"My hard disk won't boot."
I suggest they take the floppy out of drive. Later when I arrive, they
have successfully removed the floppy drive from the machine (with the
floppy disk still inside).
"My dog goes nuts when I run Windows. No problem with any DOS
programs."
Her monitor had a cracked flyback transformer. When the multisync
monitor switched scan rates upon entering Windows, the high frequency
audio produced by the broken flyback was heard by the dog.
"Michaelangelo virus ate my hard disk, but I have a tape backup. Can
you help me restore the system?"
No problem. When I arrive, I find the data on the tape was 18 months
old and that she had never run a backup. Reason?
"I thought you just shoved in the tape and it sucked up the data."
"How do I get on the national data information super highway?"
I ask if he has accounts on any BBS's. He has Netcom, Compuserve, and
others. I tell him he's already on the highway.
"Is that all there is?"
I hang up.
"What's the fastest way to move 500 MBytes of data daily from Santa
Cruz to Los Angeles?"
Answer: FedEx.
"How many RJ45 connector does it take to build 8ea 10baseT cables?"
Answer: 45. I put the first 16 connectors on with one end backward. I
then chopped off the good ends. Chopping off the other 8 connectors
and effectively starting over consumed another 16 connectors. The 2nd
try resulted in one end being mirror-imaged. Chopping of 8 more
connectors I finally got them wired correctly. Then I tested them for
continuity and found 5 bad crimps. Total=45.
"What kind of hard disk do you have?"
Well... It's black with a little red light ... (groan)
Most common support call:
"I lost my CMOS setup. How many heads, cylinders, and sectors does a
_______ drive have?"
"I move the mouse in any direction and the cursor only moves an inch
or so on the screen and stops."
Solution: Take the foam shipping ring out from around the mouse ball.
"My system's on fire. What do I do?"
Ummmmm. Turn it off?
"(Click)"
Most hated support call:
"I'm not sure if we need a computer system. Can you give me the
relative advantages of Unix, DOS, Windows, Novell, MacIntosh, Sun,
etc...?"
Favorite software support call:
"I just installed Word 6.0 for Windows. It's really big and slow. How
much will it cost to upgrade my machine?"
"My floppy drive won't read disks."
I suggest they clean out the dust from the drive.
"I can't."
Huh?
"The dust won't move."
I found out that they were using spray glue near the machine and that
all the dust were glued in place.
How to impress a new customer: I walk into the computer room and knock
the fire extinguisher off the wall which immediately sprays everything
with dust.
"My printer stopped working."
Turn it upside down and shake out the staples and paper clips. Works
every time.
"Can you teach me how to use a computer?"
I answer: No, I just fix the machines, I don't use them.
The company motto: "If this stuff worked, you wouldn't need me."
From one of my smarter clients:
"Why is something broken every time you're here?"
"I'm trying to install a 2nd IDE drive. Support told me to take out
ALL the jumpers."
How many did you take out?
"12"
(What they meant were the two easily accessible jumpers).
I call a manufacturer to order a manual on some junk I picked up
surplus. The receptionist asks for my name and company. She notes that
I'm not in their database and could she have my address and phone
numbers. No problem. I'm then transferred to the customer service
department which notes that I'm not in the database and asks for the
same information.
The customer service person transfers me to the the parts department
which notes that I'm not in the database etc... Since the manual will
take a few days to arrive, I ask for tech support who notes that I'm
not in the database etc... The manual arrived promptly followed by 4
identical envelopes of promotional literature with exactly the same
name and address.
Question LEAST likely to be answered correctly by support:
"What is the current version of your software/hardware/firmware?"
Pacific Telephone Support Dept (Dial 611 for repair service), now asks
you to punch in your phone number, and then warns you that you will be
asked to verbally recite the same number when the service operator
answers. I wonder what happens if they're different?
Email from a friend: "CanYouFixTheSpaceBarOnMyKeyboard?"
Fax back information service for additional information from one
vendor requesting just one item returns a copy of their catalog page
plus 10 pages of promotional garbage.
Email autoreply from support@_______.com:
Thank you for your support request. (drivel deleted) Please refer to
support request number: Error: cannot create /u/something/filename (4
lines of garbage deleted) in future correspondence. Your request will
be processed in the order received. (more garbage with Out of space on
hd(1,41) mixed in.)
Conversation with support at a certain controller manufacturer:
"I can't answer that, please call your dealer."
"I am the dealer."
"Then call your distributor."
"He said for me to call you."
"Then have the customer call us."
"AAAAARRRGH!"
Modems and payphones don't mix. I once hotwired my laptop into the
mouthpiece of a payphone and proceeded to do system maintenance on a
customers machine. The sheriff arrived shortly and proceeded to
interrogate me. Someone called complaining that I was using a computer
to steal money from the payphone.
Having my system page me when it does an unscheduled reboot was a good
idea. Having all my customers machines do the same was a mess after a
power failure and 100 pages.
"My hard disk has a virus!"
How can you tell, I ask?
"When I type DIR, it says VIRUS (DIR) and some date stuff."
(Hint: Never name the directory for virus scanning software VIRUS).
Some monitor manufacturers suggest using alchohol to clean the screen.
They forget to mention that the monitor should be off. (Boom)
I told a customer to take his machine to a gas station and have them
blow the dust out. The gas station hands him a 150psi air nozzle that
belches rusty water and oil. I got to clean up the mess for free. He
also mangled the floppy heads with the high pressure.
Oxymoron candidate: Disk Protector. That's the cardboard disk they
shove in the floppy drive for shipping. More drives have been mangled
by shoving in the wrong shape, backwards, or bent than have ever been
protected by them. Use a floppy disk instead.
What's the difference between a Van DeGraf static generator and a belt
driven vacuum cleaner? Answer: Not much. Don't use a vacuum to clean
your computer.
After the cleaning service crashed the computer for the 4th time by
plugging the floor sweeper into the UPS, I decided to take action. I
suggested they install "child proof" plastic plugs in any outlets
deemed worthy of protection. The order went though the chain of
confusion, and I was soon blessed with 1000 child proof plugs hot
stampled with "Protected". I gave instructions to install about 10 of
them on the protected outlets. However, the maintenance person
assigned to the task knew nothing and proceeded to plaster every
outlet in the building with the plugs. Mutiny was averted by spending
all night removing the monsters. Three years later, they are still
appearing.
Hint: Do not allow long hair black cats to sleep atop laser printers
and tape drives. The black hair is almost invisible in black pattens,
gears, and rollers.
Forensic filth analysis is a new part of computer repair. I now carry
a microscope and some chemicals which are used to determine the exact
nature of the filth I remove from keyboards, mice, computers, light
pens. While nobody pays me to do this, it definately adds to the
entertainment value.
Why do customers think that I maintain a document and device driver
library for every conceivable board ever made?
From a hard disk drive manufacturer: "The drive stopped working. I
popped the little plug and noticed it was awful dry inside. I added
some oil but it didn't help".
Which arrow key? There are 17 arrows on the keyboard.
Favorite error message: "Out of paper on drive D:"
This was produced by a timeout error on a slow WORM drive and a
defective AT/IO card.
At one time, I was into antique furniture. When I purchased my first
computer (IBM 4.77 PC), I decided that it deserved a suitable antique
table. I asked the local antique dealer: "Do you have an antique
computer desk?" He looks at me with a strange look and says: "They
didn't have computers when this stuff was made."
When 3.5" floppies first appeared, some users were confused with the
operation of the write protect window. One user wanted to be doubly
sure that the disk would be safe from his mistakes. He correctly
opened the window and just to be sure, covered it with one of the
magic write protect tabs from a 5.25" floppy.
Favorite Windoze game: "Guess what this icon does?"
A video store installed the computer on top of the cash drawer. Every
time the cash drawer would open, the hard disk would get a good
bouncing. I decided that this was technically disgusting, and moved
the machine. The next morning, the drive wouldn't spin up (stiction).
Solution: Put it back on top of the cash drawer and let it bounce.
The curse of the mad labeler. Some of the clone cards I see have stick
on METALIZED labels that a quite good at shorting traces. I've fixed a
few by just removing the stick-on short. A variation on this effect is
the tendency for some distributors to put stick-on labels on TOP of
their CPU chips. Then they smear on some silicon grease and bury the
mess under a heat sink and fan. The air gap produced between the chip
and heat sink severely degrade its cooling value.
Follow the wacky mouse home