Learn to read, please
Feb. 2nd, 2006 10:50 pmWe are rolling out a new feature and, since it's alpha code, we don't really want to offer support for it as of yet. No docs, no help for it available yet, etc. We even have a nice plain "leave us alone" about it in our notices area:
Being in alpha means there is no support for this yet. If you cannot get it working we cannot help right now. There is also no documentation and the service is subject to outages. Sounds brutal, huh? It's really not that bad, it's actually pretty easy to use.
Would you like to take a guess as to how many customers have asked me, both officially as well as unofficially, how to make it work/set it up/etc. ?
38. Less than twenty four hours into our testing and 38 people can't read. This doesn't bode well at all...
*considers a trip to Jamaica*
no subject
Date: 2006-02-03 11:22 am (UTC)"This is an ALPHA VERSION and is NOT SUPPORTED. Service outages may take place AT ANY TIME with LITTLE or NO WARNING. ALL USE of this version is AT YOUR OWN RISK. NO SUPPORT OR DOCUMENTATION is available for this release. We are NOT RESPONSIBLE for ({"data", "time", "money"}) lost as a result of using this UNSUPPORTED PRODUCT."
no subject
Date: 2006-02-03 12:57 pm (UTC)~*shakes her head* "If it's in there, why don't you support it?" "It won't take long, can you just tell me how to...." "Hey, there's this new thing...what does it do?" "What does 'alpha' mean?"
~What's worse is when management says "Oh, don't say 'upsupported'....help them if you can!"~
no subject
Date: 2006-02-03 12:59 pm (UTC)As a bit of revenge, put one of those "I have read and understand" checkboxes after that disclaimer. When someone asks for help, ask them if they checked the box--if they say yes, say "Great!" then walk away :)
no subject
Date: 2006-02-03 09:28 pm (UTC)