Import Specialists of America - Thumbs DOWN

  • Thread starter Thread starter Jamie
  • Start date Start date
J

Jamie

I genuinely dislike posting negatives about companies. I am sure folks
at these places are trying to earn a buck like everyone else. For me, I
am a technology developer and when I see a company try and put up a
nice online store front, then totally forget customer service - then
they get a bad report.

German Auto Parts claimed they closed for 5 days, so for 5 days
customers were left hanging not knowing if the parts they just
purchased were even in stock.

Today it's Import Specialists of America - website looks nice, prices
look great. But, these guys are slow to answer e-mails and when they
do, they make you reply more than necessary because they don't READ the
e-mails. They ask for things like make and model of vehicle, that sit 3
lines below. So, thumbs DOWN to these guys who are too busy to read an
e-mail, therefore too busy to make a sale.

http://importspecialistsofamerica.com/
Thumbs DOWN
 
Hmmm, here is the reply I got from "Chris", regarding customers and
e-mail. I told him that I found other vendors like FCP Groton, IPD USA
and VLV World pay more attention to customers and to detail:

Chris:
"Why? Did you send 3 copies of the same email to each vendor? When
people take and waste time by sending countless emails for basic stuff,
and then expect us to read your buried info while you shop from vendor
to vendor - we are happy that you will go to our competition. Hope
they take great care of you, and sorry we couldn't help you further."
 
Well,
Import Specialists of America doesn't appreciate negative feedback.

"Chris" has told me:
"HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS of customers (over 50 of them are Volvo dealers
by the way) think we are the best.
We have blocked your IP address from all 26 of our webstores, and any
response won't be read. "
 
Jamie said:
Well,
Import Specialists of America doesn't appreciate negative feedback.

"Chris" has told me:
"HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS of customers (over 50 of them are Volvo dealers
by the way) think we are the best.
We have blocked your IP address from all 26 of our webstores, and any
response won't be read. "

Just curious...

Do you have a static IP?
nose, face, spite...
 
The quickest and easiest work-around a blocked static IP, IMO is to
change the MAC address of your PC, then reboot the modem (I've only
done this with cable). The cable company sees your MAC as a new
computer and issues a new IP. Otherwise, it wants to keep dishing out
the same one, even after IP flushes.

Changing an IP at work may be a different matter, with firewalls, etc.
 
Steve said:
Save a new mommie board how do you change a mac address?
He's doing it with a cable modem, there it's easy: cycle the power on
both the PC and the modem and you get a new MAC address stored in the
modem. Otherwise the MAC address is stored in the network adapter (not
the MoBo) and it isn't that easy to change.

Changing a static IP that the world's DNS routers need to know about is
very difficult.

--
Cheers

Andrew

<--- Remove The NO and SPAM When Replying --->
 
Andrew McKenna said:
He's doing it with a cable modem, there it's easy: cycle the power on both
the PC and the modem and you get a new MAC address stored in the modem.
Otherwise the MAC address is stored in the network adapter (not the MoBo)
and it isn't that easy to change.
Are you sure? Normally the MAC address is fixed in hardware since the
addresses have to be managed by the mfr to be globally unique and within the
mfr's assigned range. The MAC address is documented on a label on the modem.

Dunno whether the ISP uses static DHCP (which assigns specific IPs to the
same MAC address and makes sense for always-on connections) or dynamic DHCP
(which reuses IPs from a pool and is more efficient for dial-up). I used to
work for an ISP but was on the POP side of the business rather than on the
server side.

I would also expect the IP to stay the same (presuming it's static) when you
change the modem IP. When I changed my cable modem I had to have the cable
company change the account to the new MAC.

Mike
 
No, the MAC address won't be changed by power-cycling the modem or PC. You
may get a new IP address, depending upon the ISP.

If the network interface is embedded in the motherboard, the MAC address
is there too.
Are you sure? Normally the MAC address is fixed in hardware since the
addresses have to be managed by the mfr to be globally unique and within the
mfr's assigned range. The MAC address is documented on a label on the modem.

The MAC address is embedded in read-only memory, but that is only accessed
when the interface is initialized--the interface driver reads the MAC and
stores it in memory, where it can be changed. As long as you have local
administrative (or root) privileges, making the change is pretty trivial
on Windows, Unix, BSD, or Linux systems.

Most cable/DSL routers have the option of entering a MAC address or doing
a pass-through of the MAC from the computer.


Gary
 
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