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Admin
Replace This Comment
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Replace first comment with this one:
First!
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The real WTF is actually that this Title is marked as "Feature Articles" though it should be in "Error'd"...
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And it´s not a first time. What´s up?
Note from Alex: I blame.... ummm... the software!
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I had wondered in the past if developers where making these dialog boxes just for WTF screen shots, but the "yggdrasil gnawing dragon throwed an exception" does exist http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&q=yggdrasil+gnawing+dragon+%22throwed+an+exception%22&btnG=Search&meta= note to self: add more bizzare and WTF worthy error messages into next project.
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Hellooooooo! That's why it's the daily WTF. Sheesh. And I thought I was blonde!
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Ratatosk, the 40 year old nerd who lives in his mother's basement, was up last night playing D&D dressed as Ne' Trinifar the high elf when suddenly the curler wearing dragon, also known as "mom", began belowing down the stairs "keep it down you losers, some of us have to work in the morning!"
Ratatosk and his band (which consisted of a drunken dwarf warrior named Breunor, a hafl-elf rogue named Twinkle Toes and a human mage named Merlin) were literally crapping their pants and the sounds coming from the dragon. That is until Merlin pulled out some magical potions of courage (also known as Mountain Dew).
With their spirit reinvigorated from the magical potions they set off on their quest to steal the dragon's treasure, which consisted of Doritos and maybe some ding dongs. Quietly they snuck up the winding stairway. At the top Twinkle Toes searched the door for traps.
Twinkle Toes: "Rolling... HA a 14!" Ratatosk: "Good, you disarmed the trap!"
Slowly he opened the door that lead into the dragon's lair. The heat was intense in the kit...dragon's lair. Quietly he snuck over to the cabinet containing the dragon's horde. He could hear movement off to his left down one of the corridors and Ratatosk whispered "hurry, the dragon is coming!" As quick as he could Twinkle Toes grabbed the Doritos and made his way back to the exit. Just as the dragon lit a torch he silently closed the door.
Mission complete, the merry band sat and congratulated themselves on a mission well done.
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WTFType42? Replace this comment at your own peril!
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The last one was actually pretty funny and quite accurate.
In Norse mythology:
Now you know... and knowing is half the battle :)
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That's more of a meta-WTF.
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CommentType18
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That is by far the most awesome error message I've ever seen.
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Maybe if the original developer responsible for the last screenshot had spent more time actually developing and less time in the clouds dreaming up nerdy in-joke error messages we would have: A.) Not seen the error because it would have not occurred B.) Not seen such a WTFy error message.
Somehow even a HRESULT code seems better than this.
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It won't be a proper WTF until the error message is displayed in Old Norse. A "WTF" button on the dialog would show a localized version of the dialog text to those few of you who aren't fluent in Old Norse (i.e., non-Icelanders). Or maybe a FILE_NOT_FOUND error. That'd be good too.
Viking Kittens, anyone?
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I once got this message while writing code to run on a gameboy advance:
"(void*) is not actually (void*)"
seemed a bit existential at the time.
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Well I don't know about the ABC News graphics people, but the newsreader lady doesn't seem very amused.
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Great, not only is it a "fun" error message but it contains the word "throwed", which, last time I checked, isn't a word.
These programmers need to be taken out and shot, or failing that, forbidden from ever writing anything again that a user might possibly see.
Also, I'm pretty sure I saw that in a previous WTF. Or maybe it was a 404 page. It looks familiar.
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The real WTF is that Veðrfölnir isn't a eagle, its a hawk that sits between the eyes of the eagle. No wonder that there's an exception thrown!!!
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In the southern US, "throwed" is accepted, but the proper term is "th'owed".
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Rather than 16695551 I much prefer 5296383 which at least makes for a correctly spelled (UK) English imperative...
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We couldn't get Irish girl back just for today? Day ruined :(
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...and what an exception it was, for unbeknownst to the user, that button would bring on Ragnarok...
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Actually, the Norse error message is a very GOOD idea. From what I've heard from tech support, users never remember cryptic error messages (nor have them on the screen when calling). But given this, the user is more likely to remember the message, or at least enough that the tech support will know exactly which one it is.
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I think it's this one: http://forums.thedailywtf.com/forums/p/10250/182614.aspx. The full image seems to be gone, but 'throwed' and 'Yggdrasil' are mentioned in the replies.
Admin
Only if you make them sufficiently unique - this would have to be the only Norse myth one and the only one with a dragon.... Otherwise callers would just identify it by "something about a dragon that throwed something".
Now if you really want users to remember error messages, start playing a song that will get stuck in their head when the error message pops up. Suggestions: It's a Small World After All; Eye of the Tiger; 867-5309/Jenny; Who Let the Dogs Out; or themes from nearly any TV show (Gilligan's Island, The Love Boat, Brady Bunch, etc.)
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[EACCES] Permission denied.
[EBADF] Bad file descriptor.
[ENOLCK] No locks available.
[ETIMEDOUT] Connection timed out.
[E2BIG] Argument list too long.
[EHOSTUNREACH] Host is unreachable.
[EISCONN] Socket is connected.
[ENODEV] No such device.
[EADDRNOTAVAIL] Address not available.
[EPERM] Operation not permitted.
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[ETIME]
[ENOEXEC]
[EFAULT]
[EPIPE]
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CAPTCHA: damnum Damn...um...
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Mrs Doyle: And what do you say to a cup of tea?
Father Jack: Feck off, cup!
http://feckoffcup.ytmnd.com/
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Actually, it may not be too bad an idea - the more unique the error message, the easier it is to search for and possibly find a resolution.
Imagine at the bottom of the error there's a set of a few words (order matters). The user, encountering the error, just has to enter in those keywords probably in order), and they'll get the results for that app, for that error.
A generic error message can be harder to find, but toss in some unique words and possibly the resolution pops up without sifting through 10 pages of Google results.
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Can I just point out that saying "Australian ABC" is a bit like saying "PIN number". Sorry, slow day here, carry on...
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Quote at your own peril.
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[EIEIO]
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Preferably a TV show last screened sometime after the user was born!
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It's a consequence of letting all these semiliterate slackbum mouthbreathers out without their education. People for whom a half-arsed job is "good enough and where's my bonus?".
You know the sort; the sort who commit all sorts of atrocities agains the English language through sheer fecklessness, and then excuse it by saying "languages evolve" and accusing anyone who complains of being some sort of Nazi.
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Shaddup, Muphry. I'm going to fit this textarea with a serif font.
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I believe I am responsible for the Ratatosk error message. The shame. :) I can't remember the original reason (other than being bored) for including Norse mythology in an error message, but I am suitably amused it has made it here. (I am much more responsible these days and only include things like 'out of cheese error, redo from start' in code comments...)
Admin
The real WTF is the bluriness of the last screenshot. That and the fact that bluriness is an actual word.
Admin
Cisco actually makes a device called the Safeword?
Interesting, but useless for my girlfriend and I, as we don't use safewords.
Admin
TRWTF is that the dragon throwed an exception.
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Actually, the Cisco safeword issue is a common one for alphanumeric one time passwords. The problem is that filtering the "bad" words out of teh codebook is (a) pointless - every language has its own words and (b) DRAMATICALLY reduces the number of different combinations in the One Time Password code book. Besides, you then get blamed if you miss one - no such problem if you don't..
Add to that that such a small and low powered device typically doesn't have that much program space and processing power and you're welcome to it. The WTF would be to give in to misguided censorship. It's either polite and useless or secure and possibly rude - pretty much like a good sysadmin :-)
[in case you're wondering, I just went such a discussion a week ago]