Thank you for calling Microsoft, and have a nice day.

In the course of my employment, I occasionally find myself needing to activate a new installation of Windows XP. If the computer in question has a network connection, activation can sometimes be performed over the network. Unfortunately, that rarely works in my situation.

When the activation over the network fails, I get to make a phone call. I have called so many times that I have the number memorized: 1-888-571-2048. This is the Microsoft Product Activation Center.

A few minutes ago I finished a phone call to the Microsoft Product Activation Center. This time, however, is so far and by far the best call I have ever made to India.

That’s right! The Microsoft Product Activation Center is in India. I always suspected this, but today I got it from the proverbial horse’s mouth. That sounds mean. Rahul is not a horse. He is a very considerate man.

As the call begins, I am greeted by a recording that tells me I should try to activate over the network if I have not already tried (thanks, that’s a great idea!), and the average call length is six minutes. Today I brought the average up, because my call lasted 18:55.

About one minute into the call is when I actually start to interact with an automated system. The first question is, “Are you calling to activate Windows XP? Please say ‘yes’ or ‘no’.”

You can’t fool me.

I learned a long time ago that voice-recognition systems don’t like me. And I learned a long time ago that at the Microsoft Product Activation Center, ‘1’ means ‘yes’ and ‘2’ means ‘no’. So I pressed ‘1’.

“Are you at your computer with the activation window open?”

“1.”

Eventually I get to give my installation ID, which is a (9 × 6 =) 54 digit number that I can either speak or type using the number pad. Just so you know, with a number that long you can uniquely identify one million billion billion billion billion computers. No one ever said Microsoft wasn’t optimistic.

Ideally, after I give my installation ID, the recording thinks for a few seconds — eerily, I always thought this pause was more for psychological rather than technical reasons — then gives me a confirmation ID to type in a box in the activation window.

However, that rarely works. The recording apologizes — a computer is apologizing to me; think about that long and hard — and informs me that she can’t validate my installation ID. Now I get transferred to a customer service representative. This is where the fun begins.

I first noticed today’s call was different because of the time I had to wait on hold. I seriously listened to the same poor-quality elevator song at least three times, periodically interrupted by, “We are experiencing higher-than-normal call volumes.” Thanks for the update.

I hope you’re not bored with my story. It’s just getting good.

Finally, I’m on the line with a live person. I give Rahul my installation ID, and as he is looking up my confirmation ID, he asks me the questions I have gotten accustomed to:

“Is this software installed on any other computers? Did you buy it separately or did it come pre-installed on the system? What is the make and model of the computer? Where did you buy it?”

(About that last question: because I’m working at the Help Desk and never activating Windows on my own computer, I always “bought it online.”)

Rahul seems satisfied with how the interrogation went, and we are just waiting on that elusive confirmation ID. He tells me his system is slower than normal today. (Hey, I have that problem at home, too!)

If you’ve ever talked to me on the phone, you may be well aware that I don’t mind awkward silence. But Rahul must feel (or have been trained) differently, because after a few seconds of nothing, he tries to strike up a conversation with me to pass the time.

I’m surprised. This has never happened before. But I’m always willing to try new things.

“Where are you calling from?” he asks.

“Texas.”

“And how is your day?”

“It’s rainy,” I reply. I think this is a great time to confirm my suspicions. “Where are you at?”

“I’m in India — New Delhi.”

I smile to myself.

“Texas, is that near the coast?” Rahul continues.

“Well, Texas has a coast, but I don’t live anywhere near it. Do you get monsoon season over there?”

“Yes, it’s just coming up.”

“Well, I hope you stay safe,” I say.

A bit more silence. I guess Rahul and I don’t have much in common.

I’m curious, so I ask, “Is there any indication of how long this will take, or do we just have to wait it out?” I was tempted to add, “like a monsoon,” but I resisted.

I must have upset Rahul, because he asked if he could put me on hold again. Oh, alright. I hadn’t gotten enough of that song, anyway.

About thirty seconds later, Rahul is back with my confirmation ID and we are about to part ways. Would I ever talk to him again?

“It was a pleasure to talk to you, sir,” he said to me. “Thank you for calling Microsoft, and have a nice day.”

4 Responses to “Thank you for calling Microsoft, and have a nice day.”

  1. Justin says:

    I had a similar experience with T-Mobile. However, the girl was from Chicago. She, too, struck up a conversation. I am very good at short abrupt answers when someone is “fixing” something like voicemail again for the 3rd time this year.

  2. Aaron says:

    1 with 54 zeros behind it (e.g. MS’s installation ID length) can identity one septendecillion unique installations. I had to look that up.

  3. sarah says:

    Can I just say that sales people are the more conversational. I ahve a great Di-Cut Sales Representative who doesn’t mind asking me all about my personal life. I almost feel like he is ging to ask me out, but I’m safe because he is somewhere in Indiana and I don’t think he’s interested in the commute. :)

  4. Dan Jones says:

    People ask me why I don’t like Microsoft. There are so many reasons, but one is certainly that nothing they do works right, from their software to, apparently, their “product activation.”

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