In this call, I'm answering as a tech support agent for a hotel, supporting their internet connectivity for their guests.
ME: Blade_Raver
SC: Stupid Customer
Me: Thank you for calling tech support, this is Matt, how can I help you?
SC: I'm in the banquet room here at the hotel and I've got 11 computers that I'm trying to set up in this room for a presentation and it requires internet access. You need to get them up and running.
(Okay, so I get her name, the hotel that she's calling in from... and then shortly before we go into tech troubleshooting she spouts off with some false sense of authority about how she's the IT manager of some such and such company and she can't afford to have me "screw up her presentation" because her clients are more important and blah blah blah. I tell her that I'm here to troubleshoot and away we went.)
So, we have her connect one computer to the jack, and she gets an IP address, but no internet connectivity.. no problem. I go into the hotel's router and set up a MAC filter. I ask her for her the MAC address of her Computer's network card.. she gets it and tells it to me. Set up the info on the router with proper expiration date, then BAM! She's up and running on that one computer.
Just to make things easier, I ask her for the MAC addresses on her other 10 computers. She gives off an inconvenienced sigh of frustration at me, puts me on hold, and gets information. After about 10 mins she rattles them off without me even being ready and too quick to even type them in. I asked her to say them slowly. She does and I input each one into the router.. So they're all set.. No big deal right? Wrong! She decides that she's going to hook up a switch to one of the jacks in the room and connect all 11 machines to this switch. This is where trouble ensues.
SC: Well, last time I did this you guys did something and they all worked.
Me: Let me check notes from previous call.
(I check the notes, her name's not even in the system.)
Me: I do not see any notes from last time. Do you know exactly what we did?
SC: No. You should have that information.
Me: The system doesn't show any calls under your name. You plugged a computer into it and it was able to browse just fine. The problem is the switch, and it can be fixed by MAC filtering it like we did the other 11 computers.
SC: It's a switch. It has no MAC address.
Okay, stopping here for a moment, for you techie-geeks out there, you know that there is an OSI layer model. The bottom layer is Physical, top is Application. What's the next layer above physical? Data-Link, that's right. What does Data-Link handle? Media Access Control (MAC) data. Exactly. She's got a switch, which is a network device that has RJ45 plugs on it (about 24 of them) and she says that it doesn't have a MAC address... do we smell BS? Oh yes we do... this coming from a self-proclaimed IT manager of a big company of all people. Okay, let's continue with call.
Me: All network devices that communicate have MAC addresses.
SC: You're useless and know nothing. I'm going to call my IT department. Bye. (click)
Good luck getting your IT department to hack the hotel's router to put that last MAC filter on.
More to come!
ME: Blade_Raver
SC: Stupid Customer
Me: Thank you for calling tech support, this is Matt, how can I help you?
SC: I'm in the banquet room here at the hotel and I've got 11 computers that I'm trying to set up in this room for a presentation and it requires internet access. You need to get them up and running.
(Okay, so I get her name, the hotel that she's calling in from... and then shortly before we go into tech troubleshooting she spouts off with some false sense of authority about how she's the IT manager of some such and such company and she can't afford to have me "screw up her presentation" because her clients are more important and blah blah blah. I tell her that I'm here to troubleshoot and away we went.)
So, we have her connect one computer to the jack, and she gets an IP address, but no internet connectivity.. no problem. I go into the hotel's router and set up a MAC filter. I ask her for her the MAC address of her Computer's network card.. she gets it and tells it to me. Set up the info on the router with proper expiration date, then BAM! She's up and running on that one computer.
Just to make things easier, I ask her for the MAC addresses on her other 10 computers. She gives off an inconvenienced sigh of frustration at me, puts me on hold, and gets information. After about 10 mins she rattles them off without me even being ready and too quick to even type them in. I asked her to say them slowly. She does and I input each one into the router.. So they're all set.. No big deal right? Wrong! She decides that she's going to hook up a switch to one of the jacks in the room and connect all 11 machines to this switch. This is where trouble ensues.
SC: Well, last time I did this you guys did something and they all worked.
Me: Let me check notes from previous call.
(I check the notes, her name's not even in the system.)
Me: I do not see any notes from last time. Do you know exactly what we did?
SC: No. You should have that information.
Me: The system doesn't show any calls under your name. You plugged a computer into it and it was able to browse just fine. The problem is the switch, and it can be fixed by MAC filtering it like we did the other 11 computers.
SC: It's a switch. It has no MAC address.
Okay, stopping here for a moment, for you techie-geeks out there, you know that there is an OSI layer model. The bottom layer is Physical, top is Application. What's the next layer above physical? Data-Link, that's right. What does Data-Link handle? Media Access Control (MAC) data. Exactly. She's got a switch, which is a network device that has RJ45 plugs on it (about 24 of them) and she says that it doesn't have a MAC address... do we smell BS? Oh yes we do... this coming from a self-proclaimed IT manager of a big company of all people. Okay, let's continue with call.
Me: All network devices that communicate have MAC addresses.
SC: You're useless and know nothing. I'm going to call my IT department. Bye. (click)
Good luck getting your IT department to hack the hotel's router to put that last MAC filter on.
More to come!




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