I’m glad you have an inside line on exactly how EA works. All your information is an assumption. I seriously doubt there is some long chain of ‘executives’ between Cal and whoever runs the GMs.
There is no assumption about the GMs being shared with other games. There are people on this very forum that talk about being thanked for playing other games by the GMs who responded to them.
Customer service is not under BioWare, which means there is a chain - Cal would have to go up through BioWare and then over to EA proper.
Executives don't like it when you decide to skip a part of the chain, because the money does not come out of Cal's group. EA gets our payments, and they take some of that for customer service, and then they give Cal a budget.
Remember, the one time Cal ‘did’ correct the GM department (the goza issue) he was able to, after several attempts. So it’s not an impossibility.
It's not impossible to correct specific things, but it's clear that they have no say in the overall training.
We're all assuming they are actual EA employees and not contractors. If they are contractors, it's one thing for Cal to get an entry corrected in their database over the goza issue since that would be an EA database, and another thing to get involved with their training.
Hun, please. Their job is to please us, their paying customers. Simply shirking responsibility and publicly announcing “it’s not our problem” makes them look very, very bad. It was not only highly unprofessional, it was downright callous.
Would you rather they lie to you and say they'll look into it?
They maybe here to please us, but they are also there to please the executives who are there to please the stockholders. Cost-cutting measures like combining customer service make the stockholders happy which makes the executives happy.
Actually, they looked confused and shocked that the question was even asked – an expression exhibited with frightening repetition during the video.
That's up for interpretation. I took it as bitter and a topic that they didn't want to discuss. Some people saw it as sad or unhappy, others took it as not really caring. It looked like the topic bothered them either way.
As for confused, having watched the Stratics videos again, what I saw was a poorly formatted event. There is a lot on their plate, and so much of it they cannot discuss either because it's not finished or because they are not allowed to. If they had the questions up front, they could have all went through them, and we would have more quick and short answers such as "no we can't discuss that at this time, next" instead of them having to discuss it amongst themselves and it would have freed up time for more questions or longer answers.
I and some others mentioned it in the other thread:
http://vboards.stratics.com/uhall/236574-[news]-house-commons-video-chat.html
10-15 minutes or more of everybody's time, their time and our time, was wasted on questions that they had to get clarified or discuss or dance around. That's the problem with a live event that is happening right when they have a lot on their plate that they have not fully announced.
Mesanna even chided Cal for releasing more information than he should, such as the raffle stuff. He even admitted on the booster stuff that if he went further, it would give it all away or be misinterpreted or something.
I know this isn't the thread for it, but that is just not a good format for players to get answers. They needed to have the questions first so they could simply answer "we can't talk about it at this time" rather than having to decide on the spot whether they could talk about it.
Skirting RoC Rule B? Feeling dangerous are you? Seriously, what’s gotten into you? You’re generally more rational than that… Why so attacky today?
I apologize - I wasn't familiar with that, now I am, but I see people that don't understand that in a large company, there are things that are not up for debate, and it's irritating. It would be different if BioWare was treated like Blizzard/WoW. Blizzard has their own dedicated customer service for Warcraft. They have over 2500 people who are dedicated to in-game issues, out-of-game issues, working on the websites, etc just for Warcraft. Literally over 2500 people - it's their biggest department within that group.
EA does it differently. As part of their cost-cutting, they try and share resources as much as possible. From a stockholder point of view, that's good. It hurts the players though. We saw how the video diary was butchered by people outside of BioWare. There is so much that goes on, that is out of the dev teams hands.
It goes back to my point about the HOC not being a good format, because a lot of the corporate stuff really becomes obvious. Think about the fact that they have now mentioned that the graphics plan is now done and just needs to be sanitized for the public. They weren't even allowed to really talk about it two days prior to that announcement, and now we find out it's done. Just two stinkin days!
]Really, if Cal isn’t willing to go to bat for the people that he claims matter to him, he shouldn’t be producer. UO has a problem with its GM service. Ridiculous delays, and far too many brain-dead canned responses. If he’s not the one to go to for getting this fixed, who is? Or by your logic, should we just shut up and be quiet?
The problem is EA customer service in general. That's what you have to step back and see it as. It's not a UO problem, it's an EA customer service problem. I don't want to say we see it in a vacuum, but maybe it's better to say we have tunnel vision when it comes to this. We see a UO problem.
If you go to the Warhammer or Camelot forums, you could find complaints from people who wonder why the GMs aren't given really specific training for Warhammer or Camelot. They see a Warhammer or Camelot problem.
If Cal could get them to do something about the GMs, it would make his life much much easier. It would probably even cut down on threads complaining about things. It would probably reduce the number of PMs he gets.
It's a bad situation, because we saw this coming even when UO had more players. It's an EA thing, and it's frustrating. I did not have good experiences with support when I played Warhammer. I've had a mixed bag with Camelot.
I don't know what the answer is, other than complain through EA channels about the support, and hope that Star Wars does really well. Not to use a cheesy paraphrase of a quote, but Star Wars is our best hope

If it takes off, then that means BioWare gets more clout within EA, and that could mean that BioWare is treated like Activision treats Blizzard. Because Star Wars represents up to and over a half a billion dollar investment by EA (if you take into account their purchase of BioWare), if it does well, and if BioWare is not happy with the GM service, things might change.
I do think it is good that UO is a part of BioWare. That means if Cal complains, he's going to be joined by the Warhammer and Camelot producers and it won't be treated as a UO problem, it'll be treated as a BioWare. Actually I'm sure they've already complained, many times.
I think the GM problems will definitely rear their heads within Star Wars. I see that coming big time. That's where I think it can get resolved. If it causes enough problems, BioWare could tell EA they want to handle it themselves, and they might be allowed to.