More from the WSJ's Mossberg in today's column on Dell service and USB 'caveats'...
December 2, 1999
What Does 'On-Site' Mean To Today's Makers of PCs?
By WALTER S. MOSSBERG
There's no other major item most of us own that is as confusing, unpredictable and unreliable as our personal computers. Everybody has questions about them, and we aim to help. Here are a few questions about computers I've received recently from people like you, and my answers. I have edited and restated the questions a bit, for readability.
This week my mailbox contained questions about on-site repairs, USB cables, and Lotus 1-2-3.
Q. My Dell personal computer won't boot. I have a three-year next-day on-site warranty that I paid extra for at the time I purchased the computer. I called Dell and asked them to send someone to fix my PC on-site. The person told me that I would first have to "troubleshoot" the problem over the phone with the technician. After an hour, he still couldn't get my computer to boot. Then a second technician came on the phone and said to take all of the cables out of the computer, take the cover off, take all of the cards out and then see if I could reboot it without any of the cards. I refused, told him that this is why I paid for the on-site warranty and said that I wanted someone to come here tomorrow to fix it. He again said no. What's going on here?
A. I spoke to Dell about your case, and the company said the technicians in your instance went too far in making you diagnose the machine before sending a repair person to your site. However, you have stumbled onto a dirty little secret of the PC industry: Most companies make you jump through all sorts of hoops on the phone before agreeing to honor on-site warranties. This is reasonable only up to a point: Before dispatching a technician, the companies want to make sure what's wrong isn't something simple, like a loose plug or cable, and they want to make sure it's a hardware problem, not a software problem, which usually isn't covered under such on-site warranties.
But in many cases -- such as yours -- the companies are being unreasonable. They want to avoid the expense of sending out a technician, and they still labor under the outdated assumption that most owners are techies. They think you have the time, skill and interest to go through the lengthy process of stripping down a PC to test it over the phone. But increasingly, users don't want to participate in diagnosis and repair beyond answering a few reasonable questions. They just want the PC fixed, and that's why they buy on-site warranties.
Also, in the PC business, it's often impossible to know whether a problem is due to a flaw in hardware or software, since the two are so closely intertwined. My attitude is that PC makers should stand by the whole package, including pre-loaded software, and that on-site warranties should be more inclusive.
Q. In a recent column, you said buyers of "legacy-free" computers that only have USB connectors might have to buy special adapter cables to connect older hardware, like printers. Well, this was my problem with my new Dell. I was searching for a USB adapter cable to connect my older Okidata printer and my six-month-old H-P scanner, but CompUSA told me they've never seen such a cable. When I called H-P, I was also told these cables don't exist. And Okidata said there is no such thing as a bi-directional adapter cable. Can you tell me about adapter-cable sources?
A. There certainly are adapters -- some in the form of cables, some in the form of little boxes called hubs -- that can link a parallel printer to a USB port on a PC. Some are, indeed, sold at CompUSA. Two accessory companies, Belkin and Entrega, also sell them at www.belkin.com or www.entrega.com.
However, these adapters don't work with every printer, and even when they do, they don't support every feature on those printers. In particular, they don't support so-called "bi-directional" communication, just as Okidata told you. That means that with some printers you may lose some of the information displays on your PC screen that tell you when the printer's out of ink or paper. Printing still works. And devices other than printers -- such as your scanner -- may not work at all.
Q. Is Lotus an endangered species? Yesterday in a bookstore I noted shelf after shelf of books on Microsoft products but found only two books on Lotus products. I have received no correspondence from Lotus regarding new products or support in more than a year. Is Lotus 1-2-3 about to go extinct? I have invested more than 15 years in Lotus products, but will I be consigned to a dead end if I persist?
A. Lotus continues to upgrade and sell its 1-2-3 spreadsheet, which is part of a productivity bundle known as SmartSuite, and hasn't made any moves to cancel it. But for a couple of reasons, the company has maintained a much lower profile in the consumer market in recent years. Some years ago, the Lotus suite was trounced in the marketplace by Microsoft Office, and the company turned its attention to its corporate groupware product, Notes. Then Lotus was acquired by IBM; since then it has treated SmartSuite as something mainly to bundle with IBM PCs and to sell into corporate channels. However, as I said, Lotus is still offering it to consumers. For information, see www.lotus.com/home.nsf/welcome/123.
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