Wednesday, December 13, 2006

I don't have a magic wand

You can’t call me and say “My computer’s broken” and just expect me to come and fix it with no further information. What the hell does that even mean “my computer is broken”? I think you’re head is broken and after I kick you your nuts they’re gonna be broken too. Would you just drive you car into a mechanic and say, “My car is broken. Fix it”. I don’t have a magic computer wand that I just wave over you stupid laptop and instantly all the problems are corrected.

If you decide you want to lead off your request for assistance with this stupid, pointless statement, then you must understand that I will have to ask a few questions in order to find out exactly what about your computer is broken. When I ask these questions, it is not an indicator to you that you should become more frustrated with me or your computer. I am not quizzing you. I am not trying to make you feel stupid. This will not be on a test. I just need to find out how you want me to help you, and the more frustrated you get with me with each questions just makes me want to pick up your laptop and smash it over your head rather than fixing it.

Also, acting like you’re just too busy to “deal” with your computer problems or explain them to me just pisses me off too. RELAX! It’s just a computer. This really effects you in a very small way. It probably makes you lose 3 minutes of your work day. Which of course is much less time than the hour a day you waste bitching about how busy you are. If you’d just shut your stupid mouth and do your work you wouldn’t be so busy.

So, the next time you don’t know what the hell you’re doing and screw up your computer, you may kindly call your IT support person, explain to him exactly what is happening and any error messages that may be involved and I will be very happy to come and fix it for you. If you call and say “My Computer is broken” I will very slowly walk to your desk, smash your laptop with a Louisville Slugger, and then ask you “is that better”?

Monday, December 04, 2006

Good reasons to call a computer technician

1. If you have really bad posture so your back is hurting. All Network Administrator have to take a course in chair adjustment. We’re all experts at it. Plus, if you have bad posture and always slouch in your chair, adjusting it or getting a new chair will always fix the problem.

2. If you’re an idiot and have no idea what you’re doing. Actually, you wouldn’t think that you would call a computer tech for this but you definitely should. There is a right and wrong way to go about it however. If you don’t know what you’re doing, don’t just call up and ask for help or advice. That never works. Call and tell them that your brand new $3000 dollar laptop sucks and they should buy you a new one. That will almost always fix the problem.

3. If the owner of the company you work for implements something that in some small way affects your computer and you don’t like it. For example, if the owner decides he wants a background image to be on all company computers. You should definitely call the computer tech. Actually, this works best if at least half of the people in the company call him and bitch about it. You should try and coordinate your efforts so you all do it within about a two day period. Make sure to mention that it’s intrusive, and the image is ugly, and that you’ve spent about 3 hours trying to figure out how to change it back instead of doing your job. I mean, after all, it is your computer right? It’s not like the company bought it or anything.

4. If you’re in Europe and you’re trying to send 300 pictures to someone in your home office via e-mail. It is important on this one that you make sure you take the pictures at the highest resolution possible, especially if you don’t really need detailed pictures. That will make sure they are really big for absolutely no reason. Then when you connect, be sure that you’re staying in a hotel that was built in the 14th century and has really antiquated phone lines. You should call the computer tech and scream at him because it’s taking too long to transfer the files and your system keeps freezing. Tell them it’s ridiculous that they can’t be sent instantaneously and that it’s impossible to do their job. If the computer tech tries to explain to you why you’re having the problem, just cut him off and say you don’t understand and don’t want to know. Also, as with most other problems, make sure you ask for a new computer because that always fixes the problem.

5. If you have a virus on your computer. This is another one where you might think you wouldn’t need to call a tech. The key here is to not tell the tech there is a virus. Tell them about all the problems you’re having with your system but be sure to be vague. Don’t give any specific error messages as this will just confuse the tech. Only after he has spent a minimum of one hour trying to resolve the problem you should you say something like, “Oh, I forgot to mention something. I’ve had this little box popping up for a while saying something about my machine being infected. Could that be part of the problem?”. This is definitely the best way to go about it, and the most time effective for both you and the tech.

6. If you’ve forgotten how to think for yourself. Whenever anything unexpected happens to any electronic device, immediately call the tech. Using logical thought processes’ is very damaging to your brain. It could cause headaches, hot and cold spells, and in severe cases cranial hemorrhaging. Since techs are used to this kind of stress being put on their brain, it’s best to just call them the instant you think you might have to think for yourself. Here is a sample of an actual phone call that could be considered a perfect time to call a tech.

User: The printer’s broken
Tech: What’s wrong with it?
User: I don’t know. It’s not printing.
Tech: Are there any error messages on the screen?
User: No, the printer is turned off.
Tech: Maybe you should turn it back on and try to print again.
User: Oh.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

I'm just making stuff up

Ok, that’s it. From now on, I’m just going to make stuff up. You obviously don’t believe the real answer, so I’m not going to fight it anymore. I’ll just give you the answer you want to hear. You win.
Old way
Steve: Hey, I just got this message that says something like, “This program has performed an illegal operation and must be closed.” What does that mean? What should I do?
Mr. Bitter IT: Oh, that’s probably not a big deal. Just a problem with your memory. Reboot your computer and it will probably work fine. If not, give me a call and we’ll look at some other things.
Steve: Ok, thanks.
Steve (talking to his friend Joe): Dude, our IT guy sucks. Every time I call him about some problem he just says, “Reboot your computer.” I mean, it usually works, but how stupid is that?! Man, I should be an IT guy. All you have to do is walk around all day and tell people to reboot their computers. That’s all they do and they get paid like $300 grand a year. What a joke.
Joe: Yeah, tell me about it. Our IT guy does the same thing. It’s ridiculous.
New way
Steve: Hey, I just got this message that says something like, “This program has performed an illegal operation and must be closed.” What does that mean? What should I do?
Mr Bitter IT: Wow, does it really say that?!!
Steve: Yeah, how come?
Mr Bitter IT: I just read about this on MSNBC last night. Apparently that’s a brand new problem with the Microsoft Operating System. It happens when the Gigaflop converter gets out of sync with the Complimentary Metal Oxide Semiconductor battery. They’re not even sure what causes it yet. What they’ve figured out so far is that it usually only happens during a full moon and at high tide. It all started after NASA landed on Mars, so they think something that happened while they were up there may have caused it. Microsoft and NASA are working in a joint venture project trying to solve it. They haven’t decided if it would be cheaper and easier to stop exploration of Mars, or try to fix the glitch with Windows. Anyway, they said in the mean time, if you just reboot your computer it will probably go away.
Steve: Dude, no way! That is crazy! I can’t believe it happened to my computer!
Mr Bitter IT: Yeah, me neither. That’s cool. I’m going to call my buddy who works at Microsoft and see if maybe they want to use your computer in their testing lab. I’ll call you back if they do. Thanks for calling me about this.
Steve: Yeah, no problem. This is awesome!
Steve (talking to his friend Joe): Dude, check it out. I had this thing happen on my computer today that’s caused by Martians or something.
Joe: Seriously? That is awesome!
Steve: Yeah, totally. Our IT guy Rocks! He knows everything!
Joe: Really? Our guy sucks. He just tells us to reboot all the time.

You're an idiot . . .

If you already think you know everything, why the hell are you calling me? The assumption would be that you don’t know how to do something, so you call me to see if maybe I do, right? So, why then, when I tell you what your problem is do you tell me that I’m wrong and you know what’s going on. For example:
User: My e-mail isn’t working anymore.
Tech: What seems to be the problem?
User: When I open Outlook it doesn’t pull up any of my new e-mail.
Tech: Are you connected to the Internet or to our network?
User: No, but I’ve never had to do that before.
Tech: Well . . . I’m sorry to tell you this, but that’s impossible. You can’t get your e-mail if you don’t have some kind of connection.
User: Well I don’t know what you’re talking about. I’ve been doing it this way for months. It just started happening like this the other day. This computer sucks. I need a new one.
Are you kidding me? First of all, are you really that stupid that you think you can get something off the Internet if you’re not connected to it? And let me reiterate again. If you already think you know what you’re doing, why the hell are you calling me? If you ask me something, accept my answer. You’re the idiot, not me. I do this for a living. I know it’s hard for you, but please use your brain for at least 10 seconds and think this through.

You ride the short bus

I really don’t want to talk to you about how cool your stupid computer is. I work on computers all day, and don’t really care that you just bought a new Geforce video card or setup a wireless network all by yourself. Would you walk up to an accountant and say, “Dude, I did my taxes last week. Pretty cool huh?” Or talk to a clothing designer and say, “Hey, check it out. I got dressed all by myself today”. They don’t want to hear about it, and neither do I. If you have an intelligent question, I’m all ears. If you want to ask me how my day was, or what I do for a living that’s fine. But don’t assume that just because I’m an IT guy that I just can’t wait to talk to you about how your brother just got this new awesome system. All it does is put me in a bad spot.
Mr Bitter IT Guy thinking to himself: Should I tell this guy he’s a complete moron and has no idea what he’s talking about, or should I just let him keep blubbering about how he and his buddy spent all last weekend building their own computer from scratch.
I don’t care. I’ve done that a million times. It’s not cool to me. You ride the short bus to computer class. Next time why don’t you just tell the bus driver to drop you off at the nearest Kinder Care so you can talk about computers with someone on your own level.