re_solidworks
Guest
I do not discuss what the lawyer said, also because there are "contractable" points for example the 8 days from the discovery who tries them? or the fact that the customer is not sufficiently experienced to be able to judge the work... Well, what's he doing? Isn't it industry? Did he improvise an entrepreneur?
apart from this we need a reflection. if a customer wants a work comparable to that of his interior designer and that is free from civil liability then ok, the fares that turn can be accepted. in the event that civil liability should be included (and here we must put a border "to where") things should change. I think an increase of 5/10 €/hour is the minimum to include any damage.
this is a fairly clear case, but there are cases much more nebulous. for example if I make the drawings and details come true and fit everyone correctly, an engineer does the checks and nothing breaks and maybe we follow some solution requested by the customer (that we do not share but that we adopt so much to bind the donkey where the master wants) and then the machine does not work well? here it becomes very difficult to tell who has wrong what and the measure of responsibility of each.
that is why it would be the case of making a written contract in which the responsibilities we want to take are explicit. paradoxically if I sold my work not as design but as graphic processing and in the aforementioned explicit contract that I do not feel responsible for the mechanical aspect of the solutions and that the designs must be controlled and approved by their technical office before proceeding, how do we put it?
Obviously, always assuming that a contract like this is approved by the client. . .
apart from this we need a reflection. if a customer wants a work comparable to that of his interior designer and that is free from civil liability then ok, the fares that turn can be accepted. in the event that civil liability should be included (and here we must put a border "to where") things should change. I think an increase of 5/10 €/hour is the minimum to include any damage.
this is a fairly clear case, but there are cases much more nebulous. for example if I make the drawings and details come true and fit everyone correctly, an engineer does the checks and nothing breaks and maybe we follow some solution requested by the customer (that we do not share but that we adopt so much to bind the donkey where the master wants) and then the machine does not work well? here it becomes very difficult to tell who has wrong what and the measure of responsibility of each.
that is why it would be the case of making a written contract in which the responsibilities we want to take are explicit. paradoxically if I sold my work not as design but as graphic processing and in the aforementioned explicit contract that I do not feel responsible for the mechanical aspect of the solutions and that the designs must be controlled and approved by their technical office before proceeding, how do we put it?
Obviously, always assuming that a contract like this is approved by the client. . .