I went back to UM’s office, and put forth my idea about having the client attempt to get Jaws and the db_interface to cooperate.
He didn’t shoot it down, although he could have been blowing smoke.
We’ll see what happens.
I hope to blog the results.
In the meantime, I’m still going ahead with the research of information for filing charges of discrimination.

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

I woke up around 03:30 with a migrane, and it hasn’t gone away.
I don’t have to be to work until 09:00 now, and I’ll work until 18:00 this evening.
I wish I could just stay home and sleep this thing off.
I plan on going in to work this morning and letting the suits know that I’m not accommodating anymore.
I think Cary and I have accommodated enough.
I’m also going to be emailing Division of Services, and looking into filing charges with the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission.
I’ve had enough of this.

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

I have a bunch of database interface screenshots, made using Jaws and a text editor.
I think, instead of taking a call, I’m going to have the suits sit down at computers with no mice, and scroll through those with their keyboards to find the information they need.
It will simulate, as best as possible, the way I use the database interface.
It’ll make it easier to explain what doesn’t work, and it’ll give me a little malicious satisfaction.
Sounds like a winner to me.
I’m going to love tormenting the suits.

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

I slept through most of Shabbat.
I came home yesterday, showered, and went to bed at about 21:00.
I didn’t eat dinner last night, and I didn’t eat until just a few minutes ago today.
I wasn’t very hungry.
Work was too depressing yesterday.
I thought things were going to change, but after testing all that software Wednesday and Thursday, we’re back at taking calls with the inaccessible software, so we can explain to someone who has, until this point, illustrated that they don’t give a damn about whether or not their software is accessible.
I’m tired of playing games.
Ze’evi’s out of town this weekend.
He won’t be back until Monday, so we won’t get to talk until at least Monday evening.
I’m going to contact Division Of Services for the Blind here in town and see what my options are.
I have no idea how I’ll afford legal fees.
I think that’s the route I need to take at this point though.
The company’s doing everything in it’s power to avoid putting me in another position, and the client’s not interested in making their software accessible.
UM would rather play games with the client than just solve the problem.
I can’t believe I’m having to fight this much and this hard, just to do my job.
It’s ironic.
Most people wouldn’t fight like this over a customer service job.
They’d just leave.

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

I just had a discussion with UM, and he says he wants me to take an actual call, using the inaccessible database interface, so he can illustrate to the client what exactly is going on.
What the hell?
For the sake of argument, (really, because I can’t tell the guy no), I’m going to have to attempt it.
But, as far as I’m concerned, there are too many uncertainties to start involving someone’s real-life problem in some sort of a guinny pig operation.
He says we can have someone y-connect to spot.
I’m not sure what that’s going to do.
How can you have two people taking a call.
He’s not registering that, if the client has refused to do anything up until now, despite the trouble tickets, despite the repeated and documented explanations of the problem, they’re not going to do anything.
And nobody’s even considered the logistics of handling a call whose first step, after giving the opening greeting, is fraught with problems.
John doesn’t even know, and he’s the one who trained me, and has worked for this company for at least five years.
I wish I could just quit, and leave, and say to hell with all of it.

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

It seems as though we’ve tested all software, and the only thing that doesn’t work is the remote desktop client.
I’ll be looking for a Jaws-accessible telnet client at some point, but for everything else, it either works, or there’s a work-around.
UM says they’ll probably have me doing random odds and ends like cue management, entering exceptions into Digital Solutions, and whatnot, until they get the system fixed.
He still thinks they’ll fix the system.
It’ll do me no good to try to convince him otherwise, so I won’t bother.
This post is openly trackbackable, so leave your link and your trackback.

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

I was late to work this morning because there was a huge accident on the way.
From what Christin said, there was a dump truck involved, and another car.
The dump truck hit the car, and completely destroyed it.
There were two ambulances, and the driver of the car had to be cut out.
I’m assuming that means the driver was still alive.
May Hashem bless them both with a refuah shlema.

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

Thanks to the techno-shepherd on duty, I found a new report in the app that monitors the cue.
There’s an icon you can click on that will pull up the people in aftercall, witch is the state you need to be watching anyway.
Nobody else knew about it.
I had forgotten that the techno-shepherd showed it to me during the initial testing this morning.
I think today’s been very productive.

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

I’ve spent the afternoon going through more software.
So far, I’ve only found one thing that absolutely doesn’t work, and that a remote desktop client.
I knew it would work the minute I found out it was remote desktop, because I don’t have a remote desktop license for Jaws, but I figured I’d go through the motions of trying anyway.
What harm would it do?
The woman who’s helping with the testing is very nice, but very stupid, and in serious need of a stick of deodorant.
She’s working under the assumption that I know just as little, if nor less, about computers than she does, so I’m being walked through every step, one by one, including “Press the start menu, then programs … ” ETC.
And then there’s the musk.
It’s sickening.
How do you walk out the door before work, knowing you smell like that, or will smell like that by day’s end?
And finally there’s the stupid factor.
I think we should start a colony on the moon, for the stupid people, and let natural selection take its course.
They’d either learn to survive, (some of them undoubtedly would), or they’d perish.
Either way, they’d be in the not-our-problem category.

As seen at: Third World County,

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

During the time I’ve worked here, I’ve moved from sitting all the way at the front of the center to all the way at the back.
I could literally spit and hit the back wall.
I’m kind of hoping I can stay back here, because there’s a modicum of privacy here.
We tested the schedule viewer, and the only thing I can do with that is print schedules.
I think we have a few more things to test.
All and all, today’s been productive.

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

I’m now sitting at the supervisor cube, and have tested some of the software.
The app that generates the call reports works, albeit with the Jaws cursor.
At this point, I don’t care.
Something actually works.
I still have to test some other software, for which someone else has to come over here with log-ins.
Definitely better than before.

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

Today I begin testing out other applications to try to fill another position at work.
That’s a good thing.
I’m supposed to go into work, install Jaws on another system, sit at one of the supervisor desks, and see what works and what doesn’t.
Hopefully it will lead to something, but either way, it’ll give me something to do for at least part of the day.
I plan to try to participate more in the blogosphere today, since I’d like to try to boost my traffic, and just plain participate.
Yeah, I’ve done some of that over the last few weeks, but with nothing going on to actually write about, and my internet priveleges limited at work, you know what that can do to the blog.

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

I’m sitting here listening to Vince Garcia on Super70s.  Jesus, these guys are so drunk.  I wish I was recording this so that, if he says something hilarious, (as he probably will, given his propensity to be the most entertaining when he’s trying the least), and then play it back later.  Either way though, I hope he has a happy new year all the same. 

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

Yes, you read that right, I’m playing hookie. 

Why?

Because I just can’t bring myself to pay for a cab to go to work and sit. 

After paying all my bills, I’ll have over $200 left, and the only thing coming out of next week’s pay is the rent, so I can stand to miss the pay for today. 

I just can’t handle going in there and sitting all day, and paying to do it. 

Not motivated isn’t the right word for it. 

I’m way past that point. 

I won’t get to watch Star Trek today, but at least I won’t be sitting in a cube, doing what I could be doing at home. 

 

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.

It’s only just a little after 11:00, and I’m already so tired of this place it’s ridiculous. 

Not that I wouldn’t be tired of it if I was actually working, but not working makes it even worse. 

i’d really love to be at home, in the recliner, watching TV. 

OK, Star Trek isn’t on Spike today because of the James Bond marathon, but I’d find something else to watch. 

Either way, I wouldn’t be here, doing nothing. 

 

Originally published at Customerservant.com. You can comment here or there.