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Admin
Having worked at a computer store, I can say that I always loved when the little old ladies from the neighborhood would come by. We even had one who would bake something for us every time she came in. By far the older customers were the best, at least where I worked. They never made assumptions and were usually willing to listen when you were teaching them.
Fun 'issues'/pranks:
CAPTCHA: tristique <-- ??WTF??
Admin
Hmmm... is 4.9 greater or less than 4.11?
Admin
Haven't seen the foot pedal, but I have (with my own two eyes) seen mouses held upside down (using the ball as a trackball), and held to the screen. I'd pretty much guarantee that the footpedal trick's happened at least once at some point. (Now, I'd say it hasn't happened in the last 5 years, but 10-15 years ago? Sure...)
Admin
Windows 98 SE (4.11): half decent Windows Me (4.9): complete load of kronk
In this case 4.11 is definitely > 4.9
Admin
Admin
Yes! I was working on a printer problem, and it turned out this was the issue.
The best part is that I tried unplugging and plugging back in the printer to trigger the USB detection, and I did it behind the computer without looking and didn't even notice that it was in the ethernet port and not a USB port.
Admin
Hm. They read better fifteen years ago.
Admin
I call shenanigans on the Missing Icons one. Although I can (somewhat) see someone using a mouse on their monitor, surely the simplest of simpletons would understand that objects behind the hand and mouse would be obscured. That'd be like someone complaining that Angela Lansbury was disappearing from their TV screen whenever someone walked in front of it.
Admin
Admin
I no longer have a computer with Windows 95 to verify this, but I distinctly recall that if you did the internal system call to ask the version number, which returned the major version in one register and the minor version in another, Windows 95 returned major version=3, minor version=95.
I can't even try this now because I've become so enJava'd that I don't even have a Windows C compiler.
Admin
This sort of rebuttal is only valid if you start with the assumptions that (a) the person carefully studied the device before using it incorrectly, and (b) thought through the mechanical design.
I can easily imagine someone picking up an unfamiliar device and without thinking assuming that it works the same way as some other device that they are familiar with. You don't even have to assume the person is stupid, just that they leaped to a conclusion too quickly based on insufficient information.
I recall the time I vainly struggled with a certain auto repair tool before I realized that it might be helpful if I removed the cover. Indeed, I'd guess almost everyone in a technological society has had the experience at one time or another of using a device incorrectly because they didn't understand how it was supposed to work.
Heck, right here in my office, one of the other programmers came over to my desk to show me something and couldn't get my mouse to work. No matter how much he pressed it against the table and how carefully he moved it, the cursor on the screen just wouldn't move. Despite the fact that I kept trying to tell him that it wasn't a mouse, it was a trackball. But it just didn't register on him.
Admin
So... I guess he would call up his Nissan dealer to answer questions about his Ford.
Admin
To the people thinking the food pedal is made up, I can state it does happen, for I have lived to see it occuring.
Back then I worked as a network administrator for a company that had maybe, 60 employees. The company made gloves and resold/distributed various sports stuff.
One of the branches of the company made fire-proof gloves for firemen, and armored gloves for the GRC's swat team. It was in a fairly remote location, where people found computers very alien. At least most people in the factory.
Whenever they'd need a computer, we'd ship one out with diagrams and clear explanations on how to set it up, connectors being color coded, etc etc. They usually set it up correctly. However, one day one of them called and told me "The pedal on my computer is broken".
It took me forever to understand he was talking about the mouse, and seeing as how most people there were used to commercial sewing machines and other kind of factory machinery that involved pedals, it seemed natural for them to place the mouse on the floor, under the desk.
Admin
You've never worked with real users, have you?
Admin
"foot pedal? I don't think that's true"
really? ive had to explain my grandfather that no, a mousepad is not an advanced mousetrap
Admin
I actually ran a copy of "Windows 96½" once. My manager was a warez fiend, and he downloaded a beta of what at the time (spring of 1996) was being called Windows 97 from alt.binaries.warez.ibm-pc (or whatever the group was back then). He decided my 386 workstation would be a great testbed for it.
I nuked the OS in frustration after the third time I had to wait several seconds for a menu drop-down animation (that you couldn't disable, naturally) to render. He didn't understand why I seemed not to like it.
Admin
Well, it's often possible to get a service station to work on whatever make you've got. Maybe not a dealer, but some places they might do at least basic maintenance on whatever you've got. So I don't think it's absurd to call whatever company is advertising computer support. However, that doesn't excuse the attitude...
Admin
I guess it might be drawn from a real call, but I think Phil Hendrie did a few of these bits ten years ago. Sometimes people think his shows are real and pass it on as real. But who knows... maybe a real tech support engineer sent these in.
Admin
I guess I'll be the jerk today:
...a complete factor-state restore...
...who listed to the irate customer complain the thirty-minute wait times...
...they live little doo-doos around the house...
...the cubicle next time his...
Admin
I know we all hate grammar Nazis, but this article had a few too many distracting mistakes for my liking. And I'm pretty sure I've heard the "foot pedal" one on a top-10 list of IT stories before.
Admin
I don't know about internally, but in the computer properties dialog box, I remember it identified the OS version as 4.0095.[whatever build the kernel was].
Windows XP is identified as Windows version 5.1.2600 using 'ver'.
Admin
Merging two fixes into one...
for good or for ill Microsoft has numbered: Windows NT 4.0 = 4 Windows 2000 = 5 Windows XP = 5.1 Windows Vista = 6 WIndows 7 = 6.1
Admin
I once worked in a particular blue-and-yellow competitor to CompuMart...
After a while, even competant sales staff developed a hatred for the customers. We once had a man ask if a particular mousepad would work with his computer. My snarky coworker shot back: "Well sir, what color is your computer?" "Uh, beige." "No sir, that mouse pad won't work. [now reaching for a beige pad] Here sir, THIS mousepad will work with your computer."
Customer came back the next day, very angry at having been mocked. But management insisted that my coworker didn't exist... turns out, he was also the guy who stole the old nametags from fired employees, so he was a different person every day.
sigh Good times...
Admin
Ok, I have to call B.S. on this... I have never seen a mouse with a USB-A connector, and I have never seen a computer with a USB-A connector. The USB standards designate the USB-A connector to be used for hubs or peripherals -- not the computer.
Now, having said that, I can say that I have really, honestly had this problem, but it was plugging in a printer/fax/scanner combo that has Ethernet support (HP OfficeJet 6300 series). It's a printer, so it actually has a USB-A, and it does fit very well into the ethernet port and the two ports are right next to each other. I wouldn't be surprised if the HP techs get that one on the support line...
Captcha: gravis. I only mention it because these stories all seem about as old as the Gravis Gamepad I used to have plugged into my SoundBlaster 16 sound card. Maybe even the 8-bit sound card...
Admin
I recall foot pedal granny showing up some 15 years ago at the earliest I can remember. I've always chocked it up as urban legend. But I've worked with a lot of ignorant users as well, so it wouldn't shock me if it were true. I may still have the usenet thread archive with it SOMEWHERE... it's probably the most commonly repeated "omgtechcomprehensionfail" story I've seen - that and the CD tray/cupholder one.
Admin
You've got it backwards. A is the flat connector that plugs into PCs (and is approximately the same width as an Ethernet port). B is the square peripheral/hub connector.
Admin
I knew something was wrong... Oh well. Now that I think of it, the USB-B connector fit right into the phone connector...
I got mixed up because people normally just say USB connector when talking about USB-A. Since he was specific, I ass_u_me_d he was talking about the USB-B.
Admin
Man oh man am I glad I don't work a help desk...
Most of the time I just have to deal with the crud that doesn't get sorted through the help desk.
One of my favorites: "When I boot my machine up, there is a loud beeping noise." Move a stack of papers off of the keyboard, and reboot the machine, no more beeping.
Admin
I can believe it happened, somewhere, someplace. Now apparently it happens more often than I'd thought (and the dictation machine explanation does make sense).
It just seems like every time we get an article about IT horror stories, this story (and the CD cup holder) show up, so either it truly is happening frequently enough that every IT person who tells the story has had it happen to them, or they're embellishing or referencing an incident that happened to someone else.
Remember that kid (Craig Shergold?) who was dying of cancer and wanted to break the world record for postcards received in the mail? I have no doubt that it happened but that doesn't stop me from being suspicious every time I hear a story like it.
Admin
I couldn't say, but I'm touched that you pay such careful attention to my writings.
I can say that I was once the Tech Support Manager for TopSpeed Corporation back in the late 90s and I did in fact say the above to one or two beligerently stupid asses.
Thanks for caring.
Admin
I haven't actually ever run into a user trying to use a mouse with their foot or a CD tray as a cupholder, but I have had users do things that could seem like urban legend.
Our company has a large warehouse the contains all of our product to be shipped around the country. About 4 years ago a manager out there who was in his sixties (he has since retired) asked for a laptop to use to type inventory data into a spreadsheet. We provided him with an old 600MHz Celeron laptop and he had difficulty using the touch pad. He unplugged the mouse from his office computer and had plugged it into the laptop and it wouldn't work so he called our Help Desk. I walked out there to find that he had jammed the USB mouse connector onto the laptops serial port.
A user called in (and left a voicemail) to complain that she couldn't get to the internet. We got this message after power was restored to the building. Her phone and laptop both stayed on, but she didn't put two and two together that the lights being out would stop her access to the internet.
Admin
Does anyone read these before posting? I've noticed that thedailywtf.com tends to have one spelling error per post, but I usually ignore them. This article, however, had three errors in the first three sections that would be obvious if anyone actually read the article first:
factor => factory "The tech then moved on to a complete factor-state restore..."
live => leave "...but they live little doo-doos..."
time => to "...that it occurred in the cubicle next time his."
I'm not someone who usually comments just to point out spelling errors, but these are getting distracting.
Admin
Seconded. Or thirded, icosidodecaded or whatevered it is by now. BTW, my laser mouse not only works on a TFT but also the bottom side of a steel pot. Hey, I was curious. Captcha's opto, I swear.
Admin
+1 on the category idea
The mouse-on-screen idea: that tech really impressed me; I would have never ever thought of that as a possibility. Who knows if a new wave of those will come up now that touch computing is upon us ?
Admin
Worst. TDWTF. Story. Ever.
Admin
(Why do people really want to sound like the fat Comic Guy from the Simpson ? Is the display or either poor memory or emphysema a good thing to communicate to the world ? Purple monkey dishwasher ?)
Admin
Now, tell us how sad your life is by letting us know how many of those you did not need to verify...
(I remembered that 95 was 4, but was thinking that 95 OSR2 was 4.1...)
Admin
Ever see an old sewing machine?
Admin
I also call shenanigans on the "disappearing icons" one. The medical community refers to the stage of a normally constituted human being's life when they can recognized that their hand can make things disappear as: "baby".
Admin
I keep ranting about this over and over. Windows Me has a bad rap in the same way Vista does. It had some early problems, but a significant portion of the crap users had to go through with it was driver-based. They were transitioning from VXD to WDM drivers in Windows 98SE, but they made them mandatory in Windows Me. No one new how the @#$% to write a WDM driver, so none of your hardware worked well, so Windows Me crashed. A lot.
I kept my drivers up to date and chucked out a couple of bad components and had just as good an experience (or better) with Windows Me than most people did with Windows 98SE - for better or for worse.
I am also currently running Windows Vista SP2 and it's just as stable as the Windows 7 beta was on the same hardware (downgraded for reasons that turned out to be unrelated, too lazy to reinstall the beta when the full thing is out in like, two days now).
I read somewhere that something like 40-60% of BSODs on Windows Vista in the first few months were related to NVidia drivers.
Admin
No, but neither did the tech support person - they were talking on the phone, so they didn't see anything.
Admin
Lyfe? Lyle would've been better. No, not just better... the BEST! And Lyle would not have gotten a complaint!
That Lyle story is still one of my favorites:)
Admin
This article brought back an idea I got about two weeks ago when I got a ZX Spectrum+ (full box, introductory tape and manual) from eBay. How come today's computers no longer come with manuals? Why are you expected to know everything about your computer? To sell more Windows books? And more "computer" books? And none of them tells you what the "foot pedal" actually is (a cup holder people!).
The Speccy's manual is colorful, full of detail, and giving you an extensive basic training around the machine and it's UI (BASIC as it were).
These days? Not so much. I got a laptop with Vista installed on it. First thing I see? The Vista pre-installation, license acceptance screen. After that? Well, the Vista desktop. No manual in the box to tell me what I can do with it, no suggestions, no trips and tricks for the first time user. Nothing. They expect me to know, or know someone who knows. That means, if I weren't in IT, I'd have to call someone who is, and that is, hopefully, not first line tech support, as they won't even know what books to point me to. They'll just tell me to "Google it". What's this Google thing anyway and how do I get to it? :) Browser? What's that? And so on...
Admin
Am I really the only one who thought the user expecting computer support from a store advertising that they provided "computer support" was not being unreasonable? If I buy a Microcenter branded PC (yes they have their own brand), would Best Buy Geek Squad not support it?
Admin
Admin
//third try//
Admin
Well well...
If you want customer support tales, go visit: http://www.techtales.com While it hasn't been updated in almost a year, they DO have LOTS of older funny stories about the ins and outs of customer support.
Moral: there are lots of 1d10t's out there, and it doesn't take much to find them.
Admin
This always bugs me about September - December.
Admin
I believe that 95, 98, and ME are viewed as basically the same product to Microsoft (version 4), as are NT and 2000 (version 5). That leaves XP and Vista as 6, and they new thing as 7.
Also, I don't know if anybody could prove it, but I think the design at Microsoft with the current numbering is to suggest that they are a step ahead of Apple. As Apple has been selling OS X 10.1, 10.2, etc., and is now at 10.6, Microsoft naturally offers Windows 7.
It's not a perfect theory -- Windows 11 would be an even more obvious trump.
Admin
I guess the teletype wins :)