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Friday, May 21, 2004
 

:: Withheld identity of a boiler man ::

My boiler is being fixed for the second time. It keeps blowing a fuse, but not in any recognisable pattern - every repairman's nightmare.

I noted the fancy mobile computing set-up for onsite job reporting, dispatch and so on: a Windows CE device, but apparently with insufficient memory to hold the required service manuals. To the engineer, this is the critical need. The providers of the system are more interested in logistics. In any case, the engineer told me how he manipulates the reporting function.

Today, another engineer joined his colleague on site. This was to bring a part from his van to fix my job. Parts inventory appeared not to be part of the logistics set up.

I overheard the second engineer complaining that he couldn't get answers from customers in order to announce his planned arrival time. The problem he identified was that he was withholding his caller ID. Some customers will not answer an unidentifiable call.

The reason for withholding ID is to avoid customers phoning back up for direct support after the job is done.

With appropriate use of existing technology, this problem can be solved, but my guess is that the service company doesn't know this. More likely, they haven't identified the problem in the first place. It probably gets reported as "customer didn't answer".

I feel that writing a book about wireless for lay people will be a useful public service. Perhaps, once some of its potential is more widely appreciated by potential users, "next generation" wireless will become more useful than it currently is.


11:21:16 AM    comment []  

:: Cantenna ::

I have recently been writing about the invention of the "Cantenna", or the Pringles Yagi, as I prefer to call it. Andrew Clapp is the original "discoverer" (his preferred accolade, rather than "inventor") and I was happy to hear from him that it is still going strong, linking up his flat to the nearest community WiFi point.

I was also impressed to find out that someone (Jason Brook) has gone and made a business out of it and taken the domain name Cantenna.com. Andrew mentions on his website that he doesn't know where the name came from. It emerged from several places at once. I recall "discovering" the name "Zingo" for a wireless portal project. The name later "emerged" as a trademark for a London taxi company's wireless hailing system. They trademarked it, whereas I didn't.

Apparently, the name of a business can make or break it, so reports David Kipen when reviewing the book "Word Craft" by Alex Frankel. You can even buy names on the Net, from the likes of Names Express - 12 names in 24 hours for just 70 USD.

Some people invent/discover things. Some people name things. Some people make money on things. Some people write about it. I've tried all of them.


10:16:27 AM    comment []  


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