Protection
Services is Beverly Canfield-Woods DTN 276-8770 @OGO
Regards
|
3925.8 | Contact Service Delivery directly | BSS::C_BOUTCHER | | Thu Jun 08 1995 10:59 | 11 |
| If you have a customer looking for Disaster Recovery Services, you can
have them call 800-354-9000 and a call can be routed to their local
service delivery unit (based upon zip code), or the customer can ask to
speak to the Operations Manager for their area.
More revenue ...
Regards,
Chuck
|
3925.9 | Contact IN Dallas | DPDMAI::TORRESE | | Thu Jun 08 1995 12:49 | 6 |
| Here in Dallas Lloyd Hodges can help yoy with any disaster recovery
Questions.
DTN 483-4277 (214) 702-4277
Little TEX.
|
3925.10 | 800-HOTSITE | ASABET::MACGILLIVARY | | Thu Jun 08 1995 13:18 | 9 |
| The AtoZ guide to resources lists 800-HOTSITE (468-7483) as source to
contact for Disaster Recovery.
I made a test call and the number is valid.
To access the on line AtoZ guide to Resources in Digital, type
VTX ATOZ.
|
3925.11 | | WONDER::MAKRIANIS | Patty | Thu Jun 08 1995 15:02 | 6 |
|
thanks everyone. I called Beverly Canfield-Woods and we'll be directing
calls to her in the future. I knew you people would be able to help.
Again, thanks.
Patty
|
3925.12 | same as those that fit in PCs (72-pin wide) | HDLITE::ONEAL | | Thu Jun 08 1995 15:11 | 24 |
| From the the AXPpci 33 glossy, p/n EC-F2938-56:
Memory:
Four 72-pin (double-sided) SIMM sockets to accomodate mamimum memory of
256 MB
Also, from the text of the glossy:
Your complex applications will run without memory limitations.
The motherboard supports supports four 36-bit-wide industry-standard
SIMM sockets. The memory architecture is 72 bits wide with 64 data
bits and 8 ECC bits for single-bit error correction, double-bit and
nibble error detection. Minimum memory configuration is 8 MB using two
4 MB SIMMs. Maximum memory configuration is 256 MB using four 64 MB
SIMMs.
In other words, the board uses SIMMs greater than or equal to 4MB each
(in sets) that are the same as those that fit in PCs (72-pin wide).
Tim
|
3925.13 | Disaster Recovery Contact Names/numbers | ODIXIE::MORENO | Frank Moreno | Thu Jun 08 1995 16:47 | 17 |
| For information regarding Digital's Disaster Recovery Services for
Digital customers, you or your customer may call the 1-800-Hotsite
number directly, or you or your customer may contact any of the 3
Hotsite Centers directly as follows:
Parsippany, NJ. @ (201) 631-6100, DTN 280-6100, site code NJO
Contact: Jeff Gonia
Arlington Heights, IL. @ (708) 818-5800, DTN 450-5800, site MRC
Contact: Mark Puchalski
Tampa, Fl. @ (813) 348-3300, DTN 350-3300, site code SEC
Contact: Frank Moreno
There are also BRS reps located in different offices across the
country. If additional information is still required, direct your
calls to Beverly Canfield-Woods @OGO, Corporate Practice Manager for
Disaster Recovery Services, at DTN 276-8770.
|
3925.14 | Back to simms (briefly) | BBPBV1::WALLACE | dtn 841 3425 | Thu Jun 08 1995 18:52 | 7 |
| A caution re SIMMs: If a PC customer buys cr*p SIMMs, when they get an
error they see Windows hang and they're used to that, so they just
reboot. When an Alpha customer buys cr*p SIMMs and gets an error, the
customer calls Digital and moans "your system is c*p; it doesn't work
with industry standard SIMMS". Conclusion: be careful with industry
standard SIMMs vs Digital-qualified (Alpha-qualified!) SIMMs. Sometimes
you get what you pay for.
|