I prefer to wow them with a quick and permanent resolution to their problems rather than with fancy gadgets or tools.
I'm in this camp as well.
I prefer to wow them with a quick and permanent resolution to their problems rather than with fancy gadgets or tools.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000FJR0SG/ref=oss_product
http://www.frys.com/product/4701129?site=sr:SEARCH:MAIN_RSLT_PG
Where is the extra $85 going in the second one?
I tend to keep this with me when I need to measure temps. http://www.frys.com/product/4701129?site=sr:SEARCH:MAIN_RSLT_PG
It's actually been working flawless for roughly a year now. The location I go to is actually not that bad. I had purchased a 500GB HDD which advertised 16mb cache on the box, went home and opened it to see it had only 8. I took it back with no issues and actually ended up purchasing a copy of Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit for $89 with the refund I received.Problem is if you buy it from Fry's it will not work anyway. But at least it will look good in your bag.
It's actually been working flawless for roughly a year now. The location I go to is actually not that bad. I had purchased a 500GB HDD which advertised 16mb cache on the box, went home and opened it to see it had only 8. I took it back with no issues and actually ended up purchasing a copy of Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit for $89 with the refund I received.
I guess you could say it just varies by location/employees.
I have been following this thread and have to agree that my expertise is my greatest tool (asset).
And some good people skills like:
LISTENING
We like to get our hands on the keyboard but STOP and listen to the client and ask the proper questions and take notes on your shop worksheet. When did this problem start? What happened just before the first time this happened? Has there been any change made to the computer recently? Has it been abused (dropped)? At first I just jumped in and then ended up calling the client to ask more questions. It is so much better to spend the time at the start.
What do I carry in my bag? Yes. . a PSU tester is a cute and valuable tool. A Multimeter. My tools in a little case. My CDs and flashdrives. A P-touch label maker. My netbook. My "Resource Notebook". (Last week a client was impressed that I had the default name and password for all routers.)
"If your reading this they didn't even bother to open the case."
What do I carry in my bag? Yes. . a PSU tester is a cute and valuable tool. A Multimeter. My tools in a little case. My CDs and flashdrives. A P-touch label maker. My netbook. My "Resource Notebook". (Last week a client was impressed that I had the default name and password for all routers.)