Archive for January, 2009

China-Africa: China-Rwanda Agree to Further Cooperation

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Rwanda’s Foreign Affairs Minister Rose Museminali and her counterpart, the Chinese Foreign Affairs Minister Yang Jiechi, yesterday signed an aid and cooperation agreement at the ministry’s offices in Kigali.

While the figure was not specified at the time of going to press, the amount signed is in addition to the USD 7.8m donated last year, for different projects being implemented across the country.

In remarks made to the press after signing the agreement. Minister Museminali made a call for increased Chinese investment in Rwanda.

“China supports Rwanda in areas like agriculture, education through constructing schools, infrastructure like the constructing of important roads in the country, but we want the Chinese investors to enter into the investment, and technology sector and help it to develop more,” said Museminali.

The minister is on an official State visit to Rwanda which is aimed at strengthening bilateral relations between Rwanda and the People’s Republic of China which spans a period of over thirty years now. According to Museminali, the interaction would further cement the good relations between the two countries.

“Our bi-lateral relationship is so good because if out of fifty three African countries, Rwanda is among the four which the minister is going to visit, it shows that our relations are good,” said minister Museminali. She explained that the purpose of the visit was to increase mutual cooperation and aid between the two countries.

Minister Jiech expressed satisfaction at how Rwanda is willing to push further the ties between the two countries.

“I am impressed by the willingness of Rwanda to push these ties further; this is shown by the visit that your President paid to our country while attending the China-Africa cooperation conference in 2006 and also the official visit in 2007,” he said.

He further extended an invitation to the Foreign Affairs minister and other respective ministers to visit china as a way of strengthening more the ties between Rwanda and China.

“Rwanda is our partner and true friend, and we will continue to hold important official visits that are going to see our relationship grow more steadily because there is a lot we can do together,” the Chinese minister underscored.

He also pointed out that China was willing to support investment in Rwanda focusing more on agriculture and the infrastructure sector.

He praised Rwanda’s investment climate saying that the Chinese people who are already investing in Rwanda are satisfied and describe it as excellent.

Minister Jiech also revealed that China is committed and is paying more attention to Africa-China cooperation which is aimed at bringing more development to both partners.

Minister Jiech also toured the Gisozi memorial centre and laid a wreath on the graves of the victims of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi.

In his remarks at the memorial site, he said that what happened to Rwanda was a horrendous tragedy which serves as a lesson to the whole world that people need to learn from one another’s experiences to avoid the repetition of such tragedies.

He however, was impressed by the seriousness of the people of Rwanda in wanting to develop their country and how they have united after the genocide.

The Chinese minister will visit three other African countries; Uganda, Malawi and South Africa.

(http://allafrica.com/)

Technology: Ubuntu causes a girl to drop out of school

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Woman says Dell computer kept her from taking online classes

bbie Schubert paid more than $1,100 for a Dell laptop hoping to enroll in online classes at MATC.

But something stopped her: Ubuntu.

That’s an operating system for your computer similar to Windows that runs off the Linux system.

Schubert says she ordered her laptop online at Dell.com expecting to buy your classic bread-and-butter computer.

She didn’t realize until the next morning her laptop defaulted to the Ubuntu operating system.

“It’s been a mess,” she said. “I regret ordering the computer.”

Schubert says she never heard of Ubuntu before learning that’s when she accidentally bought.  She called Dell the very next day and says the representative told her there was still time to change back to Windows.

But she says Dell discouraged her.

“The person I was talking to said Ubuntu was great, college students loved it, it was compatible with everything I needed,” said Schubert.

So she stuck with it.

Later, she discovered Ubuntu might look like Windows, but it doesn’t always act like it.

Her Verizon High-Speed Internet CD won’t load, so she can’t access the internet.  She also can’t install Microsoft Word, which she says is a requirement for MATC’s online classes.

As a result, with no internet and no Microsoft Word, Schubert dropped out of MATC’s fall and spring semesters.

She also says Dell claimed it was now too late to get Windows and any changes she made herself would void her warranty.

“I’m extremely frustrated,” said Schubert. “I wanted to get back to school, but I needed a computer to be able to do that.”

27 News contacted Dell, but the company has not responded to us yet.

However, we think we’ve helped her get back to school.

Verizon says it will dispatch a technician to try to assist her accessing the internet without using the Windows-only installation disk.

MATC also says it promises to accept any of Schubert’s papers or class documents using whatever software she has installed.

(http://www.wkowtv.com)

Technology: Stupid Tech Support

Thursday, January 15th, 2009
  • Customer: “Hi, I can’t seem to connect you guys are you having a problem?”
  • Tech Support: “Well sir, what dialup software are you using?”
  • Customer: “The one you provided.”
  • Tech Support: “And what version is it?”
  • Customer: (says the version number)
  • Tech Support: “Oh, that’s the problem you need the latest version.”
  • Customer: “Ok, how do I get it?”
  • Tech Support: “Well, just transfer the file via FTP.”
  • Customer: “Well that would be nice, but I can’t connect to the Internet.”
  • Tech Support: (sounding exasperated) “I told you just to FTP the file sir.”

I hung up.


I had trouble downloading an operating system upgrade for a PDA, so I called tech support.

  • Me: “I can’t seem to get this download to complete. What might be causing it?”
  • Tech Support: “What operating system are you running?”
  • Me: “Windows NT.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, you have to be running Windows 98 or better in order to download it.”
  • Me: “Ummm, I am. I’m running Windows NT4, SP5.”
  • Tech Support: “Are you on a PC or a MAC?”

A friend of mine told me that when he was in junior high school (mid-to-late nineties), they got a computer in the classroom free for the students to use during breaks. The first thing many of them would do to was to change the dull Windows 95 desktop. The school’s IT Manager for some reason thought of this as vandalism, so he frequently fixed it in the only way he knew how — by reinstalling Windows.

I was almost on the floor laughing when my friend told me about how the IT Manager had come into their classroom one day and told the students, “Will you STOP changing the desktop background? I’ve had to reinstall Windows every day for the last two weeks now!”


Back when high-speed internet was first getting started, my parents wanted to hop on the bandwagon right away and called a technician to come set them up. At the time I was in junior high school and couldn’t be there when the tech showed up.

It is important to note that although we were quick in getting high-speed Internet, we didn’t have a particularly state-of-the-art machine. It didn’t have a cdrom drive, for example, but I assumed the tech would be installing the software from a floppy.

Imagine my horror when I came home and found my mother trying to dig the CD out of our ancient 5 1/4″ drive with a key, while the “tech” stood behind her, scratching his head and saying, “I’ve seriously never seen one of those before. Are you SURE it’s not a cdrom drive?”


I was cleaning up my wife’s little bit of webspace and found I couldn’t delete the files in one folder. Since I could upload/rename/delete other files with any FTP client I chose, it was clearly a server problem.

Inexplicably, ownership of the files had been changed by the ISP. It took a transfer to the second tier support to fix the problem, but even at that level, I got asked this question:

  • Tech Support: “Do you have a firewall?”
  • Me: “!!! What’s that have to do with the problem?”
  • Tech Support: “Um, I dunno.”

This is straight from a call log of a major computer company that happens to have technical support technicians in India and other points outside of the United States.

Problem Description: Client wants to know the MAC address for the computer. Advise client that I have no way of knowing or obtaining that information. Advise client that she would more than likely need to call Apple to see if they could point her in the direction of obtaining that. Client says that the MAC address is not a macintosh address. Client says that the MAC address can be obtained by doing an ipconfig /all. Client ended up disconnecting the call. During the call I believe I could hear someone else listening. Just before the call was ended by the client there was a something faintly said but I could not make it out.

Resolution: Advise client to contact Apple.


I’m not the most technical of people, but a few years ago, I got the infamous “blue screen of death.” I called in the IT department, and the new guy told me that my monitor just had to be “de-gassed” (degaussed). Needless to say, I rolled around the floor laughing, and someone else was called in to replace my hard drive.


My boyfriend and I were sitting in my dorm room, when there was a power surge, causing my computer to reboot. Unfortunately, it never got very far and popped up an error message about a missing file. Panicking, I reboot again, and the same thing happened. Foolishly, I decided to call my computer’s tech support line, and after struggling with their automated system, I finally got through to someone.

  • Tech Support: “Thank you for calling tech support. How may I help you?”
  • Me: “Yeah, um, I just had a power surge in my dorm room, and my computer won’t reboot. It’s giving me the error message: [error message]
  • Tech Support: “Have you tried rebooting?”
  • Me: “Yeah. Want me to try again?”
  • Tech Support: “Yes, go ahead. Tell me when Windows comes up.”
  • Me: “Ok…it’s giving me the same error message. It’s not even getting into Windows.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok, let’s try rebooting again, but this time, hold the button down for longer.”
  • Me: “Er…how much longer?”
  • Tech Support: “About five seconds.”
  • Me: “All right. Holding it down now…ok, it’s rebooting.”
  • Tech Support: “Good. Tell me when Windows comes up.”
  • Me: “Same error.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok. Let’s try a hard reboot. Turn your computer all the way off, then unplug the power cable.”
  • Me: (??) “All right, it’s out.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok, now hold down your power button and plug it back in. But don’t let go of the power button yet.”
  • Me: “Er. Ok. Tell me when to let go.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok, let go. Tell me when Windows comes up.”
  • Me: “Same error message. Windows isn’t coming up.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok, let’s try looking at your BIOS.”
  • Me: “All right.”
  • Tech Support: “Reboot your computer, and when it’s coming up, hit F1 as many times as you can.”
  • Me: “Can’t I just hit it once?”
  • Tech Support: “No, your computer should start beeping. I want to make sure it beeps.”
  • Me: “All right, it beeped. BIOS came up a while ago.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok, let’s walk through some things….”

He proceeded to do nothing more than confirm there was nothing wrong with my BIOS. He had me reboot again, and, of course, I got the same error message.

  • Tech Support: “Ok, let’s try bios one more time.”
  • Me: “All right.”
  • Tech Support: “Now, when it’s rebooting, I want you to hit the F1 key as many times as you can. It has to beep for this to work.”
  • Me: “I really don’t think my computer ‘beeping’ has anything to do with the problem.”
  • Tech Support: “I think I know a little more about computers than you do, ma’am.”
  • Me: “All right, fine, I’m hitting it. My computer is beeping.”
  • Tech Support: “I don’t believe you.”
  • Me: “…Excuse me?”
  • Tech Support: “I think you’re lying. I need you to hit it as many times as you can. This is very important.”

Finally, I gave up on the guy and made my boyfriend finish the call. About half a minute into the call, my boyfriend gets a really funny look on his face and ejects the floppy disk that was in the drive. He rebooted it, and it worked fine.

I suppose this doubles as a stupid user story too, but you’d think a tech support person would have checked for that early on, instead all the other dumb things he had me do.


I called up tech support because Internet Explorer insisted on opening everything I was trying to download with Quicktime.

  • Customer: “Internet Explorer insists on opening everything I try to download with Quicktime.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok.”
  • Customer: “So whenever I click on anything that I want to download it tries to open it with Quicktime.”
  • Tech Support: “Are you sure that its not a Quicktime file?”
  • Customer: “No it’s an exe file.”
  • Tech Support: “So it’s not a Quicktime file?”
  • Customer: “No, and I can’t right click either, to do a Save Target As.”
  • Tech Support: “Oh, but you’re sure it’s not a Quicktime file, right?”
  • Customer: “Yes, it is an executable file, DOT E X E, not DOT M O V.”
  • Tech Support: “Is it a .exe that can be opened in Quicktime?”

I use a cable modem ISP, one of North America’s largest ISPs. During one of their interminable outages, I called to demand what the problem was.

  • Tech Support: “Is your computer on? Is the modem plugged in?”
  • Me: “Yes, it’s on and working fine. The modem’s plugged in, but it isn’t getting anything from your end.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok, can you click on the ‘Start’ button and type ‘WINIPCFG’–”
  • Me: “Yes, I know. My IP is listed as 169.XXX.XXX.XXX.”

This IP was the one Windows 98 usually gives when it’s supposed to have one assigned to it but doesn’t get one.

  • Tech Support: “Well, sir, that’s the problem.”
  • Me: “Yes, I know. I’m getting no IP. I’m not in the network.”
  • Tech Support: “No, sir, the problem is that you’re using a Mac.”

Er….

  • Me: “I’m sorry?”
  • Tech Support: “Sir, your IP is a Mac IP. You’re not using a PC.”
  • Me: “Uhhh, I am using a PC. It’s a Dell with an Intel PII-450 CPU. I’m running Windows 98.”
  • Tech Support: “No, sir. Your IP indicates that your computer is a Mac. IPs that start with those numbers are used by Macs.”
  • Me: “You know, I don’t think it works that way. I’m pretty certain IPs are assigned based on where the computer is in a domain and a subdomain and such. I know all your IPs assigned in this area start with XXX. And I’m quite certain my computer is a PC.”
  • Tech Support: “I don’t think we use ‘domain’ here.”
  • Me: “Can I speak to a supervisor, please?”

[New!]

I was having a problem with my Internet connection a week ago. It would go off, but both the modem and router said it was on. I first called the manufacturer of the router, who guided me through some steps, and we came to the conclusion it was the modem. I noticed it happened more often when I started my new game Battlefield 2, so I called EA Games, and they told me to open ports.

Then I called my ISP.

  • Tech Support: “How may I help you today?”
  • Me: “Hi, I was wondering if you could open some ports on my connection. I need them open for this game I have, and I’ve opened them on my end, but the game says that you should also open your end as well.”
  • Tech Support: “So you want to stick your game into the modem?”
  • Me: “No, I want you to open some ports so I can play the game.”
  • Tech Support: “Sir, you cannot stick a game into your modem, you need a computer to stick the game into–”
  • Me: “Ummm, I don’t want to stick the game into my modem, I want you to O-P-E-N P-O-R-T-S!!!”
  • Tech Support: “There’s a cdrom drive on your computer. If you press the button that is next to or says ‘cdrom drive,’ a thing that looks like a cup holder will come out. Stick your game–”
  • Me: “!@#$*!@%”

Some shuffling sounds on their end.

  • Supervisor: “Hello sir.”
  • Me: “Would it be possible for you to open some ports on my internet connection so I can play a game. I’ve already done it on the router I have.”
  • Supervisor: “Sir, you cannot put a game into your modem. It doesn’t work.”
  • Me: “!@#$*!@%”

So then I called the company’s business center, and I was told that opening ports would cost a LOT of money.

I called tech support again, and finally got routed to their site in Texas. I told him my problem with the modem and ports and relayed to him the story. After laughing and apologizing, he told me (after I gave him the modem model number) that my modem was out of date.

The new modem took five minutes to configure, and it worked fine.


This incident happened to me in India. This was in 1992-3 when Windows 3.1 was becoming popular. My machine had a CGA card and monitor, which I exchanged for a VGA card and monitor. The machine booted up — there were no warning beeps — but nothing was appearing on the screen. So I called up tech support.

  • Customer: “The computer boots up without any warning beeps, but nothing shows up on the screen.”
  • Tech Support: “Is the monitor connected.”
  • Customer: “Yes, but there is no display.”
  • Tech Support: “Did you install the drivers for the VGA card?”
  • Customer: “How can I install them before I’m in DOS?”
  • Tech Support: “You have to install the drivers first before you can get a display.”
  • Customer: “You don’t need VGA drivers to boot to DOS like you do for Windows. I should be able to boot to DOS.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, insert the floppy you received with your card. Go to the A:\Utilities directory. Type ‘readme.com’.”
  • Customer: “I cannot see anything. How do you expect me to read a file on the screen?”
  • Tech Support: “Read the file, and it will explain everything.”

I hung up. The problem was that the monitor was broken. I took it to the shop and proved it, and they gave me a replacement.


After owning my computer for a little over two months I noticed the system was sluggish.

  • Me: “My system’s really slow on bootup.”
  • Tech Support: “Have you been on the net for a long time?”
  • Me: “Well, yeah, about a month or two.”
  • Tech Support: “Try deleting the cache. Oh, and do you have a virus scanner?”
  • Me: “Yes, it was the first thing I put on the hard drive.”
  • Tech Support: “Oh, get rid of it. That’s the problem. Those virus scanners screw things up on your disk. Get rid of it.”
  • Me: “Isn’t that risky?”
  • Tech Support: “And you’ll have to format your hard drive with Quick Reinstall. That’s really all I know.”
  • Me: “Um…sure. Sure I will.”

A friend cleaned up my system path, and the boot lag cleared right up. And guess what? I didn’t have to format my hard drive after all.


My school district decided to require us school psychologists to do all our reports on laptops and print from a single printer. After a few months the laptop they provided me ceased to work with the printer. I spoke with the IT Manager.

  • IT Manager: “I don’t know if the problem is a hardware problem or a software problem.”
  • Me: “Ok.”
  • IT Manager: “So I can’t solve the problem now.”
  • Me: “When can you solve it?”
  • IT Manager: “I told you: I don’t know if it is a hardware problem or a software problem. I can’t fix it until I know.”
  • Me: “Ok. I need to print my reports. When will I be able to?”
  • IT Manager: (angrily) “Look, if it’s a hardware problem I can’t fix it! I don’t know if it is a hardware or a software problem.”

I made several more attempts to communicate with the IT manager about this problem over the next few weeks, only to find myself in the same conversation. Finally, I sent a memo to my boss, explaining that I was having difficulty getting tech support and could not print out my reports. My boss wrote back:

  • Boss: “Please do not harass the IT Manager anymore. He has already explained to you that he doesn’t know whether it is a software problem or a hardware problem.”

  • Technician: “What a bad day! The PC is not working well, the phone is out of order, and I wounded my fingers when trimming the network plug with a knife to fit the PC hole.”

A few weeks ago I was calling around to some local phone companies, looking for DSL. I have cable right now, but I’m extremely unhappy with the pathetic support they give. Anyway, the phone company is one of the main providers of DSL, so I called their number to ask some questions.

  • Me: “I want to get more information about the DSL.”
  • Her: “What would you like to know?”
  • Me: “Is the 768K download in bits or bytes? I’m assuming bits.”
  • Her: “I believe it’s in bytes.”
  • Me: “So you are giving me faster than my cable connection for cheaper? Are you sure its not 768 kilobits, which is about 96 kilobytes?”
  • Her: “I’m pretty sure it’s 768 kilobytes.”
  • Me: “Ok, that works. As for the IP address, is it static or dynamic?”
  • Her: “It’s dymanic.”
  • Me: “Oh, ok. So how often does it change?”
  • Her: “The only time it ever changes is when you go in there and change it.”
  • Me: “Ummmm, then how would that be dynamic if it never changes?”
  • Her: (click)

Ok, so, strike one. The girl in tech support didn’t know what she was talking about, so she hung up on me.

I called back, and this time a man answered the phone. I told him the girl was not only clueless but hung up on me, and I am already considering not using them. He said he would try to help.

I asked him the same questions. The download speed is 768 kilobits. The IP address is dynamic and changes every few hours. But he couldn’t answer anything else: he didn’t know where I would get the DSL modem from, if they are using internal DHCP, how the changing IP address will affect my connectivity and downloads, etc. He finally admitted that at that particular call center, they really don’t know much about it. He gave me a number for tech support.

I called that number and a lady answered. She gave me a set of responses that were different still.

I finally wrote in to their customer service and told them that after one person clearly had no clue what she was talking about and hung up on me, a second was guessing and admitted he didn’t know, and tech support gave me completely different answers, I will not be using their services. The next day I received a reply. The man who replied basically said he was sorry for such bad service, and please call the following number for support. It was the number I dialed the first time.


I use a cable modem company for my Internet service. One day, it was not working. So I called our neighbors down the street and found that theirs was not working either. I decided to call tech support to see if it was down in our area. The message did not list it, so I went ahead to ask tech support.

  • Tech Support: “Oh, we’ve been getting a lot of calls from that area today.”
  • Customer: “So service down in this area, then?”
  • Tech Support: “Hmmm, well, my records don’t show that. Okay, let’s check your settings.”
  • Customer: “I’ve already checked my settings; they are fine. But I can see that the light on the cable modem isn’t on. I just want to know if service is down and if someone is working on the problem.”
  • Tech Support: “Hmmm, the problem isn’t on our end, it’s on your end. Maybe you should try to re-install your drivers. Sometimes the drivers just fail.”
  • Customer: “Ma’am, we have five computers connected to the cable modem? None of them can get online. Are you saying all their drivers failed simultaneously?”
  • Tech Support: “Oh, your computers are networked? Well, we don’t support networks.”
  • Customer: “That’s fine, I have my PC connected directly to the cable modem right now.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, just re-install your modem drivers. Go to Control Panel….”
  • Customer: “Wait, you are telling me that five PCs of five different brands with five different drivers failed simultaneously? And how about the rest of the area? I think your service is down.”
  • Tech Support: “Ma’am, I think it’s your drivers.”
  • Customer: “Uh, thanks, I’ll check it out and call you back.”

I called back 30 minutes later. It turns out service was down in our area.


About a year ago, my mother was having problems with her brand new computer. She hadn’t had it for a month before the video card died. She called the customer service line and spoke with a technical support representative, who diagnosed the problem and promised that they would send a new card to her.

She received the new card and called the 800 number again, this time asking what to do with the card. The guy that was helping her said, “Do you see the screws on the back of the computer? Well, take them all out and take off the case. You will see a card that looks like the one you just received. Replace it with the card you have and put the case back on.” And then he hung up.

So here is my mother, staring at the back of her computer, seeing an array of screws, and wondering which ones she should take out. She followed his directions to the letter and unscrewed all of the screws on the back of her computer, not just the ones around the casing edge. All of her computer components hit the bottom of the case with a bang.

When the dust settled and she realized what she had done, she called back, in hysterics. Thankfully, she got a nice woman who understood and agreed that it was the tech support guy’s fault for not staying with her on the phone. She agreed to ship her a new computer at no charge.


When I was in college, I needed to connect to the school’s network from my own computer in my dorm room. I knew there was a dial-up number that would allow me to log in and run limited commands. All I needed to know was the number. So I called the help desk.

  • Me: “I’m trying to access the University’s network from my computer in my dorm room. Can you help me?”
  • Help Desk: “Which lab are you in?”
  • Me: “I’m not in a lab. I’m in my room.”
  • Help Desk: “Then you’re not on the network.”
  • Me: “But I want to connect over the phone line. What number do I need to dial?”
  • Help Desk: “You need to call [phone number of help desk].”
  • Me: “No, that’s your phone number. I need a dial-up number for the computer.”
  • Help Desk: “I don’t understand. What are you trying to do?”
  • Me: “I want to connect my computer to the school’s network through the dial-up.”
  • Help Desk: “Why don’t you use a computer in the lab?”
  • Me: “That would defeat the purpose of having a computer in my room.”
  • Help Desk: “Well, your computer is not connected to the school network.”
  • Me: “I know! I want to use my modem to connect.”
  • Help Desk: “What’s a modem?”
  • Me: “Never mind.”

  • Me: “I was thinking of installing Linux, but I was wondering if you knew if the modem works under Linux.”
  • Tech Support: “Oh, I’m sorry, we only support Windows.”
  • Me: “I know. I was just wondering if you knew if it was possible.”
  • Tech Support: “But we only support Windows.”
  • Me: “I know, but just to save me some time, have you heard of anyone that got Linux to work with the modem?”
  • Tech Support: (getting annoyed) “Why can’t you just use Netscape?”
  • Me: “Uh, wha? It’s not a browser, it’s a–never mind. Thanks for your help.”

  • Customer: “When my computer boots up, all I get is a black screen that says, ‘boot2/’.”
  • Tech Support: “What operating system are you using?”
  • Customer: “I’m using Windows 98 and NT 4.0.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok, I’m the Mac tech. The Windows tech is gone, but I can try to help you.”
  • Customer: “Ok, what should I do? I’ve reformatted the hard drive and have fresh installs of both operating systems.”
  • Tech Support: “Sir, have you put any cheese or mustard in your a drive?”
  • Customer: “What? Did you just ask me if I put cheese or mustard in my floppy drive?”
  • Tech Support: “Yeah, we’ve had that happen a lot lately.”
  • Customer: (staring blankly at roommate, who was laughing uncontrollably on the floor) “I think I’ll wait for the PC tech to get back. Thanks for the help.” (click)

Last term in college I was working in the lab when my network connection suddenly died. Mine was the only computer doing that, and we’re not supposed to mess with the computers ourselves, so I called the lab attendant over.

This guy was a fourth term programming major. I don’t know how he was this stupid. But I told him what was wrong and what error message I was getting (”no route to host”) and figured he’d go behind the computer and check the wires.

No. He brought up the menu on the monitor (that allows you to adjust the size, shape, tint, brightness, etc, of the display) and starts fiddling with that. He told me to try again. Obviously it didn’t work.

  • Me: “Why don’t you just check the network wires?”
  • Him: “I’m the computer expert here. Just let me work.”

He fiddled with the monitor settings some more. Finally he slapped the monitor and said:

  • Him: “Well, I don’t know what’s wrong. That’s what they get for having NT servers.”

When he left, I checked the back of the computer. As I thought, the wire had gotten pulled out.


  • Me: “Yes, I’m having trouble with the connect suite for dial-up.”
  • Tech Support: “What seems to be the problem?”
  • Me: “I get random disconnects, I can’t always get the dialer to work, and web pages often give strange time-out errors. I set everything up according to the documentation.”

I thought, at this juncture, I’d get the usual “let’s go through the setup just to be sure” routine. I was wrong.

  • Tech Support: “Yes, well, that program doesn’t work on everyone’s computer.”
  • Me: “I know that. It doesn’t work on mine, for instance.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, we don’t know why it doesn’t always work. You should consider getting a new computer.”

My company recently hired a new technician, and at first he seemed to know what he was doing, but soon he got in over his head. A customer brought in a system and said she couldn’t get on the Internet. When the tech couldn’t get the plug-n-play modem to work under Win3.11, he assumed it was a new modem, and it couldn’t be done. He called her.

  • Tech Support: “Ok, this modem, since it is plug-n-play, will not work in Windows 3.11. You’ll have to get a new modem or install the Windows 95 upgrade.”
  • Customer: “But I’ve been using that modem for over a year in Windows 3.11, and it never gave me any problems.”
  • Tech Support: “Well it doesn’t work now.”
  • Customer: “If it worked before, why would it not work now?”
  • Tech Support: “Lightning must have hit it, and now it won’t work in anything but Windows 95.”

She called back later and asked for someone else.


A year ago, I was programming a database for one of the larger insurance companies in my state. The computers they had were awful things that still ran Windows 3.1 and took about three minutes to boot up.

One morning I turned on my computer and waited for it to boot. Just as it loaded Windows, it started rebooting all over again. I waited again, and it did it again. After about ten times, I began to wonder. I would have just loaded DOS and found the problem, but one of the security systems on the computers there automatically rebooted the computer if you went to a DOS prompt.

So I called tech support and explained the problem.

  • Tech Support: “Ok sir, have you tried rebooting the computer?”

I have a Pentium 100 that I bought in March 1996. I moved since then and lost the documentation about the motherboard. I called tech support.

  • Me: “Hi, I have a Pentium 100, and I want to put in a faster processor, a 133 MHz. I lost my motherboard documentation and the jumpers aren’t marked. Can you tell me what the maximum is for the board I have?”

I give him all the information he needs, restating the question three times in the process.

  • Tech Support: “I don’t have that information.”
  • Me: “You guys built the machine. Don’t you have an engineer somewhere with this information?”
  • Tech Support: “Um, I don’t know let me ask.”

Ten minutes later:

  • Tech Support: “Ok, I am going to transfer you to a technician.”
  • Technician: “Ok, you want to put a 133 processor on this board?”
  • Me: “Yes.”
  • Technician: “This board only goes up to 100 MHz. You can use it with Pentium 75, 90, or 100.”
  • Me: “That’s a disappointment — I wish you hadn’t sent me a machine with no upgrade flexibility like that.”
  • Technician: “Well, you can put the P133 in — it will run at 133, even though when it boots it will only say 100.”
  • Me: “REALLY? In the five years I have been working with PC hardware and software, and of all the machines I have upgraded, I have never heard of this. Are you sure you are correct?”
  • Technician: (long pause) “Um, no.”
  • Me: “You just wanted to get me off the phone, right? Well, I just wanted the answer about my board — if the answer is no, fine, but don’t lie to me.”
  • Technician: “Um, sorry. No, you can’t upgrade that board to a processor faster than 100.”

  • Me: “Hi, I have a problem with my left speaker, no sound is coming out of it.”
  • Tech Support: “Have you adjusted the balance in the volume properties?”
  • Me: “Yes, it’s definitely not that, and it’s not a sound card or connection problem either. Could you just send me some new speakers? It’s still under warranty.”
  • Tech Support: “Errrm, ok, I want you to go to DOS and type ‘format c:’ and then restore your hard disk from the master CD.”
  • Me: (click)

I called my cable modem service about a problem involving a series of constant disconnections and lock ups.

  • Tech Support: “Oh, you need to empty your browser’s cache.”
  • Me: “Well, that’s a different program.”
  • Tech Support: “Do you use Internet Explorer or Netscape?”
  • Me: “Internet Explorer.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok, click on View/Properties/Internet Options.”
  • Me: “I’m sorry but cache files from an entirely different program couldn’t possibly be causing this.”
  • Tech Support: “Hmm, let me refer you to advanced technical support.”

The advanced technician knew exactly what the problem was and solved it. A month later it happened again.

  • Tech Support: “When was the last time you cleaned your browser’s cache?”

Yet again I was forwarded to advanced tech support, and my problem was solved. A while later, it happened a third time.

  • Tech Support: “Oh, it’s the cable line in your area. We’ll get a truck rolling on it right away.”
  • Me: “If it’s the cable line, how am I able to connect at all?”
  • Tech Support: “There could be a short in one of the lines, and that could be causing it.”

The next day the cable repairman arrived and checked the lines in my area, but my service was again working flawlessly even before he arrived. When he left, I turned on the TV and noticed the cable was out.


I’m a system administrator for a fairly large company. We were shipping out new desktop PC’s to all our branches, but the PC’s did not come with installed modems. I installed modems in these machines and configured all the necessary software before I shipped them out. I received a call from one branch manager stating that his modem would not work. I had his try all the standard tests, and it appeared that the modem had become unseated.

He called the IS director and asked why I hadn’t tested the machine before I sent it. I tried to explain that I did, and the card had become unseated in shipping. The IS director, knowing that I install PCanywhere on all machines so I can troubleshoot from my office, asked, “Can’t we use PCanywhere to dial in and fix that?”


I had just come across a Compaq 386 Deskpro motherboard. Since I was just getting into PCs, I thought it would be cool to wire it up for my brother. But I had no idea what the pinout for the power supply plug was, as it was non-standard. So I called up Compaq tech support.

  • Me: “I just got an old 386 Deskpro motherboard, and I wondered if I could get a pinout for the power supply plug, so I can power it up and see if it works.”
  • Tech Support: “What happens when you turn it on?”
  • Me: “Ummm…nothing, I don’t have a power supply for it. I need a pinout to wire up a standard power supply.”
  • Tech Support: “I see. Can you get into Windows?”

About two years ago I signed up with a local ISP. They gave me some software to install and said it would take up to five days for my account to be activated. I installed the software, but five days later I still couldn’t get on. I waited two more days, then called to find out what the problem was. The tech support person said he would check on it and call me back. Four hours later, I still hadn’t received a call, so I called again. The same guy answered the phone. I asked if he had figured anything out. He replied that he had not. I told him if he couldn’t fix the problem, I wanted to cancel my service. He stammered and told me he really didn’t know that much about computers, but he didn’t want to lose my business.

At this point I completely lost my patience and told him to cancel the account immediately. He told me that to cancel my account I had to send them email from it.


I called the TurboTax support number for help with the online filing of my taxes. Here is my dialog with the “tech support” person:

  • Tech Support: “How can I help?”
  • Me: “I’m having a timeout problem when filing online. The modem dials up ok, but after connecting I get a timeout error.”
  • Tech Support: “What kind of modem do you have?”
  • Me: “A MultiTech 28.8.”
  • Tech Support: (pause) “We only support 9600 baud. What’s 28.8?”
  • Me: “Twenty-eight point eight K-baud.”
  • Tech Support: “What’s K-baud?”

While looking into DSL, I came across a number for a large service provider and called to get details. When the tech support person got up to the speed of the connection, she said:

  • Tech Support: “1.54mbit up/down.”
  • Me: (after some calculations) “Hmmm. That’s about 173KB/sec, right?”
  • Tech Support: (pause; sound of typing) “No, that’s 1.54MB/sec.”
  • Me: “No, that’s the speed in bits per second. I wondered what it was in bytes per second.”
  • Tech Support: (pause) “No, it’s 1.54MB/sec.”
  • Me: “No, 8 bits equals 1 byte–”
  • Tech Support: “No, bits and bytes are the same thing!”
  • Me: “Um, that’s not true. That’s why a 56K modem is a 56kbit modem that usually gets 5 KB/sec transfer rates.”
  • Tech Support: “Well that’s because people take out the dot when they say it. It’s actually 5.6kbit or 5.6kbyte. The .6kbyte is just lost in the connection.”

As a networking consultant called in to a new client, one of the things I like to do is go over their bills to make sure they are getting what they are paying for from ISPs, telcos, etc. On one occasion, I discovered that a client was paying an ISP for 20 email mailboxes that they hadn’t used in years. I called the ISP’s customer support to cancel the mailboxes.

  • Me: “Yes, I notice I’m paying $100/month for 20 email boxes I’m not using. I’d like to cancel them all.”
  • Tech Support: (after verifying our account information and getting the details of the account displayed) “No problem, sir. What I’d like you to do is fax me a list of all the boxes you’d like to cancel, and I’ll do it this afternoon.”
  • Me: “Well, I can’t really do that, because I don’t have a list of these email names. I just have a bill. We haven’t used these names in probably two years. Just cancel them all.”
  • Tech Support: “It’s all right, sir. I have them here. I’ll read them to you.”

She proceeded to read me names, and like an idiot I jotted them down until it dawned on me what we were doing.

  • Me: “Hold on. You’re going to read me all 20 names?”
  • Tech Support: “Yes.”
  • Me: “So I can write them down and fax them back to you??”
  • Tech Support: “That is our policy, sir.”
  • Me: “Am I the only one who thinks this is absurd?”

My husband and I helped our church get online. We installed a new modem, checked everything out and then after doing some research on local ISPs we chose a reputable one that would give the church a good deal.

Netscape came with the modem’s communications software, but it was an old version. After getting everything going we started to download Netscape’s upgrade. The ISP kept hanging up ten minutes after starting the download. We checked all the settings. Everything checked out fine, but we were still experiencing the problem. It would even disconnect while downloading email.

I asked the church’s secretary to call the ISP’s tech support number the following morning. The next morning she called me back and reported that the ISP tech support person had told her she needed to reformat her computer and reinstall Windows.

I called the tech support person myself.

  • Me: “I can’t believe you told her that! You told her that? That’s preposperous! This is not a software problem, this is a problem with the ISP. What does this have to do with email downloads and getting disconnected?”
  • Tech Support: “Look, this is a common problem. I can’t even download email without it disconnecting. It is like that with all ISPs. This is what we tell all our customers who have this problem. You see, SMTP stands for–”
  • Me: “I don’t think you have any idea what you are talking about. I am with Netcom, and this has never happened to me.”

I was getting several “illegal operation” errors on a new Windows 95 machine I was trying out. So I called tech support.

  • Customer: “I want to buy this computer, but I’m a little concerned that I’m getting so many error messages. Is that common with this machine?”
  • Tech Support: “Well, we have to reformat the hard disk and reinstall the software every day. That’s normal.”
  • Customer: “Wait, wait, wait. You’re saying that I will have to reinstall Windows every single time I use the computer?!?”
  • Tech Support: “When it has errors, ma’am, that’s the only way to get rid of them.”

Needless to say, I purchased my computer elsewhere, from a store and salesmen that had a clue.


I had a problem with my computer. Out of the clear blue, the sound card disappeared from my hardware settings. After trying to get Windows 95 to re-install it, I gave up — Win95 consistently told me that the card was a Soundblaster, and I knew it wasn’t. But I didn’t know what kind it was, and the manuals that came with the computer didn’t say. I called tech support, and they asked me what had been installed on the system since I bought it. “Microsoft Office, and Plus” I said.

They told me that was the problem. They told me I wasn’t ever supposed to install anything on the machine except for what came with it originally. Then they told me to reformat my hard drive and re-install everything from the setup CD.

I asked to speak with this guy’s supervisor, and he told me the same thing.


In the 1980s, I did not know what fdisk was or how to use it, so I called tech support and left a message on their answering machine. I spoke very clearly and left the message: “My hard drive crashed, and I’ve been told that I need to do a low-level format before I can restore from my tape backup. How do I low-level format my hard drive?”

The next day, our receptionist handed me this message from the tech support team: “Put the floppy diskette in the drive and type format a: and hit enter.”


This weekend, my father brought over his new laptop, purchased at a major retailer. It was taking 4-5 minutes to boot into the OS. It was discovered that there were several utilities loading during startup, some of them multiple times. Not wanting to void the support warranty, we called tech support. After my father related the problem, they talked him through removal and unchecking of many of the options. A reboot then took about 2.5 minutes, still quite a long time. When he asked what else could be done, he was told, “Just reboot a few more times. It should get faster as it works in.” We just sat there with our mouths open.


I was working as a student placement at a rather large company last year. One of our backup tape drives was acting up, and nothing I could do fixed it. So I phoned support. The first thing the guy asked, after half an hour of detail-taking, was:

  • Tech Support: “Do you use clean tapes in the drive every time?”
  • Customer: “No.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, that’ll be your problem. Use a new tape every time, and that’ll fix it.”

I was rather skeptical about this but decided to try it anyway. Of course, it didn’t work. So I rang support again and got a different guy.

  • Tech Support: “Do you use clean tapes in the drive every time?”
  • Customer: “Yes!” (enthusiastically)
  • Tech Support: “Oh, well, that’ll be your problem then. Every new tape that’s used clogs up the drive.”

I bought a laptop with a DVD drive and S-video output, thinking to use it, among other things, to play DVDs on my TV. The S-video output worked fine until I tried to play DVDs, when it switched back to the laptop’s monitor. So I called tech support.

  • Tech Support: “It’s not supposed to work, because the resolution would degrade too much.”
  • Customer: “But this is DVD; they’re designed for TV sets.”
  • Tech Support: “No. You see, it looks really great on your computer monitor, but the TV doesn’t have as good resolution.”
  • Customer: “But DVDs aren’t SUPPOSED to use all that resolution. They’re supposed to be shown on TV sets. Anyway, do you have a solution for me?”
  • Tech Support: “Well, if you’d get an HDTV, it would work fine!”

As it turns out, he was right about one thing — it wasn’t supposed to work. Buried in the documentation of the MPEG decoder is a line that the card didn’t support interlaced displays.


The company is now dead, so I can mention this one by name:

  • Tech Support: (an elderly sounding woman) “Hello, Commodore customer service. May I help you?”
  • Customer: “Yes, I’m trying to find the file format for Deluxe Music Construction Set.”
  • Tech Support: “You want to format a disk? Lemme see…” (paper rustles)
  • Customer: “No. I’m looking for documentation on the file format for DMCS.”
  • Tech Support: “Oh, yes. I’ve got documentation here.” (paper rustles) “Ok, to format a disk, first you–”
  • Customer: “No, no…I’m looking for the file format for–”
  • Tech Support: “You want to format a file? I umm…” (paper rustles again)
  • Customer: “NO… I DO NOT WANT TO FORMAT A FILE!”
  • Tech Support: “Ok, well, to format a disk, you–”
  • Customer: “NO! I don’t want to format a disk. I’m a programmer. I’m trying to find some documentation on–”
  • Tech Support: “We have documentation.”
  • Customer: “Yes, I understand. But I’m looking for specific documentation on software that I bought through Commodore. I’m looking for documentation on the file format for Deluxe Music Construction Set–”
  • Tech Support: (paper rustles) “You want to format a file?”
  • Customer: “No, I– Is there someone else there I can talk to?”
  • Tech Support: “No. No one here but me.”

I tried in vain for other contact numbers or the vendor of the software (contact information for that software was conspicuously missing in my software and documentation). Some hours later I called the same number above and got someone who gave me decent information. He had no clue what woman I talked to earlier. Could have been janitorial staff for all I knew.


I was troubleshooting a powerbook for a user, which had been flaky all of it’s short life, when it refused to boot and I could smell something smoldering. Clearly there was a short-circuit somewhere, probably in the power supply. I called Apple to get it repaired under the warranty.

  • Me: “Hi, I have a problem with a powerbook. It has developed a short circuit, probably in the power supply. I need an RMA number so I can send it back; it’s still under warranty.
  • Tech Support: “Please describe the symptoms.”
  • Me: “Um, there is a short circuit somewhere. I’d guess it’s a bad power supply. I can smell smoldering when I try to power it on, and it won’t boot, and the screen is just a pattern of lines.
  • Tech Support: “Ok, let’s try troubleshooting this.”
  • Me: “There’s nothing to troubleshoot. I need an RMA number so I can send it back under warranty.
  • Tech Support: “Well, you just described three problems to me. We’ll tackle each one and see how many we can fix.”
  • Me: (frustrated) “There’s only one problem, a short circuit in the power supply. Something’s burning inside the case; I can smell it when I power it on.”
  • Tech Support: (as to a child) “You said that you smell smoke, that it won’t boot, and that there are funny lines on the screen. We’ll tackle each of these one at a time. Now, let’s start the troubleshooting and see if we can get it to boot.”

At this point, I mumbled something about the phone not being near the computer and hung up.

The punch line is that, after the thing was shipped to Apple (twice), it got stolen from the shipping agent’s truck, and we got a brand new model.


I had just bought a new laser printer in the US when I received a very good job offer for the summer in Europe. So I called the printer manufacturer’s help desk to find out if I could use the printer in Europe with 220 volts, or if they had a low cost transformer.

  • Me: “Hello, I have just bought your new (printer model), and I was wondering if I can use it in Europe with 220 volts?”
  • Tech Support: “Hmmm…let me see…. Here, ok, it says that the printer works with 120 volts, so 220 volts should be enough.”
  • Me: “What?! If it is made only for 120 volts, and I hook it up to 220 volts, it’s going to fry.”
  • Tech Support: “Hmmm. You may need a surge protector.”

I’m an American living in Switzerland. I prefer English software, and the easiest way to get it is to buy directly from the United States.

So, we’ve recently purchased software from [a company] in the States. It had a few problems, so I called the international support line, and please note the word ‘international’.

After 45 minutes of listening to bad music at peak international phone rates, someone came on the line. It’s a known problem, he said, and he’d send an update right out — he’d just need my address.

He asked for my street. He asked for my city. He asked for my state. Oops, I’m in Switzerland, and the ’state’ field doesn’t apply. The tech is very apologetic, but his software won’t let him leave the field blank. Ok, I said, I’m from Texas, so just put Texas in there. Amazingly, the software accepts my four digit zip code. But he never asked me for my country, so I double checked. No, there was no place for him to enter a country. So he wrote my address down and said he’d sort it out later.

Weeks later, the update still hadn’t arrived. I called back, waiting “only” twenty minutes this time. They checked, found my order, and told me it had been sent to Canada and been returned as undeliverable. I corrected the mistake, and the update arrived a few days later in spite of the fact that it was addressed to “Swaziland.”

I have no idea if this company ever updated their software so the international help line could support international addresses.


  • Me: “Does your Internet provider support multicasting?”
  • Tech Support: “Yes. Just download it onto your PC and it’ll work fine.”

  • Customer: “I seem to have lost my IP address can you tell me what it is?”
  • Tech Support: “Just a minute, I’ll check.” (pause) “You’re using Win95 aren’t you? It’s a bit complicated. Click on Start.”
  • Customer: “Ok, I don’t need to do that–”
  • Tech Support: “Please do it my way, click on Start.”
  • Customer: “Ok.”
  • Tech Support: “Now click on Settings…Control Panel…Networks…TCP/IP…and now on Protocols, and there you are.”
  • Customer: “Yes, that’s where I was when I called you.”
  • Tech Support: “Well why call me? That’s where your IP address is, right in front of you.”
  • Customer: “Well, that’s where it should be, but mine’s all blank.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, what do you want me to do?”
  • Customer: “Can you tell me what it is?”
  • Tech Support: “Of course, just a second…why didn’t you ask me that in the first place?”

  • Customer: “I can’t seem to connect. Is there a problem on your end?”
  • Tech Support: “No. Let’s check a few things.”

“We” check.

  • Tech Support: “Ok, looks like you’ll have to re-install your net software. Do you still have the disks we sent you?”
  • Customer: “I’ve been using you guys as an ISP fully a year before you had handy install disks for common software.”
  • Tech Support: (pause — he clearly doesn’t comprehend how that’s even possible) “Well, then you’ll have to re-install Windows.”
  • Customer: “I don’t think so. Can I talk to someone else?”
  • Tech Support: “Um…just a sec.” (several minute pause) “You there?”
  • Customer: “Yes.”
  • Tech Support: “We’re down in your area.”
  • Customer: (dryly) “Thank you very much.”

One of our clients, an ISP, gave us a free account to use to test their service and help us write the documentation and marketing copy for them. I set the system up, logged on, and handed it over to my assistant.

After about thirty minutes I passed by and noticed they were on the phone to the technical support line, reporting a problem with the connection. I checked what the problem was with my assistant who told me that the web site they were supposed to connect to wasn’t answering. I checked — sure enough the connection just timed out with the usual ‘Unable to connect to server’ error. I tried a ping to the server and got no response, then decided to speak to the tech support person myself.

He was convinced the problem was with our dial-up connection, but as soon as I got on the phone I suggested the server was down and asked if he could check it with someone. He refused and we spent the next forty minutes trying various things on our machine to get the connection working. Finally I stopped him:

  • Me: “Look, I’m a technical consultant who tells other ISP’s how to set up their services. I was a founder member of the largest ISP in the UK, I think I know the difference between your server being down and a probem with my machine.”
  • Tech Support: “I’ve set up two ISPs myself, I know what I’m doing, sir.”
  • Me: “You may well have set two ISPs up, but your server is currently down. Can I speak to your supervisor? I don’t have time to waste checking things I know aren’t wrong.”
  • Tech Support: “Hang on a second — I’ll just check something.” (pause) “It looks like our server is down.”
  • Me: “I told you that 45 minutes ago. Why didn’t you check that when I first asked — we could have both saved ourselves a heck of a lot of time.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, we have to go through this procedure of checking the caller’s machine.”

  • Me: “I’m having problems connecting to sites outside the University.”
  • Tech Support: “What operating system are you using?”
  • Me: “The latest version of Linux.”
  • Tech Support: “What programs are you currently running?”
  • Me: “Nothing much — ftp, telnet, X, Netscape, sendmail…”
  • Tech Support: “It’s not our fault you can’t connect anywhere if you’re running sendmail. You have to get mail centrally.”
  • Me: “But sendmail has nothing to do with ftp access, web access, or anything else.”
  • Tech Support: “It’s not our problem.”

Three months later, it was announced on the University web site that there was an “untraced fault” on the network, and everyone had to reduce the MTU on their computers to 1498. A few talks with various technicians revealed that this had been known and repeatedly reported by a great many people, who had received just as unfriendly a response as I had, over those 3 months. The official story was that the technicians were waiting to see if the problem would clear up on its own. It took another six months of complaints before they finally got someone in to fix the router.


I recently signed up for a 640kbps ADSL line with a borrowed router. We have four computers in our household, with a perfectly working LAN. But after trying to set up the ADSL settings, there was still no connection to the Internet. I thought it was an ISP problem, so I phoned to the tech support. I explained the problem, and…

  • Me: “…If I ping any computer everything works fin–”
  • Tech Support: “You what?”
  • Me: “If I ping any comp–”
  • Tech Support: “No, I didn’t get what you did. Ping, right?”
  • Me: “Yes, ping. You know, when you write ‘ping’ and an IP address to see if the network is working.”
  • Tech Support: “Write where?”
  • Me: “At a command prompt.”
  • Tech Support: “It is better for you to upgrade to Windows XP. DOS is outdated.”
  • Me: “I run Windows 2000. Go to Start, Programs, Accessories, and you’ll see a Command Prompt icon. That’s where I type ‘ping’.”
  • Tech Support: “Oooooooooooh, I see, I see. Now I remember. Maybe the LAN isn’t working.”
  • Me: “No, I told you, the LAN was set up well before the ADSL contract and is perfectly fine.”
  • Tech Support: “Mhm. Go to Start, Programs, Accessories, and you’ll see a Command Prompt icon. You’ll get a black window. Write p-i-n-g-space-[an IP address].”
  • Me: “…”
  • Tech Support: “Sir?”
  • Me: “Done. All packets lost.”
  • Tech Support: “You have a LAN, don’t you? Try to ping your PCs and the router. To do so, go to Start, Progr–”
  • Me: “I know.”

And so on, for almost an hour. The problem never got solved. Later I swapped out the router, and it worked. So I called back to see if I could have a replacement router.

  • Tech Support: “So, you tried to exchange the router with a new one and it worked?”
  • Me: “Yes, it could be defective.”
  • Tech Support: “Yes, it could. Which brand of router did you have?”
  • Me: “A Cisco one.”
  • Tech Support: “Ah. Does Cisco make routers?”

I hung up, and later I cancelled.


I had a problem with using my PPP connection through Linux. The data transfers were really slow sometimes but fine at others. I played with it for a while, then finally called the help desk. I was on hold for twenty minutes, then:

  • Tech Support: “Hi. How can I help you?”
  • Me: “Hi. I’m trying to hook up my Linux box via PPP, and I’m running into some problems. It works fine under 95, but I can’t seem to get it to connect right under Linux. I can resolve hostnames and even –”
  • Tech Support: “Um, sir — what kind of computer is it?”
  • Me: “IBM compatible. Specifically, an Ambra.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok — what happens when you try running Trumpet Winsock?”

I slap my forehead.

  • Me: “This is Linux. It doesn’t run Trumpet Winsock.”
  • Tech Support: “Oh - it’s a DOS program?”
  • Me: “No. It’s an operating system. Trumpet runs fine under 95.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, have you tried running this program under Windows 95 then?”
  • Me: “No, it is an operating system. It doesn’t run under another operating system.”
  • Tech Support: “Oh. Ok, so what happens when you try to run Winsock under it?”

Murderous thoughts are going through my head. After a couple more exchanges back and forth, she finally understands that Winsock won’t run on Linux for some weird reason.

  • Me: “So can I get an incident number so I can talk to a tech?”
  • Tech Support: “Sure. I just need to get some info from you.”

She gets down my name, room number, phone number, computer type and brand, then we get interesting again.

  • Tech Support: “Ok, so is this under Windows 3.1 or Windows 95?”
  • Me: “Neither. It’s Linux.”
  • Tech Support: “Which type of Windows does it run under though?”
  • Me: “Neither! It runs on its own!”
  • Tech Support: “Oh!!! Oh! I’m sorry, in that case we can’t help you. We only support Windows 3.1 and Windows 95.”
  • Me:WHAT?!?
  • Tech Support: “Sorry. That’s all we’re currently supporting. Have a nice day.” [click]

  • Me: “The ethernet card you supplied doesn’t work under Linux.”
  • Tech Support: “Have you installed the DOS drivers?”
  • Me: “I’m using Linux, so the DOS drivers won’t work.”
  • Tech Support: “Why not?”

I was a manager in an IT department who had a network of around 100 point-of-sale (POS) computers spread all over Australia. One of our shops, about 2000 miles away, called with a problem. The motherboard appeared to be broken. I called one of our technicians who was in the area and asked him to go over and swap out the hard drive from the machine with the broken motherboard into a machine that was in the store room which I figured was working fine — that way the shop wouldn’t lose any of its data.

The technician called me later and said he couldn’t figure out how to get the hard drive out of the machine. To understand what he was looking at, I dismantled a spare machine I had. Thankfully IBM made the machines easy to service — lots of diagrams and instructions on the inside of the case. You just had to get into it first. The hard drive was mounted on a tray which was designed to slide out smoothly once a retaining clip had been pressed. Then it would be easy to unplug the drive and slide a new one in.

No matter how much I described, cajoled, and threatened the technician, he could not figure out how to get the hard drive out. He finally got sick of it, got in his car and drove away, leaving the shop with frustrated customers. I called the technician’s manager and explained the situation. But he wasn’t too interested either, saying we’d have to get IBM to come and fix it (at a huge cost, as you can imagine).

I called the shop back to explain what was going on and that they’d be down for a while. But the elderly lady in the shop said, “It’s ok, dear. I watched what the technician was doing, and it didn’t look that complicated. He left some of his tools behind, so I pulled the machines apart, swapped the disks, and all I need to know now is how to get the cases back on.”

I lead her through how to re-fit the case, and she was off and running.


This is an actual conversation I overheard in the cube next to me. I only heard one side of it. He had called the helpdesk to resolve a network problem.

“Hello, my name is [name]. My computer no longer communicates on the network. . . . Yes, the network connection is plugged in. . . . Yes, both ends. . . . Ok, I’ve rebooted the computer. Still nothing. . . . I don’t have a ‘Start’ button. I’m running Windows NT 3.51. . . . Windows NT. . . . NT. . . . Ennnn Teeee. . . . I don’t think that will work. . . . Well, ok. I’m pulling down file [long list of instructions]. . . . I don’t have that menu choice. . . . Ok, we’ll try it again. I pull down file [long list of instructions]. That menu choice doesn’t exist. . . . Yes, thank you, I do know how to spell. . . . No, there is no menu choice by that name. . . . I’m sorry, it isn’t there. . . . No, I do not have a ‘Start’ button. . . . No, I am not running Windows 3.11. I am running Windows NT 3.51. . . . Uhhh, no, I don’t think they are the same thing. . . . Look, you can keep saying that the choice has to be there, but in fact it is not. I’m running Windows Ennn Teee. It’s different from Windows 3.1. . . . No, the choice third from the bottom is [name of option]. . . . I AM NOT LYING TO YOU. . . . Hello? . . . Hello?”

My co-worker redials.

“Hello help desk? My name is [name]. I called a few minutes ago with a network problem. I’d like the name of the tech assigned to my case. . . . Thank you. Now, could you assign a different person to the case please? . . . Because she’s a moron. . . . Yes, I did say moron. . . . Thank you.”


  • Customer: “I’m calling to find out if the modem that was bundled with my system has Non-Volatile RAM. It doesn’t appear to work, if so.”
  • Tech Support: “Have you run ‘MemMaker’?”

  • Tech Support: “Multitasking a Pentium is like stepping on the motherboard with running cleats.”

I was waiting in a computer store for a price quote once, and while I was waiting I noticed one of the technicians trying to fix a customer’s computer. I listen in on the conversation.

  • Tech Support: “You see when I put my mouse over ‘Documents’? How it turns yellow?”

It was clear the customer had changed the Windows 95 colour scheme from the standard green background and blue and white windows that you see when Windows 95 starts for the first time. He had a new color scheme altogether, a blue background, and when he ran his mouse to highlight something, it turned yellow instead of the original blue. Perfectly normal, I thought; almost every Windows 95 user changes the color scheme.

  • Customer: “Yes, I see that. What about it?”
  • Tech Support: “That means you have a virus.”

Of course, that was it. I wasn’t going to buy a system from a store with this incredible tech support, so I left.


[New!]

  • Lab Technician: “Is that an old disk?”
  • Friend: “Yeah, it’s an old one. I reformatted it.”
  • Lab Technician: (suspiciously) “What was on it before?”
  • Friend: “I had some games on it.”
  • Lab Technician: “WHAT??? Don’t you know that games are FULL of viruses!?”
  • Friend: “What–?”
  • Lab Technician: “Give me the disk right now! I’m going to scan it for viruses.”
  • Friend: “Look, it’s been formatted, so it’s blank, and games are not–”
  • Lab Technician: “Hand it over right now or I’ll throw you out.”

He was absolutely baffled when he didn’t find any viruses on it.


I had a friend who gave me a Mitsubishi monitor. The monitor wasn’t getting a picture for some reason, so it obviously needed some servicing. I took it to a repairman to see what could be done.

  • Technician : “You mean you get no picture at all when you boot up your computer?”
  • Me: “That’s right.”
  • Technician : “Oh, that’s because you have a small hard drive. You have to get a bigger hard drive and then the monitor will work fine.”

My new ISP was exhibiting extremely slow service. When my wife called to ask if they were having a problem, they told her no, everything was fine and maybe she should defragement the hard drive.


I got disconnected from my ISP and was unable to log back onto it — my modem would connect and everything, but Dial-Up Networking couldn’t get past verifying username and password. Nothing had changed in my setup, so I called my ISP’s tech support.

  • Me: “I’m calling to report an outage with my dialup number.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok, let’s check your Dial-Up Networking settings.”

He didn’t bother to check whether I was using Windows or MacOS.

  • Tech Support: “Are there any dashes in the phone number?”
  • Me: “No, but that wouldn’t affect how my modem dials.”
  • Tech Support: “Try removing the dashes anyway.”
  • Me: “Ok. I should mention that I have no problem calling the number and connecting to a modem — I connect at a full 49,333 each time. I just can’t get past the verifying the username and password step. Is it possible that network maintenance is being done right now?”
  • Tech Support: “What state are you calling in, sir?”
  • Me: “California.”
  • Tech Support: “One second, let me check. . . . No, don’t see anything at all in California. You double checked your username and password, right?”
  • Me: “Yep. Nothing has changed in my setup. This was working just ten minutes ago.”
  • Tech Support: “Have you tried any other dialup numbers?”
  • Me: “Yes. I tried the one in [city], which is a toll call for me. That one doesn’t work either.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok. Try adding three commas after your dialup number.”

Adding a comma in a modem dial string causes the modem to pause in its dialing for three seconds. This guy wanted me to add nine seconds of pause after the number had been dialed.

  • Me: “Um…what good would that do?”
  • Tech Support: “I dunno. I just notice that it always seems to help when I get busy signals.”
  • Me: “But I’m not getting a busy signal! Like I said, I can connect just fine, physically. I just can’t get logged on.”
  • Tech Support: “Try the commas. I’m sure they’ll help. Give it about fifteen minutes or so, and if you’re still not able to connect, call us back.”
  • Me: “Sir, I’m an experienced computer tech. I know that adding commas to my dialup number isn’t going to change whether or not the authentication servers and routers are working. If anything, it’s going to cause the modem on the other end to hang up before mine tries to connect to it.”
  • Tech Support: “Ok, what’s the dialup number you’re calling, sir?”
  • Me:[number]
  • Tech Support: “Ok, lemme put you on hold for just a moment.” (elevator music pause) “Sir, I just tried that dialup number, and it sounds all weird. Didn’t sound like a modem.”
  • Me: “Huh. Sounds just fine on my end when I connect to it.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, I just called it, and it was giving off all sorts of weird tones and stuff. I can write this up as an incident report for you if you want.”
  • Me: “How’d you try to connect to it?”
  • Tech Support: “I just called it.”
  • Me: “What kind of modem?”
  • Tech Support: “No, I just called it.”
  • Me: “Did it sound kinda like a fax?”
  • Tech Support: “Sort of.”
  • Me: “Then there’s nothing wrong with the dialup number itself. That’s a V90 train sequence starting up there. Those little tones you’re hearing are the modem trying to determine if you’re a compatible V90 modem on the other end.”
  • Tech Support: “Oh.”
  • Me: “Look, I know exactly what’s wrong, and what needs to be done to fix it. What’s happening is that your routers in my area are down. Your technicians need to be made aware of it. If you could just let them know about it, I’m sure they’ll be able to fix it real soon, if they haven’t already.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, why don’t you give it about 15 to 20 minutes, and if it’s not working by then, give us a call back and we’ll see what we can do for you.”
  • Me: “All right. Thanks for your time.”
  • Tech Support: “Have a good evening, sir.” (click)

About fifteen minutes later, I was about ready to call them back, but then I actually managed to log on again. Unbelievable.


I originally bought a certain brand of computer that supposedly came with a video card that had 2 megs of memory. After a while, noting that the screen graphics were moving very slowly, I went into the Windows 95 Control Panel to take a look.

Video memory: 1 meg.

So I checked with a diagnostic program.

Video memory: 1 meg.

I called the tech support people about this.

  • Tech Support: “Oh, the Control Panel just tells you how much video memory you are using right now, you really do have 2 megs in there.”

Pardon me, but if my Windows 95 desktop takes up 1 meg of video memory just sitting there, we have a problem.

  • Tech Support: “Well, you need to go out and buy [a brand name diagnostic problem] and check the video memory, because that is the only one I know how to use. Don’t worry, it’ll tell you you have 2 megs of video memory.”

Um, I need to buy a $50 piece of software so that I can tell you something I already know?

  • Tech Support: “Well, this particular motherboard/chip/etc is registered with the FCC, and I have the specs right here! It has 2 megs of video memory!”
  • Customer: “Maybe the specs say so, but my computer doesn’t.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, you can just ask the FCC if you need to! Your computer is [a certain type], and that type has 2 megs of video memory — so your computer does too.”
  • Customer: “It is still under warranty. Can I have someone take a look at it and check to see if something is wrong? It only has 1 meg of video memory.”
  • Tech Support: “No, it has 2!”

He couldn’t seem to grasp the difference between a written set of specifications and a material object — namely, my computer.

  • Tech Support: “Here, I’ll have my supervisor come and read you the specifications for your computer!”
  • Customer: “Um, I have the specs right here. And yes, this computer should have 2 megs of video memory. But it doesn’t, and that is why I’m on the phone with you!”

I finally managed to get the guy to give me the number of the local computer tech so I could take it in. The computer tech looked at it, said, “Hmm. It only has a 1 meg video card in it,” traded it out, and I got my computer back.

The scariest thing about that call was what I left out. There were about four other things wrong with the computer at the same time — and each garnered about the same level of response.


I overheard a conversation between the assistant manager of a PC repair place and a customer.

  • Manager: “Ok, you’ve got a new video card in there. The bad news is that your old card was an AGP, and the new one is PCI and eight megabytes. That means that it’ll steal eight megabytes of your system memory.”
  • Customer: “Oh, my…”
  • Me: “Ahh…pardon me? No it won’t. That figure of eight megabytes refers to the amount of video memory on the video board itself. It has nothing to do with system memory, and it won’t steal anything from it.”
  • Customer: “Oh, thank you! That’s what I was looking for, a little expertise.”
  • Manager: “Are you sure? Even with PCI?”

The following is a three-way conversation between customer support for a company that sells computers, a customer of said company, and a technician that was called in to repair the hard drive of a machine from said company. There’s one brain among the three of them, and it’s not hard to figure out which one has it.

  • Customer Support: “Customer support center this is Allen.”
  • Technician: “Ya, this is the ‘CE’ from (company). I was called in to fix yer hard drive. I put one in but now it’s asking for a reference disk.”
  • Customer Support: “All our systems are shipped with reference disks. They should be in a box called ‘reference disks’ there next to the computer.”
  • Technician: “Oh, here they are, do I put it in now?”
  • Customer Support: “Yes, and reboot the computer. It will come up to a configuration screen and all you have to do is follow the prompts. Are you sure you’re a service guy?”
  • Technician: “Look, I’ve been working on PC’s for over 10 years now; I know enough to reboot. Geeez! Oh, wait, it says, ‘There were no configuration files found for devices in slots 1, 2, 4…please remove your reference disk and insert disk containing the correct configuration.’ What do I do now?
  • Customer Support: “Look in the box. There should be the original disks that came with the network card, the scsi controller, and the modem. You’ll have to put them in one at a time as it asks to update your reference disk. What kind of network card is in the machine?”
  • Technician: “It’s a microchannel card.”
  • Customer Support: “Not what brand. What type? Token ring? Ethernet?”
  • Technician: “How do I tell? Oh wait, the customer wants to talk to you.”
  • Customer: [yell, yell, curse, curse] “What do we pay you for??”
  • Customer Support: “Calm down.”
  • Customer: “We have a box here that says use these disks to reconfigure the computer. Maybe he should be using these instead.”

Hours go by.

  • Customer Support: “There, now reboot the computer, and it should all be finally working fine.”
  • Technician: “Hmmmm. It says invalid or missing command interpreter.”
  • Customer Support: “Were there any error messages when you formatted the new drive?”
  • Technician: “Formatted the new drive? I just put it in outta the box.”
  • Customer Support: [taking a big gulp of cold coffee] “That’s ok, we can do that now. Put in a boot disk, and we’ll format the drive and then restore the system from tape.”

Dead silence.

  • Technician: “I don’t think we have a backup tape.”

I know just enough to get myself in big trouble. Long story, but I managed to trash the BIOS and remembered that jumping two pins on the BIOS would reset the BIOS to a preset level.

  • Tech Support: “What operating system do you have installed?”
  • Me: “Windows 98.”
  • Tech Support: “You didn’t buy that from us, you have to reinstall Windows 3.1 before I can help you.”
  • Me: “I would be more than happy to, but the BIOS has to be reset first.”
  • Tech Support: “Maybe I didn’t make myself clear. You have to reinstall Windows 3.1 first.”
  • Me: “May I talk to your supervisor, please?”
  • Tech Support: (very loudly) “You understand this telephone line is recorded, right!?”
  • Me: “Doesn’t bother me. May I please speak to your supervisor?”
  • Tech Support: “I don’t have to put up with your foul language.” (click)

Once I called my local phone company to see if they were offering ADSL in my area.

  • Me: “I am calling to see if ADSL is available in my area.”
  • Customer Service: “56k? Yeah, we offer 56k.”
  • Me: “No, no. ADSL.”
  • Customer Service: “Oh, no, we quit offering 28.8k a long time ago.”
  • Me: “No, I’m talking about ADSL.”
  • Customer Service: “What city do you live in?”
  • Me: “Dalton.”
  • Customer Service: “No, we quit offering 28.8k a long time ago.”

Many years ago I was having problems with my miniframe lab computer. I called tech support, and after some time of discussing the problem, the guy told me to format the disk into two 795 megabyte partitions. When I told them that the disk was only a 300 megabyte disk, he replied, “I can’t help you if you refuse to cooperate.”


I noticed that the CGI scripts on my web site had spontaneously ceased working, so I contacted the tech support for the ISP that was hosting the site. It’s important to note that, since I had set up the site, I had moved to a different city and, hence, only used telnet to connect to them. The tech needed to ask a few preliminary questions.

  • Tech Support: “What number are you dialing in to?”
  • Me: “I’m not dialing in. I’m using telnet.”
  • Tech Support: “Yes, but what number are you calling?”
  • Me: “You don’t understand, I’m not dialing in to your modem pool. I’m telneting to you.”
  • Tech Support: “Please tell me what number you are dialing.”
  • Me: “Fine. (number)
  • Tech Support: “That’s not one of our numbers!”
  • Me: “Of course it’s not. I’m using A TELNET UTILITY to reach you over the Internet.”
  • Tech Support: “But how are you connecting to the Internet?”
  • Me: “Though a different ISP!”
  • Tech Support: “Then we can’t help you!”
  • Me: “Listen, I am connecting to you via telnet. It’s a utility that allows me to connect to your UNIX shell from a remote location WITHOUT USING A PHONE LINE.”
  • Tech Support: (incredulous) “So, you’re using a cable modem or something?”
  • Me: (figuring it was just easier to say yes) “Yes.”
  • Tech Support: “Um, we don’t support UNIX.”
  • Me: “I’m not using UNIX. You are.”
  • Tech Support: “I’m using Windows.”
  • Me: “No, your SERVERS are UNIX based.”
  • Tech Support: “I don’t think I can help you.”

I had to agree.


There’s this quite major company called Time Computers over here in England. I bought a system from them, and then five months later I hear a “Pfoo!” noise, and my display went all fuzzy and strange. After some troubleshooting, I opened up the case and discovered that the video card had a little, remarkably Wile E. Coyote-esque soot explosion mark centered around a burnt chip in the middle of it.

Here’s the conversation I had with tech support about it, with a lot cut out:

  • Tech Suppport: “What seems to be the problem, sir?”
  • Me: “Well, my screens all fuzzy, and my video card seems to have exploded.”
  • Tech Support: “Well, right click on the desktop.”
  • Me: “Before you say anything, I’ve tried the monitor on another computer, and on this computer on Windows 98, 2000, Linux, and BeOS, and it’s definitely something wrong with the video card, because the monitor worked on the other computers, and it didn’t work in any of the operating systems in this one, and when I tried another video card, it worked.”
  • Tech Support: “Right click on the desktop.”
  • Me: “…”
  • Tech Support: “Right click on the desktop.”
  • Me: “Well, I’m in Linux right now.”
  • Tech Support: “Right click on the desktop.”
  • Me: “I’m not in Windows.”
  • Tech Support: “Right click on the desktop.”
  • Me: “Do you know what an operating system is?”
  • Tech Support: “Yes, sir.”
  • Me: “Ok then, because, I’m not in Windows. I’m in Linux, which is another operating system. Right clicking on the desktop won’t do anything you think it will, I promise. Do you want me to reboot into Windows?”
  • Tech Support: “Right click on the desktop please, sir.”

I sighed, gave up, rebooted into Windows, and right clicked on the desktop.

(http://www.rinkworks.com)

Asia: 6 strokes for drinking

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Noorazah (pictured) and Mohamad Nasir, were both sentenced to six strokes of the cane and ordered to pay a fine of RM5,000. This is believed to be the first case in Malaysia of a woman receiving a caning sentence for drinking. — PHOTO: NEW STRAITS TIMES PRESS

KUALA LUMPUR - A RELIGIOUS court has sentenced a Muslim woman to six strokes of the cane for drinking alcohol, possibly for the first time in Malaysia.

The Syariah High Court in Pahang also handed the same sentence to a man on Monday, and is due to make a decision on another woman in May.

Mohamad Nasir Mohamad, 38, a father of four, and waitress Noorazah Baharuddin, 22, were found drinking beer separately in pubs in July last year in central Pahang state, said reports released yesterday.

Nasir admitted that he had drunk beer at a pub in Cherating on July 11, while Noorazah was caught drinking at the pub where she worked, in Jalan Gambut.

Both were also fined RM5,000 (S$2,100) each by the Pahang court on Monday.

The third accused was part-time model Kartika Sari Dewi Shukarno, 32. According to the New Straits Times, Kartika, a Singapore permanent resident, could not attend court as she is studying in Singapore.

Judge Abdul Rahman Yunus said that he had given the maximum fine and caning as a deterrent to other Muslims, but had spared them a jail sentence.

‘The caning is to shame them and should be done at any of the prisons in the country,’ he was quoted as saying by NST.

The case comes after two controversial fatwas, or edicts - one over tomboyish behaviour by women and the other concerning the practice of yoga - sparked intense public debate over decisions made by the country’s top religious body.

Malaysia has a two-track legal system, with the civil courts operating alongside state-based syariah courts. Muslims are governed by syariah laws in family and personal matters, while ethnic Chinese, Indians and other races come under civil courts.

According to NST, this is the second time such a sentence has been handed down. In 2005, the same judge sentenced two Muslim brothers to six strokes of the cane after they were caught drinking.

However, the caning has yet to be carried out as the men are appealing against the decision.

Alcohol is widely available in Malaysia, and Muslims are rarely punished for consuming it.

‘It’s rare but it’s within the law and Muslims are subject to such law in this country,’ said lawyer Pawancheek Merican, a syariah law committee member of the Malaysian Bar Council.

MP Salahuddin Ayub, the youth chief of the opposition Islamic party PAS, said he ‘agreed’ with the court ruling.

‘The ruling only concerns Muslims and it does not affect the non-Muslims. It is to remind the Muslims not to drink,’ he said.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

(http://www.straitstimes.com)

China-Africa: Senegalese president appreciates China’s quick work on gov’t Internet

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Senegalese President Abdoulaye Balde appreciates China’s quick work on installing the government Internet for the West African country.

During his recent visit to a China-funded Center of Resources of Administrative Internet, Balde expressed appreciation that 90 percent of work has been completed for the project originally planned for two years.

Situated in the suburbs of the capital Dakar, the three-story building is a venture of 25 billion FCFA (50 million U.S. dollars), which will link state agencies to the network. As an information hub, its services will cover the entire territory of Senegal, benefiting, among others, institutions ranging from hospitals to universities.

“This network will allow us to gain efficiency and time in the field of administrative work, not to speak of economic gains in state telephone budget estimated at billions of FCFA,” said the Senegalese president.

Thanks to the network, a professor in the University of Dakar could teach the courses to students elsewhere in Ziguinchor, the president said. A doctor in Fann Hospital could make a diagnosis in cooperation with his colleagues in Saint-Louis and Le Dantec hospitals, he added.

The government Internet will connect seven regions by means of optical fibers, including Dakar, Saint-Louis, Louga, Diourbel, Kaolack, Thies and Fatick, before getting through to all parts of the country, Balde declared.

He also announced the installation of telecommunication equipment at the Presidential Palace for videoconferences with leaders of other countries.

(http://news.xinhuanet.com)

China-Africa: China gives Uganda $77 mln aid to boost development

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

The Chinese government has offered 77 million U.S. dollars to Uganda in a renewed bid to boost the East African country’s development, the visiting Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi revealed after signing aid agreements here on Tuesday.

The low interest aid package signed between the two governments included a framework agreement on provision of a concessional loan for the construction of e-governance project worth 60 million dollars and procurement of engineering equipment for Kampala City Council worth ten million dollars.

The other package is a seven million dollar economic and technical cooperation agreement on the construction of a hospital and government offices.

Yang, who is currently on a two day official visit to Uganda, the first leg of his seven nation tour to the continent and Brazil, said China will not cut its aid pledges to Africa despite the global economic downturn and appealed to the developed countries to do the same.

“China as a firm friend of Uganda and Africa will by no means cut our aid to Uganda and Africa, on the contrary we will exert even greater effort to help our African and Ugandan brothers and sisters,” he said.

Sam Kutesa, Uganda’s minister of foreign affairs hailed China’s support and pledged that Uganda will closely work with the Asian country both at the UN Security Council and other international for a to deal with both regional and international issues.
(http://news.xinhuanet.com)

China-Africa: New Minafett Headquarters to Be Unveiled Today- Rwanda

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

The Chinese Foreign Minister, Yang Jiechi, will today officially open and handover to the Government of Rwanda, the multi-million dollar complex that will serve as the headquarters of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation (MINAFFET).

Minaffet has revealed that the state-of-the-art building located at Kimihurura worth about $8.9m, is among various projects funded by China in Rwanda. The Chinese Minister will also inaugurate the new Chinese Embassy complex in the City Centre during his one day visit to Rwanda.

Jiechi who arrives in the county today will pay a courtesy call to President Paul Kagame at Urugwiro Village and will also hold bilateral talks with the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Rosemary Museminali to further discuss how China and Rwanda can strengthen their bilateral ties.

Museminali is quoted in a statement saying that the Chinese top diplomat’s visit is “highly welcome and will be an opportunity to cement the good relationship which has prevailed for a long time between Rwanda and China.”

Jiechi visit some of the projects his government has funded in Rwanda and also further discuss how China can continue to support development projects in the country.

China is one of Rwanda’s major development partners, supporting several projects in different sectors of the economy, ranging from agriculture, industry, infrastructure to education.

Rwanda has also benefited from different arrangements under the Forum for China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC), an initiative by China to support African Economies develop and some of the special arrangements Rwanda has benefited from is the Special Preferential Tariff Treatment (SPT) programme which allows tax free entry of Rwandan products into China.

Jiechi who is visiting Rwanda and three other African countries including Uganda, Malawi and South Africa is on a traditional African tour taken by Chinese Foreign Ministers on invitation by the foreign ministers.
During his stay, Jiechi will visit some of the projects currently funded by China including several paved roads within the City of Kigali.

China is also funding the construction and operationlization of the cement factory (CIMERWA) at Bugarama, rice processing plants in Rwamagana and Nyagatare and the construction of Ngoma Hospital in Ngoma District in the Eastern Province.

Apart from the MINAFFET Complex, China funded different projects across the country valued at $7.8m in 2008 alone, the ministry revealed.
(allAfrica)

China: China Passes Germany to Become Third-Biggest Economy

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

By Nipa Piboontanasawat and Kevin Hamlin

Jan. 14 (Bloomberg) — China’s economy overtook Germany’s in 2007 to become the world’s third largest, underscoring the nation’s increasing economic and political clout.

Gross domestic product expanded 13 percent from a year earlier, more than a previous estimate of 11.9 percent, to 25.731 trillion yuan ($3.38 trillion), the statistics bureau said on its Web site today. That topped Germany’s 2.424 trillion euros ($3.32 trillion), using average exchange rates for 2007.

China’s economy is 70 times bigger than when leader Deng Xiaoping ditched hard-line Communist policies in favor of free- market reforms in 1978. After overtaking the U.K. and France in 2005, China became the third nation to complete a spacewalk, hosted the Olympic Games and surpassed Japan as the biggest buyer of U.S. Treasuries.

“This number is just one more piece of evidence that China is one of the most important players on the global stage,” said Huang Yiping, chief Asia economist at Citigroup Inc. in Hong Kong.

The figure was released as China faces the weakest economic expansion since 1990 after exports collapsed because of the global recession.

German economic growth slumped last year, according to numbers released by the Federal Statistics Office in Frankfurt today. Gross domestic product grew 1.3 percent, down from 2.5 percent in 2007.

Widening Gap

China’s economy may now be as much as 15 percent larger than Germany’s, Louis Kuijs, a senior economist at the World Bank in Beijing, estimated. He confirmed the calculation that it overtook Germany in 2007.

The U.S. economy is the world’s biggest, followed by Japan’s.

“If China continues to grow at its average rate in the past 20 years and if the U.S. does the same, it will overtake the U.S. in 20 years,” said Tim Condon, head of Asia research at ING Groep NV in Singapore. “There’s no doubt that that will happen — it’s just a matter of time.”

The nation’s enlarged role in the global financial system was highlighted when it cut rates at the same time as the U.S. Federal Reserve and five other central banks in October to counter the deepening credit crisis. In contrast, Japan stood on the sidelines.

Stake in U.S. Economy

China is the biggest contributor to global growth and underpins demand for metals, grains and the exports of its Asian neighbors. It also has a big stake in the U.S. economy, holding $652.9 billion of U.S. Treasuries, according to Treasury Department data.

Since introducing free-market policies, China has lifted 300 million citizens out of poverty, according to the United Nations. Before the latest revisions, the nation’s per-capita gross national income was 132nd in the world at $2,360, behind Angola at 125th and Azerbaijan at 126th and ahead of Tonga at 133rd, according to the World Bank.

“The size of China’s GDP tells us something about how quickly it is getting richer compared to other countries but in terms of per-capita GDP it is still less than 10 percent as rich as Germany is,” said Kuijs.

The nation hosted the Olympic Games in August last year, sent men into space in September and aims to land a man on the moon by 2020.

Asian Financial Crisis

“We have overcome challenges in the past 30 years, from the breakup of the Soviet Union to facing down global sanctions, from the Asian financial crisis to the current global crisis,” President Hu Jintao said last month. “Our international profile is rising and we will play an increasingly constructive role.”

Global interests spanning African oilfields and South American mines are encouraging China to add to its military might. The nation sent ships to fight pirates off the coast of Somalia last month and will “seriously consider” building aircraft carriers, the Ministry of National Defense said.

“China’s importance goes beyond even the ranking as number three because it’s one of the only resilient economies in the world today,” said Citigroup’s Huang.

Still, growth is sagging.

The economy grew 9 percent in the third quarter of 2008, the least in five years. The fourth-quarter expansion, due to be announced next week, was 6.8 percent, the weakest since 2001, according to the median estimate of 12 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

The nation’s 4 trillion yuan stimulus package, announced in November, may help to limit the severity of the slowdown.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nipa Piboontanasawat in Hong Kong at npiboontanas@bloomberg.net

(http://www.bloomberg.com)

USA: Bush Tours America To Survey Damage Caused By His Disastrous Presidency

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009


Bush Tours America To Survey Damage Caused By His Disastrous Presidency

(http://www.theonion.com)

China-Africa: China to Build hospital in Nairobi

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

President Mwai Kibaki has hailed the government of the People’s Republic of China for the willingness to build a hospital in the Eastland’s part of Nairobi .

The President noted that the hospital would go a long way in de-congesting Kenyatta National Hospital .

The Head of State said the hospital would serve as a modern anti-malarial center and effectively serve the densely populated eastern parts of the city.

The President made the remarks when he met the Chinese Minister for Commerce Hon Chen Deming at his Harambee House office .

The President also thanked the government of China for providing Kshs 380 million shillings for the upgrading of Kakamega, Nyamira, Nyeri and Malindi Hospitals .

During the discussions President Kibaki briefed the Minister on the achievements of the grand coalition government and appreciated the support accorded to his government by China .

President Kibaki expressed the commitment of his government to rehabilitating and expanding the existing infrastructure particularly the construction of new roads network.

The President especially thanked the Government of the People’s Republic of China for providing funds for the construction of several by-passes to the tune of 145 million dollars.

The by-passes are: Nairobi Southern by-pass- cost $ US -56 million, Nairobi Northern by-pass- cost $ US- 35 million, Nairobi Eastern by-pass- cost $ US 42 million and Nairobi link roads- cost $US 15.4 million

This is aimed at decongesting Nairobi City while at the same time promoting development of the peri-urban areas.

The government of China is also rehabilitating the JKIA-Uhuru Highway-UNEP road.

Through the Chinese Minister of Commerce President Kibaki invited Chinese companies to invest in Kenya ’s Export processing Zones, noting that Kenya was the gateway to the wider East and central African region.

President Kibaki also encouraged the government of China to establish the regional offices of the China-Africa Fund (CadFund) in Nairobi.

The purpose of the fund is to encourage Chinese entrepreneurs to invest in Africa .

On his part Hon Deming hailed the consolidation and expansion of the existing cordial relations between the two countries.

He particularly hailed the exchange of high level visits and growing interaction of people between the two nations as evidenced by the introduction of direct flights by Kenya Airways between two major Chinese cities, Guangshou and Hong Kong and Nairobi .

The talks were attended by Deputy Prime Minister and Minister Trade Uhuru Kenyatta, acting Finance Minister John Michuki, Internal Security Minister Prof George Saitoti, Energy Minister Kiraitu Murungi, Information and Communications Minister Samuel Poghisio and assistant minister for Foreign Affairs Richard Onyonka.

Also in attendance were Head of Civil Service and Secretary to the Cabinet Amb Francis Muthaura and several other permanent secretaries.

On his part the minister was accompanied by Chinese Ambassador to Kenya Mr Zhang Ming, Mr Shou Yabin, Director-General Department of Western Asia and African Affairs among other senior officials from the Ministry of Commerce.

(http://www.kbc.co.ke)

China-Africa: Chinese foreign minister begins Africa tour

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

BEIJING (AFP) — Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi has began a four-nation trip to Africa, according to the government, kicking off a traditional visit to build China’s relationship with the continent.

Yang’s tour of Uganda, Rwanda, Malawi and South Africa would last until Saturday, foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told journalists.

“He will exchange views on bilateral issues, China-African cooperation, and other international and regional issues and sign a series of cooperation documents,” she said.

“We believe the visit will enhance and improve friendly cooperation between China and the four African countries.”

Following his swing through Africa, Yang will visit Brazil and Portugal from January 17-21, she added.

China has built close partnerships with African nations in recent years, partly to secure resources such as oil, minerals and timber to help fuel its economic growth.

The relationships have drawn some criticism in the West due to Beijing’s links to regimes with poor human rights records, including those of Sudan and Zimbabwe.

However, the World Bank said in a report last year that China’s overtures to Africa had led to a massive infrastructure revolution on the continent that was vital to reducing poverty.

Many African nations have also welcomed China’s no-strings-attached economic policies.

In recent years, China has traditionally kicked off its diplomatic New Year by sending its foreign minister to Africa.

Yang visited four African countries in January last year and his predecessor, Li Zhaoxing, made New Year trips to Africa in 2006 and 2007.

The trips have typically resulted in China landing oil and gas deals, as well as strengthening ties in other areas of trade.

Jiang did not detail the nature of the agreements to be inked during Yang’s trip.

China: Angry Teacher Rips Student’s Cheek Off

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

On December 18th, 2008, a 10 year-old 5th grader named Chao Qun Zheng went to his elementary school in HeNan, China.

When his teacher, Guo, found out that young Zheng had not completed his homework, she flipped out.

“She was very angry at the time,” he said. “She ripped and twisted my cheeks with both her hands and then she lifted me off the ground.”

The teacher held the boy up until one of his cheeks actually ripped off and the boy was bleeding profusely.

Without hesitation the teacher reached down and picked up Zheng’s cheek skin, put it on his face, and instructed the boy go home immediately.

teacher_student_face_off Angry Teacher Rips Students Cheek Off picture

When the parents saw Zheng, they immediately took him to the hospital where it took 52 stitches to have his cheek sewn back on.

Zheng’s father has reported the case to the police and is expected to press for damages.

(http://www.weirdasianews.com)

Africans-In-China: Burundian princesses dance in China , African night Tianjin .

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

China-Africa: China to Expand Mauritanian Port

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

The Chinese government is promising to spend more than $280 million to extend the port at Nouakchott by more than 900 meters. The deep-water “Port of Friendship,” can already handle 500,000 tons of cargo a year.

Mauritanian Minister of Economic Affairs Sidi Ould Tah said the deal marks a new stage in economic ties between Nouakchott and Beijing and signals what he calls a “leap forward” in Mauritania’s relations with development partners.

General Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz ( file photo)
General Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz ( file photo)

Many of those partners scaled back assistance following last August’s coup by General Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz. The United States stopped $15 million in military cooperation, more than four million dollars in peacekeeping training, and three-million dollars in development assistance. Washington has also suspended a multi-million-dollar program through the Millennium Challenge Corporation and has imposed travel restrictions on coup leaders.

The European Union is threatening to withhold $230 million in development funding. The African Union has suspended Mauritania.

Jean Ping (file photo)
Jean Ping (file photo)

AU Commission Chairman Jean Ping said African leaders are working with the European Union, the United States, the Arab League, and the Islamic Conference to sanction Mauritania’s military rulers.

“The sanctions have been envisaged to tell them that if you do not comply you will face sanctions, including going to the U.N. Security Council for that,” he said.

China has not suspended assistance to Mauritania. Signing the port expansion project Sunday, the Chinese ambassador to Mauritania Zhang Shun said the two countries have “exemplary relations” that will be furthered by the new development project.

China is boosting its development assistance to Africa at a time when it is looking for new sources of oil, including Mauritania. The state-owned China National Petroleum Corporation began drilling in Mauritania in 2006 after paying more than eight-million dollars for 65 percent of an onshore oil and gas block.

Mauritania now produces about 75,000 barrels of oil a day with proven crude reservers of one-billion barrels.

Chinese contractors have nearly $700 million worth of projects in Mauritania including water supplies, telecommunications, agriculture, and construction.

(http://www.voanews.com)

China-Africa: The new scramble for Africa

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

In well-to-do circles in the West, it has become de rigueur to criticise China for its role in Africa. The Economist, the bible of the business class, has labelled the Chinese “new colonialists.” Concerned liberals in Hollywood accuse China of facilitating genocide in Darfur. More recently, the American and British governments have expressed disappointment that China, instead of throwing its weight behind sanctions against Zimbabwe, is giving the thumbs-up to talks between Mugabe and the MDC.

There is nothing radical in these attacks on “Chinese colonialism”. On the contrary, the assaults on China are motivated by a desperate desire to preserve Western influence in African affairs. The reason why American and European observers are so panicked by Chinese wheeling and dealing in Africa is because they fear it will undermine their own ability to boss African states around. In essence, they want Africa to remain the White Man’s Burden rather than becoming the “Yellow Man’s Burden”.

Many liberal-leaning NGOs and celebrity activists are using the opportunity of the Beijing Games to heap pressure on China over its “colonialism” in Darfur. Western commentators write furiously about China’s “complicity” in the Sudanese regime’s genocide. Yet, as one journalist has pointed out, the conflict over Darfur is extremely complicated and extremely messy, “and to put the blame on only one party (ie. China) makes no moral or political sense”. Western observers continue to rage against China, however, because they fear that the Chinese relationship with Khartoum is weakening their own imperialist clout in Sudan.

Throughout the commentary on China’s links with Khartoum, one can almost smell the fury of Western observers concerned that their plans to oversee a deal and effectively reshape Sudan have been threatened by Chinese meddling. One American columnist fulminated: “Sudan’s government feels it can ignore Western revulsion at genocide because [thanks to China] it has no need of Western money… China, along with Sudan’s other Arab and Asian partners, feels free to trample on basic standards of decency.”

Here, as in so much of the commentary on China and Darfur, the key concern is the standing of “Western revulsion” in international affairs — that is, the power of “Western revulsion” to force an African state to alter its ways and fall into line. Chinese investment is seen as undercutting the impact of “Western money”, too: it weakens the power of Western states to exert financial pressure in African states. The West is depicted as representing “basic standards of decency”, which apparently are being “trampled” underfoot by the immoral, avaricious Chinese. Such criticism is dressed up as “anti-colonialism”, yet its aim is effectively to defend one kind of colonialism — “decent”, anti-rogue Western colonialism — over another.

In relation to aid and trade, too, Western observers are concerned that Chinese investment in African economies and infrastructure is weakening the political power of Western funding. As China has increased its trade with Africa — rising from $12-billion per year in 2002 to $40-billion in 2006 — a spokesperson for Human Rights Watch argued: “China’s growing foreign aid programme creates new options for [African] dictators who were previously dependent on those who insisted on human rights progress.” In other words, Chinese trade is a problem because it means Western elements can no longer financially blackmail African leaders.

In recent weeks, China has been accused of interfering in Zimbabwe by continuing to deal with, and even provide arms to, Mugabe’s regime. Yet as we saw yesterday, when Western powers tried to drum up support for economic sanctions against Zimbabwe, the main concern, yet again, is to boost Western interference over Chinese interference. The concern is that Chinese dealing with Mugabe, and China’s insistence that the way to stabilise Zimbabwe is by “promoting dialogue, not continuing with sanctions”, is contradictory to America and Britain’s desire for a more heavy-handed, old-style colonial form of external pressure on Zimbabwe.

Of course, China’s motives in Africa are from pure: it is driven by a hunger for resources at any economic and political price. But don’t be fooled by the “anti-colonial” criticisms of China coming from the West. They are underpinned by an interventionist, imperialist ethos which is only disguised as “anti-colonialism”. Under the guise of attacking China’s meddling in Africa, Western observers are really jealously guarding their own power and influence on the continent. They are not calling for “hands off Africa”, in order that Africans might determine their own political destinies, but rather for “yellow hands off Africa”. Their message is clear: fundamentally, Africa still belongs to the white man. - The Mail & Guardian

Brendan O’Neiil is a columnist with The Mail & Guardian. His journalism is published widely on both sides of the Atlantic and is collated at: www.BrendanONeill.net.

(http://www.hatnews.org)

China-Africa: The Other side of China in Africa

Tuesday, January 13th, 2009

The Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs, Yang Jiechi will visit Rwanda on Wednesday as a part of an African tour that includes Rwanda, Burundi, Ethiopia, South Africa and Zimbabwe. As China is one of Rwanda’s closest foreign partners, this visit is mainly seen as a confirmation that China is interested in strengthening its relationship with the small central African state.

China is one of the most important development partners for Rwanda, and has funded several projects in different public sectors – education, heath, agriculture, medical care – in the last 15 years. Rwanda has also been recently included in the list of African “Approved Destination Status” states where Chinese citizens can go as tourists without having difficulties in receiving the authorization to leave China. Moreover, Rwanda is a part of a China-Africa Cooperation agreement that allows tax free entry for Rwandan products exported to China (the agreement is often known as the Special Preferential Tariff Treatment.)

For all means and purposes, this visit is only a proof of intention on behalf of the Chinese state, an insurance of the fact that China wants to have sustainable partners in Africa regardless of the size of the countries or their political influence. In other words, it’s a reconfirmation of the long standing relationship between the two states. And I’m sure it is at least partly well intended. After all, Rwanda has certain privileges that most African countries are craving for. However, the fact that Rwanda has obtained the above mentioned deals with China because of its good international politics or because it deserves it, it’s a sheer illusion.

The only reason why Rwanda has all these benefits is because it cannot pose any threats or inconveniences to China. The last ten years have been marked by several suggestions at the international level that China should allow imports on items other than raw materials from Africa, that it should engage in a bilateral relationship that will be a win-win relationship for the parters involved. As far as I am concerned, China is using Rwanda as such an example. We look at Rwanda and see that it gained all these rights and we think and hope that other countries – Zambia, Nigeria, South Africa or Congo – will receive the same treatment.

False!

Rwanda is a very small country, with no population pressure (given by the fact that almost one million people were killed in 1994), with no significant products that can be exported to China (Rwanda can only export only tea and coffee) and with little touristic attractions (Kigali has little to offer tourists, while some national reservations and the city of Gisenyi can somewhat be considered touristic attractions). In other words, giving all these privileges to Rwanda won’t actually change anything. It would look like a good example of mutual friendship, but in practice it is just another blow in the wind.

Let’s think: how many Chinese will buy Rwandan tea or coffee?

So what is happening here is that China is emphasizing its role as a partner for development and as a friend of Africa in a tour in which some of the visited countries only have the illusion that they are partners of the Chinese government (in fact out of the countries that will be visited in the following week only South Africa can say it has a mutual relationship with China, but that can also be debated!).

Does China have anything else to gain out of this visit? Of course it does.

The visit will be widely covered by the Chinese press. Chinese citizens will find out more about Rwanda – that it is a small Central African countries, relatively conflict-free, where business opportunities are available – and some of them will even emigrate there and start new businesses.

Of course we should not think of China as this perverse power that is trying to ship Chinese to Africa, which is naive at most, but we should certainly understand that there is a chance Chinese citizens will suddenly discover Rwanda on the map and maybe make arrangements to move to Rwanda.

Why is this such a big problem?

Well, let’s look at Lesotho, a country that is somewhat comparable to Rwanda, where Chinese immigrants that moved to Lesotho in the last ten years have simply forced local entrepreneurs out of business. There is nothing that can convince me that this might not be the case with Rwanda as well, especially since Rwanda lacks a regulatory system that will “filtrate” who comes to Rwanda and who doesn’t. (I visited Rwanda last summer and was able to get a visa at the border even if Romanians are normally required to apply for a visa in advance.)

Coming back to the original question of what China has to gain out of this visit to Rwanda, we should also consider that China is trying to strengthen its position in the United Nations, that by offering exclusive deals it might convince the remaining four African state that recognize Taiwan to shift their recognition to China (Swaziland, Gambia, Burkina Faso, and Sao Tome and Principe, all except Burkina Faso being countries that are quite similar to Rwanda in many ways) and that China can pose once again as the Eastern friend who’s there to help at all times.

While China is offering more and more exclusive deals to various African states, it is generally received with great enthusiasm by most African leaders. I will never say that the best alternative is not to engage China at all in bilateral agreements, as China is giving a lot of money to projects that would normally not be financed by Western institutions, but I recommend more caution. African politics are as complex as Chinese politics, so both should be respected and observed carefully

(http://www.africanloft.com)

China-Africa: Angolan projects attract over US$ 1.6 billion in the second phase of funding by Eximbank

Monday, January 12th, 2009

Luanda, Angola, 12 Jan – China’s Eximbank has already approved over US$1.6 billion in funding for Angolan government projects, under the second phase of the credit line for Luanda, according to official data.

The data recently released by the Angolan Ministry of Finance indicate that of the 57 projects involved, four are in the energy and water sector, four in telecommunications and postal sectors, three in fishing, another three in education, two in agriculture and one in health.

The Ministry for Public Works has the most projects in progress under this second phase – either with funding already released or still waiting for the “green light.”

There are US$907.73 million, of which US$477.45 million are for the reconstruction of the Caxito-Nzeto road.

The reconstruction of the Nzeto-Tomboco-M’banza Congo (US$160 million), and the first phase of projects for integrated infrastructures in the provinces of Zaire (US$113.15 million), Malange (US$84.1 million) and Cabinda (US$73 million) are expected to take place.

These three integrated projects, according to the same source, have an expected total investment of US$400 million (Zaire), US$253.7 million (Cabinda) and US$237.1 million (Malange).

The second, more expensive package of projects is for the Transport Ministry – US$558.97 million – already funded or awaiting funding.

Of this total, US$ 440 million are destined for the purchase of urban public transport for Luanda, Benguela, Huambo, Uige and Malange - a total of 5,500 buses.

Luanda has already made it known to Beijing that it is interested in having some or all of these vehicles assembled in Angola.

Also in the pipeline for the transport projects is the purchase of rail transport equipment (US$61.97 million) and 1,500 vehicles (US$57 million).

The Angolan Ministry of Finance has signed three credit agreements with Eximbank, to the value of US$2 billion (March 2004), US$500 million (July 2007) and over US$2 billion (September 2007) which have enabled the support of reconstruction projects.

Angolan President, Jose Eduardo dos Santos’s second visit to China in five months in December last year served to ensure the continuation of Chinese support for the country’s reconstruction projects, at a time when the fall in the price of diamonds and particularly of petroleum have caused Luanda to lose important income.

According to information published by the Angolan Ministry of Finance, the value of funding under this second package of finance reaches US$ 1,607 billion, which is 90 percent of the amount for projects in the pipeline put forward by Luanda, in the region of US$1.786 billion.

(macauhub)

China-Africa: Chinese cos may outbid OVL for 30% stake in Angola block

Monday, January 12th, 2009

Chinese state-run oil majors CNOOC and Sinopec are learnt to have emerged frontrunners for the acquisition of 30% stake in an oil block
in Angola from the US-based Marathon Oil. ONGC Videsh (OVL), the overseas arm of Oil & Natural Gas Corp, is also a contender for the stake. The successful bidder will have to pay about $1.8 billion for the stake.

The move comes days after OVL announced acquisition of UK-based Imperial Energy for $2.1 billion, outbidding the Chinese firms.

A senior ONGC official confirmed the company’s interest in the oil block. “We have bid for Angola block number 32 to acquire 30% equity from Marathon Oil. We are yet to know the formal results of the bid,” he said.

Industry sources said there is strong possibility of a Chinese company sealing the deal. ONGC has many times in the past lost out to the aggressive Chinese firms when it comes to acquisition of equity in overseas oil blocks. ONGC’s acquisition of Imperial was an exception, they added.

Recently, Sinopec acquired Canadian firm Tanganyika Oil for $1.8 billion, outbidding OVL. Tanganyika has two oil fields in Syria with proven reserves of 184 million barrels till end-2007.

The sources also said that the valuation of the Angolan block was not justified in the wake of a massive fall in crude oil prices in recent times. Oil prices have declined to $40 a barrel from the peak of $147 in July 2008.

On Angola’s block 32, Marathon Oil has announced 11 successful exploration wells. These are Gindungo, Canela, Gengibre, Mostarda, Salsa, Manjericao, Caril, Louro, Cominhos, Colorau and Alho. Marathon has a 30% working interest in this block.

Total of France, which holds a 30% stake, is the operator of the block. The remaining stake is held by Sonangol (20%), Esso Exploration and Production Angola (15%) and Petrogal (5%).

Africa: A size of Dubai portion of Africa sold out .

Monday, January 12th, 2009

US investor buys Sudanese warlord’s land

Posted by Center Left Headlines On January - 10 - 2009

sudan-farmA US businessman backed by former CIA and state department officials says he has secured a vast tract of fertile land in south Sudan from the family of a notorious warlord, in post-colonial Africa’s biggest private land deal.

Philippe Heilberg, a former Wall Street banker and chairman of New York-based Jarch Capital, told the Financial Times he had gained leasehold rights to 400,000 hectares of land – an area the size of Dubai – by taking a majority stake in a company controlled by the son of Paulino Matip.

Mr Matip fought on both sides in Sudan’s lengthy civil war but became deputy commander of the army in the autonomous southern region after a 2005 peace agreement.

The deal, between Mr Heilberg’s affiliate company in the Virgin Islands and Gabriel Matip, is a striking example of how the recent spike in global commodity food prices has encouraged foreign investors and governments to scramble for control of arable land in Africa, even in its remotest parts.

In contrast to land deals between foreign investors and governments, Mr Heilberg is gambling on a warlord’s continuing control of a region where his militia operated in the civil war between Khartoum and south Sudan.

“You have to go to the guns, this is Africa,” Mr Heilberg said by phone from New York. He refused to disclose how much he had paid for the lease.

Jarch Management Group is linked to Jarch Capital, a US investment company that counts on its board former US state department and intelligence officials, including Joseph Wilson, a former ambassador and expert on Africa, who acts as vice-chairman; and Gwyneth Todd, who was an adviser on Middle Eastern and North African affairs at the Pentagon and under former president Bill Clinton at the White House.

Laws on land ownership in south Sudan remain vague, and have yet to be clarified in a planned land act. For this reason, some foreign experts on Sudan as well as officials in the regional government, speaking on condition of anonymity, doubted Mr Heilberg could assert legal rights over such a vast tract of land. The deal is second only in size to the recent lease of 1.3m hectares by South Korea’s Daewoo from the government of Madagascar.

Mr Heilberg is unconcerned. He believes that several African states, Sudan included, but possibly also Nigeria, Ethiopia and Somalia, are likely to break apart in the next few years, and that the political and legal risks he is taking will be amply rewarded.

“If you bet right on the shifting of sovereignty then you are on the ground floor. I am constantly looking at the map and looking if there is any value,” he said, adding that he was also in contact with rebels in Sudan’s western region of Darfur, dissidents in Ethiopia and the government of the breakaway state of Somaliland, among others.

The company was embroiled in a dispute with the south Sudan government over its claims to exploration rights for oil.

Mr Heilberg said Jarch had no expertise in agricultural development but would be seeking joint venture partners to cultivate the land, which is in one of the remotest parts of Sudan, in a region bordering the Nile river but with no tarred roads.

(http://headlines.centerleft.info)

Africa: Nokulunga Buthelezi , the Snake Girl

Monday, January 12th, 2009

Nokulunga Buthelezi began contorting as a baby in Johannesburg, South Africa and now her talent for twisting into impossible positions has landed the 18-year-old a starring role in the L4.2 million ($8.4M) extravaganza production of Afrika! Afrika! Known as Lunga, or more dazzlingly, Snake Girl, the tiny girl with big eyes and a clever nature has mesmerized the two million people who paid to see her in the show’s two year run in Germany. Snake Girl credits a “snake” gene that appears in her family every couple generations for her wondrous talents.

(http://funny-you.com)