Don't Ask for the Best
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@lance said:
@scottalanmiller Very very true. I just wish when the users don't post the proper information the vendors would ask better questions and try to find out more before saying hey try my product. Some vendors are good about the way they go about it and some of them just pop in and say check this out even though they don't know what the situation is and the product may not fit well with what they are trying to accomplish.
I guess I'm just a little frustrated with some vendors at the moment.
To give them credit, their job is to sell stuff. And if a user demands to be sold something without any reason to sell it to them, it's hardly fair to expect a vendor salesperson to give up a sale of someone asking for bad advice. It's not like the person wasn't demanding that they sell them something. It's not the vendor's fault at all in that situation. They are just looking to supply what their customers are asking for.
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@lance said:
I know it's hard out there and people are trying to make a living, but I feel that if a vendor is part of a community it is part of their responsibility to not only sell products, but to add value to the community.
Agreed. But only so far as it is even more the responsibility of someone posting a question to do so in a professional, meaningful way and not set vendors up to look bad and have no real option but to do this. If a vendor tries to do something good to determine the real needs of the client they will likely just lose the sale to whoever posts fastest and says "X is best". The vendor is caught, the victim of the system. It's fixing the original poster that has to be done. They are the one initiating the situation.
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The thread that prompted this (there are many but one made me think of it) had the OP just tell me that running software released to production in the last year is "beta" software. Facepalm. What was I expecting? Once you are asking for "the best" of a product, do I really assume that they know what patching means or what a beta test is?
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@scottalanmiller said:
@lance said:
I know it's hard out there and people are trying to make a living, but I feel that if a vendor is part of a community it is part of their responsibility to not only sell products, but to add value to the community.
Agreed. But only so far as it is even more the responsibility of someone posting a question to do so in a professional, meaningful way and not set vendors up to look bad and have no real option but to do this. If a vendor tries to do something good to determine the real needs of the client they will likely just lose the sale to whoever posts fastest and says "X is best". The vendor is caught, the victim of the system. It's fixing the original poster that has to be done. They are the one initiating the situation.
I see where you are coming from, very true and well said.
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@scottalanmiller said:
The thread that prompted this (there are many but one made me think of it) had the OP just tell me that running software released to production in the last year is "beta" software. Facepalm. What was I expecting? Once you are asking for "the best" of a product, do I really assume that they know what patching means or what a beta test is?
Yikes. Some people. lol
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@lance said:
@scottalanmiller said:
The thread that prompted this (there are many but one made me think of it) had the OP just tell me that running software released to production in the last year is "beta" software. Facepalm. What was I expecting? Once you are asking for "the best" of a product, do I really assume that they know what patching means or what a beta test is?
Yikes. Some people. lol
He came back and actually tried to define beta as a slang term for something that he claimed was unique to storage. Facepalm again. More of the IT semi-pros thinking that technical terms can just be coopted willy nilly and that using correct terms doesn't matter. How little must one work in IT before it is insanely apparently that faking knowing a term or outright misusing one will not fly. It just can't. People will get confused and do things incorrectly if you tell them to do so.
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Nothing can be universally the best solution.
"It depends" is the only exception to that.
Because it depends on the organizations, needs, wants, budgets, etc. -
@scottalanmiller said:
@lance said:
@scottalanmiller said:
The thread that prompted this (there are many but one made me think of it) had the OP just tell me that running software released to production in the last year is "beta" software. Facepalm. What was I expecting? Once you are asking for "the best" of a product, do I really assume that they know what patching means or what a beta test is?
Yikes. Some people. lol
He came back and actually tried to define beta as a slang term for something that he claimed was unique to storage. Facepalm again. More of the IT semi-pros thinking that technical terms can just be coopted willy nilly and that using correct terms doesn't matter. How little must one work in IT before it is insanely apparently that faking knowing a term or outright misusing one will not fly. It just can't. People will get confused and do things incorrectly if you tell them to do so.
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@scottalanmiller I'm not sure if you spend anytime in http://www.reddit.com/r/sysadmin/ but that place will make you want to scratch out your eyes. People throw around incorrect technical terms like it's going out of style.
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What is best in life?
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