Software for Technical Support Tracking?
Wehesheit asks: "I work at a large department store which sells computers. As the *sole* technician I have to handle all the customer techwork (virus scanning, spyware, upgrades etc..), and for the most part I get along just fine but recently my co-workers have expressed a difficulty in 'knowing whats going on' in the techroom. I am wondering if the Slashdot community knows of any software which will enable me to track work I am doing for each customer and allow myself, and other employees, to pull it up easily while add notes such as 'bob called and said put in 512mb RAM'. Currently we use sticky notes which I'm sure everyone can imagine is not very trackable or reliable. Having incident numbers I can print off and put on machines would be excellent, so if a machine is marked done in the software my co-workers can match the number, print off the worknotes and give the customer the machine. Also, I have to be able to do this for $0 which means freeware. Any ideas?"
http://www.stackworks.net/view.php/irm/index.html
Unless your boss is a complete idiot, you should be able to buy what is a basic necessity for carrying out your job repsonsibilities. Admittedly, your boss may well be a complete idiot.
Fogbugz (by Fog Creek Software) (at http://fogbugz.com/) is Excellent! We use it for our 5 person development team.
I know it's not free, but it is absolutely a wonderful product. It handles bug tracking in all its complexity with as much or as little info as you want to provide, and displays status quickly and easily.
It is $99 per user, though, so I'm not sure this is your cup of tea. If you want to have your management pony up for the ability to see your status better, this is one option.
Of course, open source means cheaper, but it may not mean better; I'm open to all those who disagree if they'd like to point out another competing open source product that has similar or better functionality... ?
Unitarian Church: Freethinkers Congregate!
From the page: Eventum is a user-friendly and flexible issue tracking system that can be used by a support department to track incoming technical support requests, or by a software development team to quickly organize tasks and bugs. Eventum is used by the MySQL AB Technical Support team, and has allowed us to dramatically improve our response times.
Very easy to find something free.
just go to Freshmeat and search for stuff like tracking system or ticket tracking, go thru the list, and try out the one that seems to fit your needs the best.
It's better to burn out than to fade away
*Ahem*. RT does not use PHP; it's a mod_perl (and specifically, a Mason) application.
Quoting from RT's feature list page:
That said, RT is a fantastic tool. I've used it at the last two jobs I've worked at, and if it's not there next time I switch jobs, I expect to introduce it. It can be a bit fiddly to get installed, as it depends on a couple of dozen CPAN modules, but the Wiki documentations's generic and specific installation guides try to make this as painless as possible, and if you get stuck there's always the mailing lists and paid support. And once RT is up and running, it's stable, versatile, flexible, adaptable, and just all around a great tool for managing a collection of on-going tasks.
If it's good enough for NASA, Merrill Lynch, DynDNS, Perl (it's the bug tracker for the Perl language), and others, then chances are it's probably good enough for you too. :-)
DO NOT LEAVE IT IS NOT REAL
I was using Google to search for this sort of thing. A pain in the friggen mouse. Much better search engine is dmoz.org. There are **many** products out there that can do what you want.
Another way to search is to go on sourceforge and look for CRM (Customer Relation Management) in the Enterprise part...
Having said all that, I'll recommend OTRS.
--LWM
Very simple to deploy, simple enough so that even non-technical users feel confortable, somewhat customizable... I've deployed it twice and all users have always loved it :
http://www.mantisbt.org/
Are you trying to troll? If so, fine, I'll bite. Remedy doesn't have to be expensive. They have solutions for small businesses, it's not necessarily a $15,000/year. And really, their small business solution costs (IIRC) about $800, which may seem like a lot but when meausred against the cost of lost productivity (like a lost post-it note, losing track of what computer needed the RAM upgrade, etc) it really balances out.
Still, RT looks very good, as do some of the other options. I'm just used to dealing with bosses that are very Open Source averse (I have no idea why). So an out-of-box solution may be more useful.
If I could only live my life with my threshold at 4...