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Lookin' for Support in All the Right Places
In truth, you can probably do as good a job searching a manufacturer's
technical support database as the first-level support operator who
answers when you call for technical support. The key is knowing what
to search for and where to search for it.
For example, suppose you're planning a rollout of Windows NT in your
office. Because you're a careful and responsible person, you're doing
a pilot test and going into limited production. Halfway through the
first part of your rollout, a user complains that she's having
problems when using DOS EDIT and other DOS utilities. Apparently, she
is being asked to insert a disk into drive A whenever she runs a DOS
program, regardless of whether a floppy disk is actually involved.
This is really odd. You think to yourself, "Which of these things is
not like the other?" and run to another user's machine. You try the
same thing using another user's machine and login, and you get the
same results.
You discover that every single machine you've rolled out is having the
same problem. Obviously, you stop the rollout. But now you have an odd
problem-why is a fresh new machine acting this way? As a matter of
fact, each machine you've built acts this way. Is it a hardware error?
A software error? If so, which software? Is this a network-related
problem at all?
A lot might possibly go wrong here, so now is a good time to spend a
few minutes searching. Fortunately, you have what to search for right
in your face, in the guise of a very rude error message:
NTVDM: No disk. Please insert a disk into drive A:
The most obvious place to search, Microsoft's site, reveals nothing of
tremendous interest, except that you need to check the NT file path
for references to drive A, which aren't there.
In order to figure out where to search for your answers, it's time to
categorize what you've added to the new machine:
o Windows NT setup
o Intel virus protection
o WordPerfect Suite 8
o GroupWise email and scheduling software
But wait! Hold it right there. You're already missing at least two
pieces of the puzzle. You were thinking about application software,
but in truth, there are more pieces than you just wrote down. Let's
take it from the top and write down what you've doneto create this new
machine. The possible sources of the problem omitted from the previous
list appear in bold:
o Unpacked Dell PC from box.
o Setup was automatically run. NT and Microsoft's Service
Pack 3 were installed.
o Installed Novell IntranetWare Client32 (necessary for
connection to Novell server).
o Configured 3Com Ethernet network card.
o Installed Intel Virus Protection, Corel WordPerfect Suite
8, Novell GroupWise.
Enumerating the steps you took to create the workstation lets you come
up with a vendor list to search. Your final list contains the
following:
o Dell
o Microsoft
o Novell
o 3Com
o Intel
o Corel
Rather than build a new PC from the ground up, which might take
anywhere from an hour to two hours (if all goes well!), you go to the
following Web sites and key in the error message you received:
o http://support.dell.com
o http://support.microsoft.com
o http://support.novell.com
o http://support.3com.com
o http://support.corel.com
You might begin by entering NTVDM by itself, because this is a unique
term (again, you don't want to get hits on common words such as disk),
and then proceed to search for the entire error message if you get too
many hits. (Remember that unless you specify a "weight" to a
word-which is not an option on some vendor sites-each word counts the
same; therefore, entering insert disk NTVDM matches a document with
insert and disk more than it matches a document that has one mention
of NTVDM.)
Dell has nothing about NTVDM. Microsoft has zillions of information
documents, and NTVDM, by itself, pulls up close to 100 documents. You
decide to come back to here if nothing else pans out. On the third
try, eureka! As shown in Figure 7.1, a search on NTVDM pulls up only
nine documents, a very manageable number. A quick glance reveals a
technical document that precisely describes your problem. You click
that link to learn more. In this case, you learn that the Novell
Client32 in conjunction with a bug in Windows NT Service Pack 3 has
caused your problem. The documentation also details a fix (copy
NTDOS.SYS from the original Windows NT CD-ROM to your current
C:\WINNT\SYSTEM directory).
[07-01t.jpg]
Figure 7.1 Searching several sites rather than spending a lot of time
on one can yield pay dirt quickly!
______________________________________________________________
When troubleshooting a potential multivendor problem, don't spend
too much time on each site at first-one vendor may have a quick
solution, whereas the other vendor may have you sifting through
hundreds of documents.
______________________________________________________________
Five minutes after firing up your Web browser, you've solved the
problem. Whoa! Talk about standing on the shoulders of giants. You
might have spent hours playing divide-and-conquer on this problem if
it weren't for the incredible power of the tech support search.
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