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  • Had an older coworker who was on a long call with a user; his hands got tired so he put it on speaker after a while.

    At a certain point my coworker fell asleep... and so did the user on the phone (snoring).

  • Many years ago I worked for a small company who'd just hired a new CEO - and the guy hated me for some reason. He used every chance to make inappropriate remarks, and at times he'd just get angry and start yelling at me because his MacBook wasn't doing something the way he wanted it. Keeping in mind, I didn't do support for endpoints, my specialty was servers and network. I'd just let him go off because he wasn't local, and would only come to the office for a day about once a month.

    One day he called into the office and asked for me (again there are other support people who could easily help him with his macbook issues). He states he's on a train, and can't send or receive e-mails. Assuming he's done basic troubleshooting, and not wanting to piss him off further, I go through normal troubleshooting steps. After several minutes he gets angry again, and starts yelling at me, so did what anyone would do - I put him on speaker phone so everyone else in the office could hear his rant. We all had a good chuckle.

    Once he'd gotten it out of his system, I suggested he give me his remote access info (we'd installed remote access software on his macbook for this very reason) so I could remote into his system and see for myself what was going on. He states the software won't display the one-time access code...so I asked him if he was connected to the WiFi, there was a pause, and then and the phone went dead, he just hung up on me. Magically his email started working after that

  • I worked for a college for a while.

    All of the student records were on a mini frame IBM as400 from 1986.

    The only connectivity to this device was via a 100 MB ethernet connection. There were no backups. The tape drive that was used for backing up this data I had gone defunct well before my time at the college.

    I started noticing errors in the connection logs and I notified the CIO, saying that we needed to replace this box or upgrade it or do something before the connection failed or else we could lose access to data that we are federally required to maintain.

    They noted my concerns, and then they let it go.

    About 6 months later, the ethernet card failed.

    I let them know that our only way to get data into or out of this machine has gone offline and cannot be resuscitated.

    They asked me to fix it I told them I can't. The card was down. I had gone through the proper processes of rebooting the machine and opening it up to take a look but couldn't find anything wrong with it I tried reseating the card, but this system is old as shit and they didn't make parts for it anymore and even if they did the school would have to buy it and the school is too cheap to buy them.

    People are running around scared for losing their jobs because the consequence for this not coming back up could be so severe as to cause the entire college to be shut down.

    Okay so now that the stage is set, a few days later the former IT guy happened to stop by the college. This dude was 70 something years old if he was a day, and I saw him out in the corridors.

    I walked up to him, I was like hey man just so you know the as400 network connection is down, do you have any tips on how I might bring it back up?

    He said hang on a second.

    I let him into the server room and he waved his hands in the air over the as 400 and said try it again.

    And sure as shit, the fucking network connection came back up.

    I lost my shit.

    The administrators for the college lost their shit.

    Everyone's fucking mind was blown, and somehow they suddenly magically had the money to purchase a cloud as400 and upload all of our data to it within the next 6 weeks.

    I got to retire that box but I'm never ever going to forget how somebody fixed a 40 year old ethernet card by waving their fucking hands in the air

  • "Can you tell me why my printer won't print yellow?"

    "Well first, it is a color printer? And there is yellow ink in it?"

    "Oh, yes!"

    "Can you print green?"

    "Green works fine!"

    ". . . That printer only has 3 colors of ink, if you're printing green that means yellow is coming out..."

    Tried uninstalling and re-installing printer drivers, changing cables, cleaning cycles, examining the print head, everything seemed to be fine...

    "Oh, oh, oh! Should I be printing on WHITE paper?"

    ". . . Are... are you printing on yellow paper?"

  • Half an hour of troubleshooting a user who said they couldn't reach their file share on their network. They didn't have access to the internet... They didn't have access to anything else on the network... Switch under their desk indicated not connecting to the rest of the network. Asked if they would go to the server closet, they said they couldn't, because an overzealous wrecking ball went through that closet this morning. Not even joking...it was to take down the neighboring building which was being knocked down for being a code violation for being too close to my client's building.

  • I worked at a global internal helpdesk, my company had offices all over the world.

    One day I get in to the office for night shift and the day shift was laughing.

    Aparantly a guy in the main office, located on a different continent, called the global helpdesk for help with their computer, can't remember the actual reason, they were rude and dismissive, and while the tech was trying to help them they found games installed of the computer.

    This is not allowed, so they told the guy, who said that he had admin access so it was fine.

    The tech kept pushing that this was not allowed, but the guy would not accept it and even told us that his team mates also had these games installed on their laptops, so while talking with the guy the tech reached out to the global head of IT on Lync and explained the situation.

    The global head of IT was pissed and briefed the head of the local IT team at the main office to collect the computer and completely reinstall it.

    The tech was still on the line with the guy, and was told to tell him that the local IT team would help him, and to expect them shortly.

    I don't know the exact exchange in the main office, but the next day we got word that the entire team was required to have all of their computers reinstalled, this was a global team across mutiple continents, even some in our own office, who sheepishly came down to us to have us reinstall their computers a day or so later.

    The guy who got caught can't have been popular...


    I worked for a different company a few years after the above incident, this was smaller, much smaller, but it was a fantastic place to work.

    Anyway, I got the task of being the VIP technician for our partners in addition to my normal duties.

    This wasn't that bad, it mainly consisted in helping partners with remoting in and giving them higher priority.

    Now, at the start of the pandemic, the main VIP wanted to make sure that his dedicated office computer at one of his holiday homes was updated and ready for the summer.

    So I had to get up there, I was given a preinstalled desktop computer and had to fly to the town where the holiday home was located.

    This was in May 2020, right when the pandemic shock was at it's absolute peak.

    The flight was domestic, but what I didn't expect when I got to the airport was how completely empty it was.

    In the departure hall that would be packed normally, it was just... empty....

    Well, five other passengers was milling around, and maybe two or three staff that I could see.

    I get checked in, and walk to the gate, there sre about 8 passengers there, my flight is called and I get down to the transfer bus and the doors close, and... I am alone...

    The bus starts heading out across the tarmac and stops at an unmarked plane, a completely white Fokker F50, no branding or anything.

    There is a cute stewardess who tells me that I am the only passenger on the flight and that I can just pick any seat.

    I do so and we take off, and throughout the flight I can't just stop thinking about how I am the only passenger and how odd it felt.

    So I get to the airport, collect my bag and my taxi is waiting for me, and after and hour or so we have arrived, the holiday home is a farm, and the farm hands greet us, I get let into the office and start doing my work.

    After hours of setting up every little detail, testing and testing and testing again then documenting everything, I am ready to leave and get driven to a nice hotel, that is completely empty.

    I stay the night, and the same taxi that collected me from the airport the day before pick me up again.

    We get to the airport and this time there is a 100% increase in the number of passengers on the flight, that's right, we had one more passenger!

    The flight back is uneventful, I get back home, remote into the office and upload my notes and debrief my manager.

  • I had changed into scrubs, booties and hair cover to go into an operating theatre and repair a printer. I didn't want to have to come out and do all that again if someone had forgotten to charge the electric screwdriver, so I revved it a couple of times while standing in the charge room, which was fully visible from the hallway. A passer-by glanced my way at the noise, did a double take at what might have been a surgeon testing off-the-shelf power tools before starting a procedure, and walked into a trash can. 😁

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