j-j.co.za
Sharing thoughts and ideas on business, security and photographyExclus1ves.co.za the bad and the slightly better (updated)
Posted on June 03, 2010Three weeks ago (20 days to be exact) I ordered the Blu-ray version of The Lord of the Rings trilogy from Exclusive Books online store. I had been given a gift voucher by ITWeb for talking at their Infosec conference so thought it would be a good way to spend it.
The online process was reasonably painless, I was signed up with a new account linked to my Fanat1cs card. I went to check out, was prompted that I had a R50 discount voucher from Fanat1cs (which I didn’t know about – nice bonus), and chose the option to deliver it to my local bookstore for collection. Nowhere in the process could I use my paper based gift vouchers. What a pity. Still, with the decent price and R50 off I placed the order anyway with a notice that I could expect delivery in 8-10 days. Great.
8 Days later I was in the local exclusive bookstore so visited to found out the status of my order. #fail. The store has no way of tracking my order and could only tell me to check online or call the call centre. mmm.
I went online, found my order, the status was useless. It told me the status was “confirmation”. Great. There was a button to “send a message” to customer service. Perfect, clicked that sent a message, 2 days later I hadn’t heard from them so called. Item was out of stock, I would definitely get it next week (being this week). This morning I went online, checked status, same status. Clicked on “send message” – heard nothing. This afternoon I called them around 4:15.
Sorry sir, our warehouse is closed, we can’t help you. Great. What happened to the message I sent online I asked? “We get too many messages online, we can’t possibly respond to them all, its better you phone us.” I see red. Why have the #@%@$$ button if that is the attitude. I asked if they had a customer services manager, they do. Can I speak to him? No, sorry, he is in a meeting. Mmmm, where have I heard that before. Anyhow, his name and number was promptly supplied. He was out of the meeting at 4:30 I was told. Called at 4:40, he answered
I spoke to the man, he was very apologetic, seemed appalled to hear the story, and what the staff in-store and on the call centre were telling me. He offered me a further discount on my purchase, promised to call me tomorrow to explain the whereabouts of my purchase, and explained the site was still being developed further to remove the teething troubles. In my eyes he redeemed the situation (slightly) and if he follows through I will order from them again. If he doesn’t, they won’t be getting any more business. I certainly haven’t had these kinds of problems from Take2.co.za or Kalahari.net. Amazing how the “big guys” can get on-line so wrong. Here is hoping they can turn it around and get things working properly. I really want to order Avatar Blu-ray and Fifa worldcup soccer for PS3. Their prices are good. Come through and you can have the business.
Update:
I received a mail this afternoon from Exclus1ves. They are now promising me that I can have it in another 11 days time (its been 21 days, and the original order said 10 days).
The mail tried to console me by telling me no retailers have stock (strange I have seen it at Look & Listen in the Pav a few times), and that if they can’t deliver they will give me a full refund (by then having had my money for 6 weeks). mmmm. I’m back to being less than impressed. Honesty I appreciate, but treating the customer like a fool?
Importing NMAP .xml output into MS Access
Posted on June 03, 2010Over the last few days we ran a really large discovery scan on a client’s network. The scan was discontinued part of the way through and at that stage had produced a 650Mb .xml file. Smaller files are easy to load into Excel or Firefox to view and work with. With this much data we needed a more workable solution.
The first though was to import it into MS Access 2007. Access has built in import filters, easy enough we though. Two error lines in a table and no data brought an end to that hopeful idea. A little bit of googling found as a tool that promised to do pain free importing of XML into access, building the table structures on the fly and automatically creating the necessary table links.
The Exult XML converter from novixys.com was a lifesaver.We downloaded the trial, tested it on a scan of the local class C and it worked wonders, creating all the required tables and links. $105 later on the credit card and the full version was purchased.
Using it on out full scan file was a little trickier. Since we aborted the scan the .xml file hadn’t been properly completed. Exult didn’t like the incomplete file so threw out an error message and refused to build the access database. A comparison of the short test scan and the full scan revealed the missing XML tags. We copied and pasted these over to the full file, updating the scan information manually, and saved the file. Running Exult again took a while (over an hour) but produced the required file. Perfect solution.
Thanks Novixsys.
We are scanning the rest of the network as we speak. Not sure how we will import the balance of the .xml files into the same database. Hopefully Exult can do that for us too. Will find out soon enough