8-Oct-85 06:07:11-PDT,12341;000000000005 Return-Path: Received: from glacier by SUMEX-AIM.ARPA with TCP; Tue 8 Oct 85 06:07:07-PDT Received: by glacier with Sendmail; Tue, 8 Oct 85 06:10:43 pdt Received: by mtu.UUCP (4.12/4.7) id AA08977; Tue, 8 Oct 85 08:11:35 edt Date: Tue, 8 Oct 85 08:11:35 edt From: mtu!russell@glacier (Russell Reid) To: glacier!"INFO-MAC@SUMEX"@glacier Subject: Tecmar hard disk Cc: russell@glacier I bought a Tecmar hard disk a month after I got my Mac, not quite a year ago. I thought choosing a hard disk was a matter of performance and price. It never occurred to me that I would need "support" from the company. I was wrong, and my dealings with Tecmar have been so incredibly bad that I would like to warn anyone considering a Tecmar disk. I have dealt with Tecmar three times: once to buy the hard disk, once to get the first software upgrade, and once to get the second. My dealings with them have been like a TV sitcom. There's no way to describe it, really, but I'll summarize. I probably have phoned Tecmar 25 times, maybe more, and my local dealer has easily called 10 times for me. I can't convey the frustrating feeling of those calls--I always felt that if I could talk to somebody reasonable for 15 seconds we could settle something, and I never was able to. I always reached a recording, which put me on hold and then transferred me to the message center. No matter what kind of message I left, if someone eventually called back, they had received no information but my name. Sometimes the person who called me back would transfer me to technical support, which was always busy, and then transferred me automatically to the message center. Again. Once I was transferred three times in a single call without talking to any human or even leaving a message. All this at daytime rates, all at my own expense. Below, when I say I called Tecmar, you must remember that I have never successfully just "called Tecmar". I don't think it would be possible to parody many of the calls I made. First, I just bought a hard disk. I bought it from my authorized Apple dealer, in case something went wrong, because I am not a sophisticated user. The thing came, I set it up, and it didn't work. (It turned out the fault was with the disk cartridge. Tecmar had sent me one with masking tape on it saying "in-house". I didn't know that meant it was faulty and had been kept for testing, and didn't learn that for weeks.) I called Tecmar. Over and over and over. I wanted to talk to someone who might have a guess as to the problem, so I would know if I should return the unit, replace the cartridge, replace the accompanying software, etc. After 10 days of calling, I blew up at an operator and said I wanted to talk to somebody RIGHT NOW. The guy I talked to was nice, and helpful. I happened to mention the "in-house" label, and he opined that might be the problem, so I returned the disk to Tecmar for a replacement (actually, I had the dealer do it, to minimize problems.) After weeks of waiting, calling, etc. I ordered a new one... Tecmar had lost the old one. A month later they found that they'd received it, after all, and shipped me a new one. Meantime I had bought a new one for $100.00, and had to wait two weeks to get it. By the time I had the proper disk cartridge a software upgrade had been released, but Tecmar refused to ship it to either me or the Apple dealer. They only shipped to distributors, and though the one my dealer dealt with was a large one, it wasn't handling the upgrades. It went on and on... I called various places, the local dealer called, etc. Calls to Tecmar were, as always, a circus. Eventually another distributor, I think Rhino Sales in Michigan, agreed to send me the upgrade. It was incompatible with the old software so that all files had to be erased (a problem I underestimated until it was too late). Once it was installed.... guess what, it didn't work right. (The printer had to be plugged into the back of the hard disk, and the printing screwed up.) It turned out that one DIP switch in the printer had to be reset to handle the print spooling, but it took me another week of telephoning and being bounced around before I learned that. (Again, once I talked to someone who knew something, it was quick. There was no mention of the DIP switch in the documentation...) Whew, ready to go. Until I got the new Finder and System, and tried to work with a LaserWriter. Not only was the Tecmar software incompatible with MacTerminal and Thunderscan, it was also incompatible with the new Finder and LaserWriter. Sigh. Call Tecmar to find out when the new software would come out, and if maybe they'd let me have it this time. (Rhino sales had declined to help on a regular basis.) Getting the second software upgrade was even more amazing than my other dealings. Several times I was told it was shipping, or would be shipping next week. Familiar story, I guess. Then Tecmar told me the upgrade was posted on CompuServe, and I could get it there. I knew nothing about CompuServe, and asked a friend who did. He said it would help a lot to know the file name or where it was posted. I called to ask about that, and was told they had never heard anything about it. I persisted, asking different questions on different days. (You'd understand all this if you could see the routine I had to go through to print on the LaserWriter, or how slow 5 megs is when it has lots of files.) One time a very nice fellow asked what I meant. I said CompuServe was a bulletin board system, and people could download software if they were members. "Gee, that sounds neat. But do you need a modem or something?" Honest, he really said that. I gave up. The CompuServe posting had been taken off before I got to it. At some point it dawned on me that I could try the old version 1.0 with the new Finder and see what happened. Of course, you always run the risk of losing everything, but what the heck. It worked! so did the "Install LaserWriter", and you could use MacTerminal if you kept the document (but not necessarily the application) on a floppy. I was immediately less desperate. Now I could print without copying the file to a floppy, shutting down the hard disk, starting up with the floppy, printing and capturing the PostScript, copying that to a MacTerminal disk, uploading to the VAX, ad infinitum. But after the "two weeks" they had last told me had elapsed, I called Tecmar again. Yep, they were shipping, though they charged me $25.00. Okay, it's cheap compared to the phone bills and the hassle. A week later I called again (and again and again, waiting to be allowed to talk to someone) to se where it was: they had promised 2-3 days. When someone finally called me back, he asked if I'd like to order the upgrade (my message asked why it hadn't arrived yet.) I said no, I wanted to know why I hadn't gotten it yet. "Oh, we ran out of documentation, and it will be a week or two to print more up." Oh wow, blow my mind, I didn't know what to say. They sell $1500.00 to $2000.00 items and they can't get it together to count how many they have sold??? And what could possibly be in the documentation that takes more than a page to print? The answer, of course, is that there is nothing in the documentation at all. It is page after glossy page with virtually no content (an entire page to show you how to turn your Macintosh so its back faces you, another to tell you to fasten one end of the cable to the printer or modem port, etc.) But I didn't need a new booklet, I only needed a couple of words about what was different. There were only two sentences in the book about upgrades, and following their directions didn't work. The upgrade software came with a cryptic application that wasn't mentioned at all in the documentation, and which did something inexplicable and unexplained to the disk. Still no mention of DIP switches in the new book, but I am now sadder and wiser. As far as I can tell, the only thing the new version accomplishes is compatibility with the new Finder, which seems pretty basic. The print spooler is its only reason for being, because version 1.0 does everything except free a port for you. And the new print spooler is bug-eaten. It does not work with MacPascal. It does not work with MacFortran. It does not work with DB Master. It did not work printing draft quality from MacDraw, though I only tried that once. It does not work with ThunderScan. It will not spool the LaserWriter (and the documentation does not tell you this simple fact.) Despite Tecmar's assurances to the contrary, the new software is NOT compatible with MacTerminal either. And it is incompatible in ways that still have me struggling to figure it out. (At first I could get away with having an already-created MacTerminal document on a floppy with no system file. If this document used the printer port, the system wouldn't hang and it wouldn't transfer control to the floppy. But I once opened the MacTerminal document with Edit, to snarf some downloaded stuff, and now MacTerminal won't let me back into ANY MacTerminal document as long as MacTerminal is on the hard disk. If you can figure that one out, you are a lot smarter than I am!) I called Tecmar,(when will I learn??) to ask about these features. After I was, as usual, automatically transferred to the message center, which doesn't identify itself as such, I thought to ask the operator to read me back my message after I had left it. The only thing she had was my name... The person I talked to--eventually--suggested that I re-initialize my hard disk cartridge because perhaps the print spooler was written on a bad sector. I resisted at first, because it is a headache to back up and replace 5 megs of stuff. Tecmar's "backup utility" is won't allow you to back up a disk or volume, only ONE FILE AT A TIME! Even the Finder can shift-click to select several files. Despite my suspicions (if it prints OK from MacWrite and Word, etc, why should the sector be bad?) I relented and nuked the disk. It was a waste of time, (a lot of time), and as usual I screwed something up and lost some important data. Sigh. Version 2.2 also has a great new feature--a "reset print spooler" option for when you are printing 2000 mailing labels and the printer jams. Trouble is, to get to the feature you must quit the application you are in, return to the desktop, open Tecmar's Volume Manager, and THEN reset the print spooler. Naturally, that takes awhile, and the application may not permit you to quit till you are done printing.... Pretty smart, Tecmar. Why not a desk accessory?? I happen to be in a big pickle when DB Master and programming languages don't print. I need to print those 2000 mailing labels, and MacWrite and Edit insist on skipping over the perforations in the paper. The last version of Tecmar's print spooler also screwed up, but I could print to a file and then run a little Pascal program to print it. Now I'm dead.. I even tried FORTRAN. I suppose if I experiment enough I can make the headers in MacWrite the right size to skip exactly two labels at each "perforation". But it takes MacWrite five MINUTES to open a text file with 2000 mailing labels in it! I think I should return the upgrade 2.2 to Tecmar and ask for a refund of my $25.00. I haven't tested the speeds yet, but I have an idea that old version 1.0 is just as fast as 2.2, also. Tecmar should use the memory in the MacDrive for a cache memory or something. I have very little use for a print spooler that will only spool an ImageWriter, and which is a big headache to reset when the ImageWriter jams. I long since discarded their backup utility, configured my disk into one big volume, and set that volume to mount automatically at startup. What are hard disks for, anyway? By the way, the copious glossy documenation neglected to mention that I had to set the system volume to mount automatically at startup.... I heartily recommend that all you folks run out and buy yourselves a Tecmar product. Russell Reid Michigan Technological University