Apple Support

While at a friend’s birthday party last Friday evening, Luca dropped her iPod Touch and the screen cracked. She was almost as devastated as her father.

I went to the Apple website and was quickly able to determine what support options were available. Since the nearest Apple store is two hours away in Las Vegas, I decided to send the broken iPod Touch to Apple. The whole process took less than five minutes.

Apple provided the address to the nearest UPS Store where we’d drop off the iPod. UPS would take it from there which included the boxing and postage which is a very nice touch. That was last Saturday.

On Monday Apple sent me an email saying that had received my daughter’s iPod and would follow up shortly. On Tuesday I received another email saying I should expect shipment of the replacement iPod by Thursday.

Today, another blue iPod Touch arrived in the mail. It took about 20 minutes to restore the backup from my PC to the iPod. It was an expensive $150 lesson to learn, but Apple’s support is nothing short of fantastic.

Last week my friend told me how it took him a month to get Samsung to replace a damaged Galaxy 4 phone. No way could I go back to typically crappy support like that.

Apple is one company where you might pay a little more but, in return, you receive a lot more too.

Interview with Doug Rutherford

I decided to interview a few people who have worked from home a lot longer than I have. My first interview is with my good friend, Doug Rutherford, whom I’ve known for about 8 years. Doug is the first person I knew well who had a job that allowed him to do all his work from home.

1. What company do you work for and what is your position?

I work for Avaya and last time I checked my title was Customer Interaction Engineer.  That doesn’t say much but what I do is remote technical support for companies that run call centers.

2. How long have you worked from home?

I’ve worked from home full time for about 3 years and occasionally before that for another 4 years or so.

3. What technology (hardware, software, devices) do you rely on to work from home?

The main technology I rely on to work from home is the internet.  Without my VPN connection to work, I can’t remotely connect to customers, I can’t see what trouble tickets I have, I can’t even check my e-mail.  I have a company provided laptop & docking station with dual external screens.  I have an Avaya IP phone on my desk that connects through my network to a phone switch at an Avaya location in Colorado.  We use a custom Siebel application for our case tracking, Outlook for our e-mail, and a variety of web applications including SharePoint.

4. Did your employer provide any of the hardware, software, equipment or internet?

The company used to pay for the internet but they stopped doing that a couple years ago as a cost-saving measure.  Almost all the rest of the hardware & software was provided by them.  I do use a couple free applications that they don’t provide or support such as my terminal emulator.  I think there has been some talk of adopting a BYOD environment but I’d rather they provide and support the equipment I’m loading their software on.  The ownership can all be on them then.

5. Did you approach your employer to work from home? How did that come about? Do you know what % of employees at your company work from home?

Initially, some of us approached our employer about working from home, showing them that we have the technology and resources to make it work.  So a few of us were allowed to try it out once a week as a trial run and then others were granted the same opportunities.  Then we all went to working from home on Mondays and Fridays.  Other people in other groups started working from home more than the office.  Eventually, the office that we worked in closed and we had no other choice but to work from home full time.

6. What have you found to be the biggest challenge working from home?

Probably the biggest challenge to working from home is the lack of being able to hear what others are currently working on and having them do the same.  In the office environment, since we are in a technical support role, we can often learn from each other by simply walking over to the next desk and discussing the current cases we’re working on and being able to bounce ideas off each other thereby soaking up each others experience.  We don’t get that anymore so if we’re learning a new product or technology, it’s a little slower but still doable, just from a different learning environment.

7. What has been the biggest surprise since you started working from home? Has it gone as you expected?

I thought I would miss going into the office and getting to see all my coworkers every day.  But the fact that I’m no longer getting up around 2am, to leave the house by 3am in order to start work by 4am has been a great addition to my sleep schedule.  Now, I’m getting up just a few minutes before I actually start work and take my lunch hour to get showered and ready for the day.  So I get more sleep and I have to spend 2 hours a day less time on the road which amounts to 10 hours a week I get back in addition to the greatly reduced budget I spend on gas and car maintenance each month.  In addition, I get to see my family more.  If my wife needs my help getting kids out the door for school, or making sure someone is there for them after school, I can help with that.  So what I don’t get by going into the office has been greatly compensated for.

Doug is active on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/doug.r.rutherford

The Wire

“No one wins. One side just loses more slowly.” – Roland Pryzbylewski

I know I’m late for the party.

The Wire: I love it and despise it.

I love the gritty HBO drama for all the memorable characters it gave us from Avon to Omar to Proposition Joe. I was told the question to ask while discussing your favorite Wire character is, “Who is your favorite character besides Omar?” and while I can appreciate that, I still found myself rooting for Proposition Joe more than any of them including Omar. You could name your three favorites and I wouldn’t argue.

Yet, I despise the Wire because it set a ridiculously high bar for future TV dramas to the point where I find myself comparing everything I watch to it and finding nothing outside of Mad Men and Breaking Bad are in the ballpark.

I’ve now watched every episode at least twice.  It’s that engrossing and layered and often shocking. It’s also sad and funny, and many nights I to went to bed bothered by what I’d seen, but unable to stop thinking about it.

One of my favorite scenes takes place in the first season when D’Angelo catches Wallace and Bodie playing a game of checkers on a chess board. Like an older brother, he explains the rules of chess, comparing each piece to people –mostly thugs, they can relate to.  It’s early enough in the story that it’s easy to overlook the fact that D’Angelo is spelling out far more than a game. As each season unwinds, you realize he’s describing Baltimore and all its social and economic failings as well as their role in the “the game”.

The Wire depicts police officers and detectives desperate to make their superiors look good which often includes “juking the stats” to give them what they expect. The police and politicians talk a good game when it comes to crime. But they care more about the appearance of fighting it, even when that means moving cases around jurisdictions to keep them off the reports.

Wall Street plays the same game with different financial vehicles. Remember how Enron was able to keep debt off their books by temporarily assigning it to fictional entities? We see the same games being played in the Wire but with violent crime stats. Everyone knows it’s wrong, but few have the guts to stand up and say, “This is wrong.”

There are so many great scenes and memorable quotes that run through my mind. Avon and Stringer on the rooftop, the Omar and Brother Mouzone confrontation, and Bubbles being allowed upstairs for dinner. Only during season five did I get a bit restless watching McNulty concoct the phantom serial killer.

The Wire discourages casual viewing, yet rewards those who are in it for the long haul. Seemingly insignificant characters return in later episodes (even seasons) to help paint a full picture of Baltimore and its people working in and outside of the law. The Wire has more in common with a great book that unwinds slowly than a TV crime drama. What other TV drama have you heard of that’s taught at Harvard?

The Wire is the best television show I’ve seen, yet I’ve only recommended it to a few friends I knew would like it. It’s a major time investment and it won’t appeal to all. I had difficulty understanding a lot of the slang, and keeping track of all the characters can be mind-boggling. But is worth it?

In the words of Omar Little: “Indeed.”

Finding Home

“Doesn’t this feel just like Seattle?”

Those were Kim’s words last night as we stood on our front porch and watch the wind whip leaves down our street. For the first times in months, the temperatures dipped into the high 60’s.

And yes, it did feel like Seattle minus the $1000 worth electrical bills we rang up over the past two months. In Seattle, we stayed inside due to rain whereas here we remain in an air-conditioned home due to the heat.

With most the of 100+ degree days behind us for the year, I look forward to getting back into biking. The heat plus the higher elevation (620 vs. 3031 feet) has resulted in a lot fewer rides than I was used to.

Our children are back in school and have transitioned well to their new surroundings. They miss old friends but have made a number of new ones. They love living close to cousins and their grandparents. When I ask them today if they want to move back to Seattle they at least hesitate now instead of making a mad dash to the car.

It takes time, and we knew that going into this. We’ve found it best to talk through their concerns, and help them understand that it may take a while before it starts to feel like home. What we didn’t plan on was that those talks being more beneficial to the adults than the kids.

Seattle still feels like home. And I imagine it will feel like home for a long time.

My Two Experiences with Steve Ballmer

Much has been written about Steve Ballmer’s decision to retire from Microsoft. No doubt there’s a lot more analysis to come, but I don’t plan to add to that narrative today.

But having spent about 11 years of my career at Microsoft as a contractor, full-time employee, and vendor, I decided to share a couple of impressions and experiences I had of Ballmer while I was employed in Redmond.

While working as a contractor in the mid-90s’ I was tasked to create demos executives used to showcase their products at tradeshows and conventions. Some of the products we created demos for were not finished or were not stable enough to demo “live” so we used smoke and mirrors (local websites, Flash, fake data) to make it appear the products worked.

The first few products I worked on never made it to market. This isn’t uncommon at Microsoft where Bill Gates would proudly say he’d rather have product teams compete internally for resources than have the market decide which product succeeds. This Darwinian approach worked well as weaker products faded into oblivion giving the battle-tested products a chance to succeed.

After a couple of failures, I was finally on a team with a product we thought was good enough to bring to market. We were excited to find a prominent customer who would commit to our product, making it more likely it would be selected. In short, we needed a high-profile company to help us champion our software internally before the plug was pulled. Word got out that Starbucks was interested and a meeting was scheduled to get both parties together to work through the details.

I was involved in the meeting only because the software wasn’t finished and I would be part of the demo. Our team, made of mostly of program and product managers, worked for several weeks to make sure we had a compelling and complete presentation. It was a tense couple of weeks. We felt our existence as a product team rested on being able to convince Starbucks to go with our product.

The big day came. The meeting went well and I was pleased our demo didn’t crash and burn, which can and does happen. As the meeting was brought to a close, our group manager mentioned that Steve Ballmer would be stopping by to meet the team from Starbucks. At the time, Ballmer was VP of Sales and Support, and, although he was admired, nobody carried more clout with employees and customers than Bill Gates. One could argue that no CEO in American was more well-known than Bill Gates. Competitors feared him, customers admired him and Microsoft employees both feared and revered him.

On the walk back to our offices, I asked my coworker, who had been with Microsoft for a decade, why Ballmer instead of Gates was being brought in at this critical point of the sales process. Was our product too insignificant at the time to garner Gate’s attention? What was going on?

My coworker had been a part of a number of these meetings, having spent years in the field as a sales manager said, “We bring Bill in to impress the client. We bring in Steve to close the deal.”

And he did.

Years later, after I left Microsoft and returned as a vendor, I worked for the group that planned and provided technical support at the nearly 500 annual events Microsoft takes part in that include conventions, trade-shows, conference and dozens of keynotes.

When a Microsoft executive is asked to speak at these keynotes, say, CES, a small army of technical handlers is there to make sure the presentation goes as smoothly as possible. One group might polish the slide deck while another team configures the computers and software that will be shown. Microsoft even has podiums built that can be shipped around to the most important events. These podiums are full of computer and A/V equipment these geeks know well. Although expensive, controlling every segment of the keynote results in fewer surprises.

In short, the goal is to ensure something like this never happens again.

I was still new to the group and decided to attend a presentation that Ballmer would be giving at a hotel in downtown Seattle. I arrived early and was able to secure a badge that gave me access to the backstage. I followed my team around the stage as attendees began to fill the seats. I watched them wire a podium and demo table with all sorts of electronic gadgets including a row of black flat screen monitors. These monitors are used by the speaker to keep track of his slides and any demos. One monitor is a dedicated speaker timer.

As I looked around I noticed black tape covering the logo on each monitor at the speaker podium. I found that odd since most of the computer gear was donated by HP or Dell.  When I asked one of the techs about the tape he told me they had built the podiums to support a certain monitor size, and that a certain IBM monitor was either the best fit or best quality or both. I asked why the logo was covered on the IBM monitors but not the Dell monitors being used on the demo tables.

The tech said, “We cover the IBM logo because Steve hates IBM and doesn’t want to be photographed using any IBM products.”

Both of these experiences helped form my opinion of the man with an oversized personality and ego, who would years earlier, make friends with a computer geek from Seattle.

The rest is history.

The Disease of More

I once knew a man who decided he wanted a dog. So he spent months researching various breeds until he finally decided on one. He then found a breeder and paid $400 cash for the dog.

Over the next few weeks he bought food, treats, dishes, collars, leashes, toys, grooming tools and lotions to keep the critters away from the new family member. Of course, he didn’t want his dog reproducing with the neighbor’s mutt so off to the vet he went, only to return a few days later with a lighter wallet and a few pats on the back from the vet for making the reasonable decision.

It wasn’t long before he realized the dog needed crate for his home to assist in puppy training. The dog liked to tag along so another crate was purchased and installed in the car.

But the crate took up most of the luggage space so he began researching new SUVs that would give him and the dog more room. It only made sense. And why stop there when a storage carrier could be purchased providing even more space for longer trips.

Of course, the new SUV didn’t come with decent floor mats so he ordered special heavy duty mats that could handle anything he dog could do to them.

Within a few months a $400 pet had turned in to a $40,000 pursuit.

You’ve probably figured out by now that I’m the person in the story.

I’ve often thought back to this experience because it explains a theory I call the Disease of More.  What started out as an honest desire to own a dog quickly turned into a much larger and unplanned expense. Taken individually (outside the purchase of the new SUV), none of the purchases were excessive. But each item built upon the one before it and left a void filled only by purchasing another item.

The Disease of More is a cycle that feeds off itself. It often starts small, such as the purchase of a new phone. The phone works and looks great, until you see some cool new cases at Amazon and add them to your cart. But wait, Amazon says that people who bought this case also bought this car charger, and before you know it, you’ve dropped $300 on a Bluetooth speaker you’ve convinced yourself will be perfect at the beach.

I’ve been down this road before and can tell you it’s a dead end. More stuff doesn’t bring happiness, it only encourages acquiring more stuff. Before long, you’ve got a garage full of crap, most of which you’ve forgotten about.

The good news is the the Disease of More can be eradicated by replacing it with the Cure of Less.

As I’ve mentioned before I took up cycling two years ago. The bike I ride today is 13 years old, and a week doesn’t go by where someone cruises past me on a newer, fancier bike. For a moment I think, “Man, I wish I had a new bike” and then my mind springs into action trying to justify such a purchase.

But, as I learned with the dog, purchasing a new bike doesn’t stop with the bike. I’ll need lots of new gear, and equipment and clothing. Before long I’ll have dropped five grand on a $1500 bike. And I can’t afford that right now.

So I’m learning to celebrate how much I save by riding my old bike. My bike runs fine because I’ve taken care of it. All my gear is fine too. I won’t be competing in the Tour de France, and my bike and gear don’t need to reflect that level of performance.

When you live with less you’re able to focus your attention on those things that matter most in your life. Last month I sold my iPad assuming I’d purchase the new smaller version this fall. But I’ve found that having one less gadget to babysit feels fantastic. I’ve proven to myself that I can live better without a device I deemed necessary not long ago, which has me searching for other time-sucking items I can remove from my day.

Last night Kim and I went for a bike ride. We didn’t go far because the temperatures were in the mid 90s and, frankly, we are in the process of getting back in shape. We biked through neighborhoods taking our time and chatting along the way. When it began to get dark we headed for home.

As much as I’d love a new Cervélo or Specialized bike, I don’t like the idea of working longer hours to pay for such a purchase. The time spent with Kim on my old bike is worth far more to me.