Current job: Copier/printer/scanner help desk.
Time: Last Friday
Cast - Me, Customer, Mysterious Background Voice (located on Customer's side)
Me: Good afternoon, this is <Me> with <Company>.
Customer: Uh , yeah, every time I bring up a webpage, I get a scripts not allowed message and it asks me if I want to keep running the scripts.
Me: Ok. *waits*
Customer: *silence*
Me: *silence* Ok. What seems to be the issue with your copier?
Customer: Well, it won't print the webpages after it gives that error. It prints everything else just fine, but not the webpages.
Me: All right. This would appear to actually be a problem with the web browser, not with the copier itself then. Which web browser are you using?
Customer: Well, I'm using Internet Explorer and this is a new computer with Vista and I know it's not a problem with the web browser because I called Microsoft and they pointed me to a KB that says it's a problem with encapsulated PostScript settings on the webpage!
Me: ....Ok.
Customer: So you need to tell me how to configure those on the copier.
Me: There are no settings for those on the copier. That's embedded in the webpage.
Customer: Huh?
Me: Your encapsulated PostScript would be code written into the webpage itself. You would need to access the actual HTML of the site to change that.
Customer: But it happens on all webpages!
Me: Then it's a problem with the web browser itself, not with the copier. Are you able to print from Adobe normally?
Customer: Yes.
Me: Are you using the Vista driver from our website.
Customer: No.
Me: That may contribute to the problem. I would recommend installing it.
Customer: *sulky tone* I don't have admin priviliges. Our IT guy hasn't bothered to upgrade it yet.
Me: Well, then there's not much else I can tell you. Still, upgrading your driver will probably not correct the issue. If every webpage is doing this, there is probably a problem with IE.
Customer: But it's Windows Vista!
Me: Which is very new and still has kinks left in it to work out.
Customer: It's a problem with your copier and you're going to troubleshoot it!
Me: If you like, sir. *spends next 30 minutes going through every print test possible, including a full copy of Adobe Acrobat - all prints fine*
Me: Seems to work fine, sir.
Customer: Goddamnit! I know it's a problem with the copier!
Mysterious Background Voice: Hey, <Customer>, <their IT guy> just called. There's a bug in our web database that Vista can't handle. He says you need to return that CPU to Best Buy and get back on XP.
Customer: GODDAMNIT!
Customer: *slams phone*
Me: *marks the call as resolved successfully - OS Issue*
-BIC-
Time: Last Friday
Cast - Me, Customer, Mysterious Background Voice (located on Customer's side)
Me: Good afternoon, this is <Me> with <Company>.
Customer: Uh , yeah, every time I bring up a webpage, I get a scripts not allowed message and it asks me if I want to keep running the scripts.
Me: Ok. *waits*
Customer: *silence*
Me: *silence* Ok. What seems to be the issue with your copier?
Customer: Well, it won't print the webpages after it gives that error. It prints everything else just fine, but not the webpages.
Me: All right. This would appear to actually be a problem with the web browser, not with the copier itself then. Which web browser are you using?
Customer: Well, I'm using Internet Explorer and this is a new computer with Vista and I know it's not a problem with the web browser because I called Microsoft and they pointed me to a KB that says it's a problem with encapsulated PostScript settings on the webpage!
Me: ....Ok.
Customer: So you need to tell me how to configure those on the copier.
Me: There are no settings for those on the copier. That's embedded in the webpage.
Customer: Huh?
Me: Your encapsulated PostScript would be code written into the webpage itself. You would need to access the actual HTML of the site to change that.
Customer: But it happens on all webpages!
Me: Then it's a problem with the web browser itself, not with the copier. Are you able to print from Adobe normally?
Customer: Yes.
Me: Are you using the Vista driver from our website.
Customer: No.
Me: That may contribute to the problem. I would recommend installing it.
Customer: *sulky tone* I don't have admin priviliges. Our IT guy hasn't bothered to upgrade it yet.
Me: Well, then there's not much else I can tell you. Still, upgrading your driver will probably not correct the issue. If every webpage is doing this, there is probably a problem with IE.
Customer: But it's Windows Vista!
Me: Which is very new and still has kinks left in it to work out.
Customer: It's a problem with your copier and you're going to troubleshoot it!
Me: If you like, sir. *spends next 30 minutes going through every print test possible, including a full copy of Adobe Acrobat - all prints fine*
Me: Seems to work fine, sir.
Customer: Goddamnit! I know it's a problem with the copier!
Mysterious Background Voice: Hey, <Customer>, <their IT guy> just called. There's a bug in our web database that Vista can't handle. He says you need to return that CPU to Best Buy and get back on XP.
Customer: GODDAMNIT!
Customer: *slams phone*
Me: *marks the call as resolved successfully - OS Issue*
-BIC-
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