Am 04. Feb, 2001 schwäzte proudhawk@uswestmail.net so: > The prome is, cox@home does NOT support linux and any time you mention > it, they immediately say "that OS is not supported and we cannot help > you with YOUR problem", eve when the network outage is obviously > something on thier end of things. > > I recently had a network outage and it took going up through to a > super in tier 2 support before I got hold on an old unix man and tald > him what my system was saying. Only then was I listened to and only > then was it determined to be a node failure that caused the outage. Yes, the problem here is people who don't know enough or don't have a secondary connection with which to troubleshoot the problem. You can't necessarily determine it's their node if you can't get on their network and look at the problem :(. I know more than the techs doing customer support, but I'm still far from the most knowledgable person. Those who don't have the knowledge or access, however, can be in a difficult situation. I don't necessarily care that they don't support Linux. Shouldn't matter for the most part as far as broadband is concerned. Maybe require the customer to have an external modem/router. Then if the ISP can't contact the router the OS on the customer machine shouldn't matter. I prefer to go with external modems/routers for this reason. ciao, der.hans -- # der.hans@LuftHans.com home.pages.de/~lufthans/ www.YourCompanyHere.net ;-) # A Polish friend of mine got an offer for a free account from AOL. The # login ID was "HELLO" and the passwd "CYMBAL". She says "cymbal" is # Polish for "sucker". "Hello sucker" a greeting from AOHell :).