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the first you do is Google or Bing it. If you can't get the answer there, you ask your kids. If you can't get your answer there, you ask your friends who are like you.
KrisA wrote: » If users actually did that, I could see it going away. But this is the real world. Users rather make a ticket than google for the answer. Not to mention, you [Helpdesk] have to sift through all the useless shotgun approaches taken by others to resolve the issue. If you have not dealt with the issue before.
"Now the workforce and consumers of IT are becoming mobile. Have you ever called a help desk for your mobile device? What do you do? Probably, the first you do is Google or Bing it. If you can't get the answer there, you ask your kids. If you can't get your answer there, you ask your friends who are like you. For us, that's the workgroup," Soderstrom said
"It's impossible. You can either blow up the help desk or [forbid] new devices and the end users will be unhappy," he said.
Soderstrom said that when a scientist recently asked him for an iPad, he was told he could get one only if he could develop an application that could help the business. The scientist went on to create NASA's Lunar Mapping and Modeling Project (LMMP), which shared all of JPL's data about the moon on the web. The scientist earned a free iPad, Soderstrom said.
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