josquint asks:
"Does the Computer Service/Repair field need to be regulated? This is a question I asked myself after spending a day off from my position as Lead Technician at a local computer shop, in an auto repair shop and a hair salon. In both places, I noted that all the employees had their trade credentials displayed for all customers to see. They are not only displayed as a matter of pride or to gain customer trust (as my A+ and Network Security certificate is) but as a matter of law. This regulation, to me, makes sense. If you're going to pay good money to have your automobile repaired, it better be by someone trained and proficient at doing it (otherwise I might as well do it myself!). Also, there is a matter of safety --an error in repairing a car can easily result in injury or death of quite a few people, so some accountability is needed.
The salon regulation, to me at first, seemed like the usual overkill large government regulation. However, it too is a matter of safety to the clients, as the chemicals and equipment (tanning beds especially) can also do harm if used incorrectly. Would you view regulation or mandatory certification as a good thing in the computer repair/installation/maintenance world? What kind of regulation would you like to see, if any? How and at what level would it be implemented and enforced?"
"I personally would like something that requires certain basic certifications for the techs themselves, and possibly something to do with retail shop areas (use of static mats, data backup procedures, etc). And enforced at the State level similar to most small business type codes.
I wouldn't have a problem following some such type of regulation, and probably wouldn't need to do much if anything to make code. I do a fair share of cleaning up after fly-by-night companies/consultants/johnny's-14-year-old nephew-that-really-knows-computers. It costs a lot of the local businesses serious money to replace lost data and sub-standard equipment. I just completed a total system replacement at a clinic that had the system replaced about 2 months ago. It cost them over $10,000 for a system the should have been close to $3,500, but they had to replace the first replacement due to a consultant that had no experience or knowledge in that type of system trying to put one in.
While regulation wouldn't solve everything, I think it might cut down on the riff-raff and wannabes in an industry that many businesses can't do without as they can't do without electricity."
Regulation makes it MORE difficult... (Score:2, Insightful)
Not the same thing... (Score:5, Insightful)
Similarly, a hair stylist has sanitation concerns that must be met to provide a germ-free and safe environment.
A computer technician normally troubleshoots and diagnoses systems that do not have concerns of this type.
Granted, there are occasions when a system is critical to the functioning of a system of this type, such as elevators, but most of those functions are licensed anyway, so the technology must be certified, rather than the technician.
Re:definitely (Score:5, Insightful)
For important systems, get certified techs. For Joe Everyman, there's usually no need -- esp. with all the cheap underage (high school) proficient labor around.
Re: because (Score:2, Insightful)
Nope (Score:5, Insightful)
The things I see in the cases above are people who make bad choices and ignore the simplest of common sense when hiring someone to do any kind of work.
This would just add costs to those who want to do the work- which would get passed on to the customer and drive out the little guy who doesn't have the time or money to get a 'license' to fix computers.
Not to mention the possible legal hassles for helping someone out.
Nope.
WELL, (Score:5, Insightful)
Frys for example has horrendous levels of bad/returned equipment (because the purchase and resell refurbs and returns and bad equipment side-by-side at the same prices as real brand new equipment) and they tend to have very very poor customer service.
I would rather have a level of customer service that should be expected from any and all customers - maybe even regulating the return/exchange policies....
If all companies were required to have their customer service entities live of to an expected level of performance/satisfaction it would do wonders for trust and consumer satisfaction in general.
I cannot tell you how angry it makes me when I deal with difficult, deceptive or rude customer service agents.
Do you really want an MCSE fixing your computer? (Score:2, Insightful)
Even if it means I have to be an informed consumer, I'd much rather have choice and make my own decisions. With choice there will be reasons for the good people to stay in the field.
Scenario (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry man, I could get in real trouble if I work on your computer. I don't have a license...
won't work (Score:2, Insightful)
Just because I do OpenGL for a living, does that make me A+ certified? Or because I cannot do Linux Admin to save my life, am I not qualified?
Computer knowledge requires too many differnt areas of knowledge, since, by nature, they are a general purpose machine. The things that need certifications, do already, (MSIE, SUN security, Java, C++). I don't think there can be a law that requires me to be certified in computers, because ultimitly it would be a certification in many general subject that most I will never use in my Job or any job in the future I may have...(or forgotten by the time I get my new job
The whole cert thing is about money (Score:2, Insightful)
And the license that you need to run a business is all about money that the local government wants.
So count me out on the added taxes hassles and overall mess.
PS: I could I get a little off the top, trim it so the hair is off the ears and trim up the back. ;)
Re:A+ certified people are the dumbest of the fiel (Score:5, Insightful)
When I worked for DEC they had a rule, "A+ or your ass is gone." To keep a job, certs come in real handy. To get a (new) job, certs come in real handy, too. Some employers (prospective or otherwise) may not care about how long you've done something, or if you've been in the field forever, but if you have the cred to "prove it."
certified != good (or even competent) (Score:5, Insightful)
I've had many bad haircuts.
I've met lots of people who are MCSE's who are clueless.
All the certifications mean is that someone has demonstrated to someone else that they can regurgitate material that has been laid out for them. It doesn't mean they can apply the knowledge to real world situations.
I go to organizations that have a good reputation, I've had good experience with, or my friends/peers have had good experience with. If I have a bad experience with them, I move elsewhere.
I like the system. It works. Sometimes I get burned, but for the most part I'm happy because I use common sense.
Absolute nonsense (Score:5, Insightful)
My 20+ years worth of non-licensed troubleshooting is far better than any certification, in my opinion. I routinely fix systems that I have never seen before just because I have a knack for it. I think certification is great, but not necessary.
What are we going to discuss next? How about "should all programmers have CS degrees?".
I vote No. (Score:2, Insightful)
Now, after I say that, I would not be comfortable walking into any old shop and getting them to work on my computer without either having a recommendation or very visible credentials. This applies even more strongly if I was to blow 20K, 30K or more on computers for my business.
Re:definitely (Score:5, Insightful)
We could argue back and forth about the monetary value of my personal data and files, as well as my user account credentials for online services, which could be damaged/destroyed/compromised if I were to take my system in for service. I'd say that's a fairly large liability, wouldn't you?
Suppose I run my own legitimate business at home from my computer? That's a pretty hefty burden to deal with if the shop I take my system to screws it up. You could say that it's my responsibility to keep backups of my data, but I'd just as easily say it's the shop's responsibility to make sure that they don't break what isn't already broken. You know...the ol' Hippocratic oath - "First, do no harm."
No (Score:5, Insightful)
Just what we need... (Score:3, Insightful)
My certifications include ... (Score:3, Insightful)
PCI card swapping
Case assembly
IDE installation
PC case fan installation (I'm working on CPU fans)
SCSI hard drive installs (but not SCSI CDROMS, tape drives, RAIDS, or other SCSI devices)
AGP video cards
PCxxxx memory (but nothing before 1997) and not Rambus memory
Currently working on CPU install and LRF support (little rubber feet)
GIMME A BREAK!!! Fixing a PC is simple
All this is going to do is make silly tech schools (like the infomercials as seen on TV) more money and make people invest into a career that already doesn't pay that well
I hate it when educational institutions make extra money just because people HAVE to be TRAINED to do something that is REALL easy!
Taking a deep breath now
Just my $0.02 cents
To be a COP only requires EIGHT weeks of trainning (Score:2, Insightful)
Licensing is simple a way to raise money for the state and create politics. Some times it makes some sence, medical doctors are licensed, but even there it simply creates a cover up indiscretions of the members. Bad doctors hardly every have their licenses revokes.
I don't know about your state. But in my state (Oklahoma) you have to go to school for two years to cut hair, two years put put plants in some ones yard, six months to train a hourse and eight weeks to be a cop.
Almost all licensing is wrong. Anyone with a screwdriver should be allowed to work on computers.
Re:certification? (Score:4, Insightful)
As one who fixes his own car, _EVERY TIME_ someone else works on it, they mess something up. If I didnt fix my own computer, I am sure I would see the same.
A certificate is just a piece of paper that reflects a persons reputation. It does not reflect knowledge or skill.
if you screw up, you can loose your certificate, but its too late for those who trusted that it had value in the first place.
The government doesn't move fast enough (Score:5, Insightful)
And can you imagine the politics? Microsoft would want training for people to repair their hardware spec. Hollywood would want people to take an oath not to disable their copy protection devices that might be enabled some day. Homeland would want a quick scan of the hard drive for those terrorist keywords.
I think we are better off with the unregulated way things are now.
true (Score:1, Insightful)
Then there is the fact mentioned above about your sink being connected to the public water system and public sewer. While your computer is isolated by the either a fuse or a circuit breaker, the public water supply and sewage system has nothing to protect everyone else from botched repairs to your pipes.
It is for these reasons that most municipalities require professionals to be licensed. But notice something here. The requirement is usually local. There is no federal mandate and few (if any) state mandates on the matter. (Excepting requirements for federal or state funded projects.)
The industry already has this (Score:2, Insightful)
This is why the geniuses at Best Buy can open an eMachines PC to upgrade the RAM without voiding the warranty, and I can't.
The certification stuff is already there for those who want to embark on the high-paying lucrative career of installing video cards in people's Dells.
Re:I'd go for less regulation, and not more (Score:3, Insightful)
A mechanic who has been required to be licensed is garunteed to have a minimum of training that raises the safety of his work for all of his customers.
Same goes for hairdressers and just about anyone else required to get a license.
Certs are only worth the paper they are written on (Score:3, Insightful)
what people go to salons and mechanics for (Score:2, Insightful)
If I want to wash my hair, or comb it, or other such regular matenence, I don't go to a salon. Same thing with my car, I don't take it to a mechanic to put gas into it or chage the oil.
The problem is that most people do take their computer in for comparitivly simple things. Reinstalling a driver, reseating ram, things like that are in the same vein as changing oil in your car or combing your hair.
And the last time I checked, you didn't need a license to work at a full service gas station or sell someone shampoo.
Certs required to work on computers? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:licensing software engineers (Score:3, Insightful)
NOW HERE IS A TOPIC WORTH DISCUSSING!!!
Hardware is EASY!
1) Plug stuff in
2) Flip on power switch
3) Watch it go
But software
Make this the next topic!
Re:certification? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:definitely (Score:1, Insightful)
About Contracts, etc (Score:4, Insightful)
BUT and this is what I also see. If people are not satisfied, then no matter how much we know it is a bad idea it will happen. In industry, when there is a problem that cannot be managed by the industry, regulations start. They start because people want some quality and control. And no matter how much we whine, the law makers will not care.
THEREFORE, it is up to us to fix it!
Re:true (Score:3, Insightful)
Haven't we seen enough evidence of this through Windows viruses?
I can see an easy parallel between sink/sewage and computer/internet.
My 2 cents.
Re: who would do the certs? (Score:3, Insightful)
At least where I live, certification for auto mechanics is optional. Generally it is required only by manufacturers for in-warranty repairs. It just so happens that many people feel more comfortable taking their automobile to a certified mechanic.
Which raises a question: why require certification if people are free to choose to go to a certified repair shop?
But the real humdinger is who would do the certification? Mechanics (and other repair persons) are generally certified by manufacturers to do authorized service. Construction folks are generally certified by local municipalities to do certain types of work: plumbing, electric, etc. Requiring certification at any level above the local level would likely be problematic on a legal basis. If municipalities begin requiring certification, a morass of different computer repair codes will result.
Re:Not the same thing... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The difference is criticalness (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, maybe not true. This is my second (maybe third?) career. My first career was working in Insurance (property adjuster).
Of the 70 or so fire claims I was involved in, 2 were due to computer component malfunctions.
Clearly computers are much lower risk than cars, but there is still potential for damage there. Sure in this world of 'throw away the old one, and plug in a new one' most of that doesn't relate to the tech (our two were monitors frying - I think both from the same company
My personal vote is to do what accountants/lawyers have done, a self-regulation scheme. Believe me, we DON'T want the government involved in this. It will be run by people that don't know the difference between Linux/Windows etc, or even what the certifications mean. They'll impose stupid requirements and do more harm than good.
My father is an insurance adjuster also, they eventually had government regulators step in to regulate them. He's been doing his job since before I was born (I'm in my mid 30's), and is well respected by his peers as a competent and informed adjuster -- in fact, some of the younger ones often call him for advice.
Unfortunately, because of years of experience but no 'formal education', the regulatory body decided to downgrade his license level. The courses, which I started taking are relatively useless to someone who has that many years of experience. I was bored and just started in that industry.
It would be good in a way if we could certify all of IT on our own. Also, smaller businesses could pool together to get liability insurance (getting sued even if you're innocent still costs thousands), which could be purchased from the professional association (pharmacists have similar schemes).
That way, completely rogue operators could be 'disbarred' as it were, and thus increasing the standard and wage for all of us.
It still doesn't stop kids from earning a few bucks in their spare time for college, because certification or not, there are still mechanics working from their garage 'hobbyists'. It would just mean that businesses would have some way of discerning the hobbiest from the pro.
I'm sure we've all met the clueless MSCE (even though some of them I respect, it's not hard enough to get to really make it meaningful). If we had our own association of professionals, we could easily weed out those that can't apply the knowledge in a meaningful way.
Certification means nothing... voice of experience (Score:5, Insightful)
I said "no more of them". I went to CompUSA next, which was both Apple Certified *AND* CompUSA Certified. The problem was my PB3400c: the trackpad button was failing. So they got it (opening the computer: $180), and said "Well, the trackpad needs replacing, but we can't get another one for another month or so. We can close it up, and let you have it back, or we can hold onto it for a month. But meanwhile, we jury-rigged a sortof fix that might last for a while."
Hmm. It lasted for about a year. I went back; they said "well, it'll be another $180 to open it up again..." I needed it. They opened it. They replaced the trackpad -- but used a missized screw, so it failed again within 4 months. Tough. It's a 3-month warranty.
You know, certification really means nothing. I've repaired each of my powerbooks since then, I've done a better job, and the cost was a 2-3 hours of labor at most.
Requiring legal certification is just going to ensure that the people who are really good and cheap don't get jobs through us users stumbling on them and then sticking with them.
I say leave it to random chance, and just let people publish like crazy on the web who is good, and who isn't worth the screwdriver they wave around.
A+ regulation? (Score:4, Insightful)
When I lost my job a year or two back I had to take a job as the lead tech at Best Buy. On my staff I had 5 A+ Certified "Techs", not one of them worth the paper their certs were printed on. "New Motherboard" was their universal fix. They had NO trouble shooting skills. They knew the difference between the white slots and the brown slots and that's about it.
If there was to be an industry regulation, a new test would have to be developed, one that required basic tech skills, rather than multichoice "What is figure A. called?"
If I've offended any techs proud to be A+ out there, then you're probably one of the ones I was talking about anyways.
Re:definitely (Score:5, Insightful)
There are others of us, though, who see certifications* often as nothing more than an artificial limitation on a task that does absolutely nothing to improve quality or accountability, and instead requires a costly certification board that effectively becomes a union fee on the members, increasing costs on the consumer while reducing competition and consumer choice. No thanks. Keep the government out of this.
I wholeheartedly agree (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:definitely (Score:3, Insightful)
Your files are important? Then only have competent people work on your computer.
You can easily just reinstall canned software and don't want to pay $100 labor to have that peripheral added? Then choose less selectively.
Re:definitely (Score:2, Insightful)
I really don't think I should be forced to pay for expensive certificates.
Satisfied customers not a guarantee of competance (Score:5, Insightful)
All this does is make it harder for an independent artisan to make a living -- I don't want Intel's stamp of approval. The only approval I need is a legion of satisfied customers who tell their friends and colleagues and word spreads and reputation builds -- like in the old days before you could "buy" a certification.
At the risk of being modded a troll or offtopic, I wanted to draw an analogy here. The statement that you don't want a stamp of approval and that your satisfied customers is all the "proof" of your competance bothers me a little. I see it coming dangerously close to the current state of alternative medicine. Like you, those practioners do not particularly care if they are recognized by the medical community as a legitimate treatment -- they proudly point to their satisfied customers as "proof" that their methods work. I'm not going to go into a long diatribe of how people can be mistaken in their belief that alternative medicine has helped them here (check out QuackWatch [quackwatch.org] for a more detailed explanation). People can be easily fooled. In the process of repairing someone's hard drive, you might actually wipe out the data through your own negligence. Then you simply tell the customer that the hard drive and all the data on board could not be salvaged. Hey, it's not your fault, you tell them, it was simply fried that bad when they brought it to you. Because the customer doesn't know any better, they simply take your word for it. If you do a speedy job of replacing their hard drive, they might very well end up being satisfied customers, completely unaware that YOU were the reason the data was lost.
I'd just like to point out that this attitude that I hear in so many fields about "I don't need credentials. My customers will vouche for me." kind of spooks me a little.
GMD
Re:definitely (Score:2, Insightful)
Utility of tech certification is limited (Score:3, Insightful)
My A+ certification says that I have mastered such-and-such skills, identified by bullet points on the certificate. And that's great, but a monkey could pass the A+ exam, it could easily master the specific, exact issues the exam measures. What it doesn't measure is good, ole-fashioned tech-savviness, and I don't think any certification short of a CompSci degree can. The best tech I've ever known is forty years old, former French teacher, just got his cert last year on a whim. And I've known A+ certified techs who couldn't install a hard drive.
A bad idea for consumers... (Score:5, Insightful)
Would this benefit the customer? Or would it simply make things more expensive?
IMHO (Score:5, Insightful)
Worthless:
MCP and MCSE
A+ and *+ (everything else +)
CIW
Value:
CCIE
RHCE
Just MHO
Re: because (Score:1, Insightful)
doesnt anyone on Slashdot work in IT? I generally suspected they didnt, but I think this issue really proves it.
When you have a computing environment with servers and applications that need to be up 24/7, thats quite a different issue than if "Little Johnny" cant play Quake 3 or if his dad cant use Quicken.
Try having 500 users at a site not able to do anything on the file server because some jackass rebooted the router without backing up the config first, or having some rube fill up the C: drive and crash an application server because he was too stupid to make sure it had enough disk space.
Unfortunately, the "Tinkerers", as we call them (you know, the 'I read Slashdot and play with Linux at home, so I know computers', or the 'Im tech savy because I watch C|Net and read PC Magazine" crowd), are what is truly dangerous to the professional IT people. There is a common perception that managers have, that they can do what the tech support people do. The fact of the matter is that such people are really not technically inclined, and dont have the patience or the discipline to do real computer work.
There is some jackass at my work right now, who has messed up the routers twice, causing a loss of connection to ALL our remote sites, and he just finagled himself into being a domain admin. My only consolation is that he is too stupid to make any changes, since he doesnt even know what tools to use. My primary concern, however, is that he will give out his password to somebody who will know enough to hack the network. But, that isnt really something I can do anything about, execpt waiting for him to screw something up.
Re:definitely (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, yes, that's exactly what I'd say. If you ever give critical data to anyone without having a backup, then you're probably going to screw yourself long before a careless tech has a chance to do so. Of course, if you engage in that kind of negligence while working for someone else, you'll probably be finding work in another field, anyway.
Personally, I think certifications for computer repair are meaningless. Given that assembling computers is only slightly more complicated than assembling Legos, and the cost of simply replacing a motherboard (or whatever) is often less than the cost of having a tech spend a couple of hours performing diagnostics, the additional cost imposed by "licensed" technicians would be pointless.
This is for PCs, mind you -- for high end machines like Sun servers or IBM mainframes, the vendor supplies trained technicians and no outside agency would have the expertise necessary to even design a certification program.
Perhaps more important than any of this is the painfully obvious fact that you can easily have crappy work done on your car in garages full of certified mechanics, and you can get excellent repair work done by shade-tree mechanics. Certification programs exist mainly as a marketing tool and a bar to entry for competitors, and utterly fail to address the main problem with auto mechanics, which is endemic fraud. There is no reason to believe that computer repair -- another field where fraud is endemic -- would be any better served by bogus certifications than the auto repair industry.
Re:Nope (Score:5, Insightful)
Exactly, as soon as computer repair becomes a racket then you will undoubtedly see both unionization and certification.
Basically mandated government certification usually happens not because of public safety. Heck, look at the examples of automotive repair and beauty salons. There are plenty of auto mechanics that are incompetent, and piles more that are plain dishonest. And there are plenty of incompetent beauty school grads as well. That's why when your car is busted or you need a haircut you ask people you trust for a recommendation. Anyone who has ever had a mechanic screw up their car or gotten a bad haircut knows that the certification doesn't really mean anything.
What certification and unionization do accomplish, however, is that they raise the barrier to enter the profession. The folks that already do this type of work would just as soon not have any new competition, so they make it difficult to enter the business. Whether this is good or not depends on your point of view.
Not that it matters in the case of computer repair. Computer repair is a dying business anyhow. When you can purchase a new computer for $200 from walmart.com why would you bother repairing your old machine? In a few years the only people interested in repairing old computers will be the type of people that fix toasters and vacuum cleaners for fun. Adding certification and unionization to the mix will only make computer repair more expensive and accelerate the rush towards replacing instead of repairing.
Certification at barrier to entry (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh wait, that would drive up business costs and politicians are merely corporate puppets. I guess it won't become law after all.
Re:No regulation. (Score:5, Insightful)
The bottom line is: buyer beware. Find someone who seems intelligent and trustworthy, and let them do the repair. If they don't do a good job, find someone else. Government regulation wouldn't guarantee anything but that someone working in the shop you take your computer to has completed a minimal, half-baked certification process and paid someone a fee. I.e. it won't get you better service.
The very nature of a government certification guarantees this. It can't be any kind of guarantee of excellence, because that would exclude the un-excellent from working in the field, and that would be counter to government's purpose. If you want excellence, evaluate the person's intelligence by talking to them. They should be straightforward, honest, and not shower you with a deluge of jargon and technical information you don't understand (unless, of course, you understand it, in which case they should be able to show an understanding of the jargon they're using, rather than spitting out complicated-sounding terms that don't mean anything). If they can't speak with you clearly, don't trust your important data to them. It's very simple.
Insured yes, licensed no. Guarantees, yes. (Score:5, Insightful)
However, one should be insured for reasonable liability..
This goes for any industry as far as I'm concerned. My Auto mechanic isn't licensed, but his work IS guaranteed.
If they are incompetent they don't stay in business anyway. Sort of self-policing.
Re:certification? (Score:1, Insightful)
Wrong, you must be from the east side or some shit. The three R's are retry, reboot and reinstall. The 3 R's usually work well on windows systems. Really if something doesn't work and you retry it lots of times it'll work, if that doesnt do it, reboot. Rebooting seems to solve 90% of windows problems.
Re:definitely (Score:5, Insightful)
For a computer tech that's probably no longer the case. Unless he stayed in the field and continued his training, his knowledge is now up to date.
Also for car repair or hair dressing you need motoric skills (welding, cutting precisely etc) - once learned they can probably be adapted for new styles, or new tools fairly quickly. For the computer field that's usually not the case - unless you want to get deep into using soldering irons, the motoric side is trivial - what's important is to be able to pick up new knowledge quickly and to understand complex systems. Something which is very difficult to measure with certifications. They are only checking a snapshot of current (and soon out of date) knowledge.
Setting up a certification body, which then has to continually update the skill set measured is going to be a lot more difficult, in this case.
The best computer techs are often students, who know a lot of about computers and are quick to pick up new knowledge. They are good in that field because of these skills, and because they have these skills they will not stay in that field. They are training for other professions, and won't have time for getting these certifications.
So what I'm worried about, is that these certifications will effectively preclude the best suited people from actually working in the field, removing a good job for students to earn money for their tuition, and will not noticeably raise the minimum standards either.
Egad, no! (Score:2, Insightful)
The fact that a person can afford to take a test to get certification doesn't say squat about that person's ability to solve problems requiring critical reasoning or independent thought. I would rather hire someone based on his or her reputation for having their shit together and getting the job done right the first time. And, on the flip side, I would like to think that my own reputation spoke more highly for me than having any certification a well-trained chimp might get its hands on, given said chimp's ability to pay for it.
I tend to be nominally liberal, but in such a case as this, I am all for unregulated commerce. Dumbshits who fuck up will not be in business for long. Honest people with their act together will find their isn't enough time in the day to accept all requests for service.
Now, when it comes to coding software, I am in favor of regulation, especially for operating systems coders. but then, that is another kettle of fish entirely...
Re:definitely (Score:3, Insightful)
And one has to wonder - would a State Regulated computer tech licensing firm have trained the tech in the particular backup software you were utilising?
Re:certification? (Score:4, Insightful)
and he is the best there is within a 500 mile radius. He fixes things right the first time, does it fairly and honestly. and I'm not the only person that feels this way, his walls of the office are papered with letters from happy customers, and if you look at the dates they are no older than 4 months, except for a few gem's that are framed... and if you want to see the boxes of old praise letters he has just ask..
it is not REQUIRED for you to be a certified mechanic. you have to notify the customer that you are NOT certified.
Me? I'll stick with my non-certified mechanic, and hiring non-certified IT professionals.. I dont get burned by making them demonstrate their abilities instead of trusing some piece of paper.
Re:definitely (Score:2, Insightful)
Different people know different things. Just because most people on slashdot grew up playing with computers doesn't mean other people have. I personally would not need a computer repair service. But when your profession is something other than computers you may not be able to install windows or format a hard drive or even install a network card.
My future mother in law (one of the few people who I will help with windows problems) managed to set up a wireless network without too much trouble but I advised her as to what she would need to get and the basics of what she needed to do. However, everytime she booted into windows she got a missing file because of a program that when removed, didn't remove all the way. Something she just learned to deal with but took me all of about 5-10 minutes to track down and fix. Would I expect her to know how to go into the system registry and delete the references to the old program? (that's what was wrong with it though the error said to check the system.ini file)
But then again your just an AC posting an obvious troll question.
-Chris
And another thought... (Score:5, Insightful)
So why are you complaining? The fact that you're trusted to clean up these mistakes shows that you evidently have the experience/credentials/word-of-mouth-reputation that these fly-by-nighters, consultants, and nephews lack. On your part, you'd make less money if it weren't for two things:
1) Some of your customers were at one point careless with their money.
2) You have something better to offer than their previous servicefolks. Something that allows you to charge more, and forces them to either discount or get Darwinized out of business.
And on the part of your clients, they gain the benefit of wisdom (good judgement comes from experience, experience comes from bad judgement). Plus, it is worth the money they pay you to have you around to clean up their mistakes.
Re:certification? (Score:4, Insightful)
That doesn't happen with mechanics, so why should it happen to computer technicians?
I was a junior greasemonkey for about a year at a shop with a good reputation. The owner of that shop did a lot of horrible things that still haunt me even though I quit 3 years ago.
One of my ASE certifications is for manual transmissions. I don't trust myself to work on those (and sadly they're hardly used anymore), but I passed the test.
And with a dishonest mechanic, things aren't going to get any better. Shops that charge $500 to replace a valve cover (on a car from the 70s). It's a 2 minute job. We didn't do that, that's just a dishonest mechanic with ASE certification.
I really don't think computer certification for computer techs is going to mean anything.
Re:certification? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, I hate auto mechanics who love money. Damn them.
Ecclesiastes 10:19 A feast is made for laughter, and wine maketh merry: but money answereth all things.
Re:Do you really think it would help? (Score:3, Insightful)
Most of the time you do have to work very hard to get a Ph.D. It is not true of everyone, and certainly not true of all Ph.Ds, but most of our Ph.D's are in other fields and they only do CS because it pays better than rocket science or whatever they studied. They tend to think they are God's gift -- they are really smart... but they don't think they have to follow the rules/coding standards/etc, and they don't take criticism very well -- you have to argue with them for an hour to convince them that there's something wrong with the code they've written (when there is). I'm sure they don't make any more mistakes than anyone else, but getting those mistakes acknowledged and fixed is just painful.
On the other hand, when they are so inclined, they do tend to write vastly superior documentation. Although, that's maybe one in ten around here.
Re:true (Score:3, Insightful)
I think you missed the next few steps:
4. Government decides that OSes that are going to be connected to the internet have to be certified and signed.
5. ISPs are required to run software which interacts with your local PC to decide if it is running on trusted hardware with a trusted OS - otherwise click
6. MS pays off the appropriate authorities and WinXP gets the signature.
7. Big Linux distro also pays to get a sig. However, if you recompile your kernel the sig doesn't match anymore, and you can't go online.
8. Profit! (For MS at least, and some big linux vendors.)
Re:definitely (Score:3, Insightful)
Better yet, I'd recommend making sure the shop you take the machine to is reputable, and knows what they are doing (and understands the value of your data). Make sure they know not to touch your data without calling you first with backup options, etc.
Another significant reason to do this (and IMHO another ripe area for regulation) is that you aren't giving the guy in the repair shop access to your data...
I think any reputable shop won't go browsing through your pr0n or email. Again, research the shop first. Talk to the shop manager, or at least the person who's going to dig into the box. Or if it's a bigger shop, read their policies.
There is no need for regulation in my opinion. There are plenty of users who's data doesn't mean squat to them, and these users won't care to pay the extra fees to compensate for having to have "licenced PC repair persons". Like with anything else, some shops will be of higher quality and integrity than others. You get what you pay for...
Re:definitely (Score:5, Insightful)
Exactly!
I too fix dozens of computers every month for people who had their friend who "really knows computers" work on it, and the work ranges from slightly to extraordinarily incompetent in most cases. Businesses get roped into bad deals with incompetent computer techs, too, and it's entirely preventable.
Some steps to ensure the integrity of your data;
There are any number of things you can do to ensure that you can trust the people you're leaving your computer with; a lot of which can be asessed in about 30 seconds when you walk in the door. Caveat Emptor has to apply, and if people are going to blindly trust someone on their word (hint; smooth talkers aren't neccesarily the best people for the job!), then IMNSHO they deserve whatever perils they may encounter.
I have real trouble symapthizing with someone who entrusted their computer to a 14 year old whiz-kid and wound up losing all their data and had components blow up on them shortly afterwards. Even businesses who aren't computer savvy should be able to recognize a snake-oil salesman when they see one coming. They should also have a firm contract, reveiwed by their lawyer if they're large enough to warrant, that spells out exactly what the technician will and will not do, and gives timeframes for completion of work. All too often I've seen incompetent contractors charging hourly rates for weeks on end for a three day job, just because they can't figure it out. Are you paying for someone's learning curve? Have someone stay in the room with them and see what they're donig. If they're reading manuals more than they're working, or if you hear an excess of profanity with little positive result, chances are you're funding their mis-education.
I really don't want to see government, who (from personal experience) have clue #0 about information technology, mandating certification levels for computer stores. While it would be nice to see much of our local competition shut down, it would also add a lot of additional headache to an otherwise low margin, slumping industry.
Re:definitely (Score:2, Insightful)
NOT
Re:definitely (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, there's an issue of practicality: the computer industry moves at a breakneck pace compared to the automotive industry (in part because of the safety issue). Government agencies move notoriously slowly, so we'd still have people being certified on Windows XP when everybody's using Windows: Next Dimension 2008. Same with hardware.
If you want decent tech support, do your homework and see if your tech has a good reputation. Don't make me pay more taxes so the government can do your homework for you.
Re:certification? (Score:3, Insightful)
You guys need a certification in something...but computers ain't it. Reinstall is the absolute LAST option, only to be used when you're (a) out of options, or (b) know the fix would take longer than rebuilding the machine. Not entirely true on corporate machines that have disk images and automated app installs, but then they don't bring their PC's to the shop, do they?
Why can't you just find the problem and fix it? Is it that difficult? If it is, perhaps you should look for a new line of work, instead of leaving competent techs like myself to clean up after you or trying to explain why you formatted someone's PC (and usually screwed it up even more by losing data, settings, or not installing drivers, etc) for no reason.
Re:definitely (Score:3, Insightful)
what purpose would it serve? (Score:2, Insightful)
Now, if your data has a real value, then you either are:
What about cost? If you introduce forced certification, it'll incur a large cost that'll be passed on to consumers
What about enforcement? What if someone performs "illegal" tech work without a cert? What if a cert'ed tech screws up? Will there be government entities to oversee the process and handle complaints? All costs - and unfair, not every user 1) has a computer 2) needs a tech
Tips balance of power - if all techs had to get certed, everyone would focus on Windows - and the issue of "unsupported" systems (like your fav *ix) would get even worse.
Tech support - this involves working on systems, even if you're talking someone through it - will this be subject to cert? You can bet that even fewer will offer free support.
There are plenty more reasons to not force certification, but that doesn't mean it's necessarily bad. Techs/shops can use it to their marketing advantage - like "GM" certified shops can make themselves sound more credible than the "local greasy Joe" shop.
Re:definitely (Score:2, Insightful)
The simple question is "Would certifications improve the quality of knowledge and care without unduely restricting free tree", and in my opinion the answer is absolutely not.
"Yup, sounds like you have a virus." (Score:3, Insightful)
I've noticed that when they call a repair shop, no matter what silly little problem they might be seeing, the shop almost always concludes that the person may have a virus, and should bring it in right away (oh, and there will be a nominal $25-$50 fee to check it out). In the past two years I have seen the virus scare tactic used when people's machines:
(1) ran out of disk space -- I've seen that one three times now,
(2) had a dead modem,
(3) had an AGP slot going on the fritz,
(4) had a power switch that was flaking out,
(5) had a spent inkjet cartridge -- my favorite... oh yeah, it's a virus...
So that's seven incidents in two years with responses from everything ranging from CompUSA to the local nerd-on-the-corner. Usually I'd start out just recommending they call somebody else, but when they hit the third or fourth place claiming it was a virus, I'd break down and fix it for them -- and hopefully educate them a little in the process. (So far I've only seen one case where somebody actually had any actual mal-ware, and in that case her moron boyfriend had downloaded a fake porn EXE which proceeded to delete files. Idiot.)
On top of the virus scam, I've seen a number of very minor problems in which the shop told the person they needed a whole new computer, when it was really just a bad video card or something equally simple. I think they reserve the Big Whammy of a new machine for the scary times when the computer doesn't seem to do anything at all when the user hits the power.
These experiences have forced me to conclude that most computer repair people are either fantastically (and improbably) incompetent, or they're just outright con artists looking to scam money from people who don't know any better.
Timing is everything (Score:3, Insightful)
What a bargain.