The misinformation that sales people and other people, in general (i.e. the supposed friend/son/daughter/husband/wife/etc. that knows about computers), drives me up the wall. I have to continually re-educate customers and try to convince them that they received the wrong information. I tell them one thing and they refuse to believe me because their more trusted source said something to the contrary. For example, some salesperson told a customer that all Vista drivers were backwards compatible and would work on Windows XP and vice versa. This, of course, is completely wrong and when a device was not working because the improper drivers were installed, the customer refuses to listen. They insist on believing the other person was right when obviously it is not working...
The other thing is when people who are not subject matter experts try to act like they are. A co-worker wanted to get into programming and was asking if he should learn C++ or Java first...and, again, a sales person told him he should learn Java because it is better and C++ was a wannabe Java that never took off and is never used anymore. I had to correct this blatant error and told him that was not the case and that C++ is just as useful now as it was then and that the two languages are used for different purposes. If he wanted to start programming he would have to decide what exactly he wanted to do and then pick a language based on the strengths of the language. But, of course, the sales person claimed to know more than myself, a software engineer. Guess who the co-worker decided to listen to?
Sorry about the rant...it's just aggravating how people seem to like to listen to bad advice and can't be convinced otherwise.
The other thing is when people who are not subject matter experts try to act like they are. A co-worker wanted to get into programming and was asking if he should learn C++ or Java first...and, again, a sales person told him he should learn Java because it is better and C++ was a wannabe Java that never took off and is never used anymore. I had to correct this blatant error and told him that was not the case and that C++ is just as useful now as it was then and that the two languages are used for different purposes. If he wanted to start programming he would have to decide what exactly he wanted to do and then pick a language based on the strengths of the language. But, of course, the sales person claimed to know more than myself, a software engineer. Guess who the co-worker decided to listen to?
Sorry about the rant...it's just aggravating how people seem to like to listen to bad advice and can't be convinced otherwise.
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