Guidelines for users from the Technical Support department.
-
Don't write anything down. We can play back the error
messages from here.
-
When a tech says he's coming right over, go for coffee. It's
nothing to us to remember 4000 screen saver passwords.
-
When you call us to have your computer moved, be sure to
leave it buried under half a ton of postcards, baby pictures, stuffed
animals, dried flowers, bowling trophies and Popsicle art. We don't have a
life, and we find it deeply moving to catch a fleeting glimpse of yours.
-
When you call the help desk, state what you want, not what's
keeping you from getting it. We don't need to know that you can't get into
your mail because your computer won't power on at all.
-
Don't put your phone extension in your emails to the help
desk. We need to keep an eye on the address book performance.
-
When tech support sends you an email with high importance,
delete it at once. We're just testing the public groups.
-
When a tech is eating lunch in his cube, walk right in and
spill your guts right out. We exist only to serve.
-
When a tech is having a smoke outside, ask him a computer
question. The only reason why we smoke at all is to ferret out those clients
who don't have email or a telephone line.
-
Send urgent email all in uppercase. The mail server picks it
up and flags it as a rush delivery.
-
When you call a tech's direct line, press 5 to skip the
bilingual greeting that says he's out of town for a week, record your
message and wait exactly 24 hours before you send an email straight to the
director because no one ever returned your call. You're entitled to common
courtesy.
-
When the photocopier doesn't work, call computer support.
There's electronics in it.
-
When you're getting a NO DIAL TONE message at home, call
computer support. We can fix your line from here.
-
When you have a dozen CGA monitors to get rid of, call
computer support. We're collectors.
-
When something's wrong with your home PC, dump it on a
tech's chair with no name, no phone number and no description of the
problem. We love a puzzle.
-
If you hate your mouse, get some other pointing device and
discard the manual. We know all the keyboard accelerators.
-
When a tech tells you that computer monitors don't have
cartridges in them, argue. We love a good argument.
-
When you get a message about insufficient disk space, delete
everything in the Windows directory. It's nothing but trouble anyway.
-
When you get a message about a hard disk controller failure,
and then you reboot and it looks okay, don't call tech support. We'd much
rather troubleshoot it when it's dead as doornail.
-
When you have a tech on the phone walking you through
changing a setting, read the paper. We don't actually mean for you to do
anything; we just love to hear ourselves talk.
-
When a tech tells you that he'll be there shortly, reply in
a scathing tone of voice: "And just how many weeks do you mean by
shortly?" That'll get us going.
-
If you have a 14-inch monitor that says VGA on it, set the
display to true color, 1024 x 768. You'll never again have to worry about
people reading confidential files over your shoulder.
-
When we offer training on the upcoming OS upgrade, don't
bother. We'll be there to hold your hand after it's done.
-
When the printer won't print, re-send the job at least 20
times. Print jobs frequently get sucked into black holes.
-
When the printer still won't print after 20 tries, send the
job to all 68 printers in the branch. One of them is bound to work.
-
Don't learn the proper name for anything technical. We know
exactly what you mean by "my thingy's outta whack".
-
Don't use online help. Online help is for wimps.
-
If you're taking night classes in computer science, feel
free to go around and update the network drivers for your all your
co-workers. We're grateful for the overtime money.
-
When a tech makes popcorn, help yourself while he's checking
out your access rights. And we keep chocolate in the top drawer, too.
-
When you have a tech fixing your computer at a quarter past
noon, eat your lunch in his face. We function better when slightly dizzy.
-
Don't ever thank us. We're getting paid for this.
-
If you're a student, feel free to bring in all your friends
from uni and have your Daddy complain to our boss when we won't let them use
the scanner. We had no friends when we were at uni; that's why we're such a
bunch of tight-assed little twerps.
-
When a tech asks you whether you've installed any new
software on this computer, lie. It's nobody's business what you've got on
your computer.
-
When a tech finds the porno pictures in your Recycle Bin,
tell her you've never seen those before. We couldn't tell bullshit if it
kicked us in the face.
-
If you have NT, feel free to change the local
administrator's password to "blowjob" and promptly forget it. We
like installing NT.
-
If the mouse cable keeps knocking down the framed picture of
your dog, lift the computer and stuff the cable under it. Mouse cables were
designed to have 45 lbs. of computer sitting on top of them.
-
If the space bar on your keyboard doesn't work, blame it on
the mail upgrade. Keyboards are actually very happy with half a pound of
muffin crumbs and nail clippings in them.
-
When you receive the new Yanni CD for your birthday, shove
it into any slot on the front of your computer. We like getting physical
with 5.25 floppy drives.
-
When you get a message saying "Are you sure?",
click on that Yes button as fast as you can. Hell, if you weren't sure, you
wouldn't be doing it, would you?
-
When you find a tech on the phone with his bank, sit
uninvited on the corner of his desk and stare at him until he hangs up. We
don't have any money to speak of anyway.
-
Feel perfectly free to say things like "I don't know
nothing about that computer crap". We don't mind at all hearing our
area of professional expertise referred to as crap.
-
When you need to change the toner cartridge, call tech
support. Changing a toner cartridge is an extremely complex task, and
Hewlett-Packard recommends that it be performed only by a Professional
engineer with a master's degree in nuclear physics.
-
When you can't find someone in the government directory,
call tech support. Due to budget restrictions, we double as 013.
-
When you have a lock to pick on an old file cabinet, call
tech support. We love to hack.
-
When something's the matter with your computer, ask your
secretary to call the help desk. We enjoy the challenge of having to deal
with a third party who doesn't know jack shit about the problem.
-
When you receive a 30-meg movie file, send it to everyone as
a mail attachment. We got lots of disk space on that mail server.
-
Don't even think of breaking large print jobs down into
smaller chunks. Somebody else might get a chance to squeeze a memo into the
queue.
-
When your eyes fall on the family pictures on a tech's desk,
exclaim in a flabbergasted tone of voice: "YOU have a child?!?" We
need to be reminded of how lucky we were to ever have gotten laid.
-
When a tech gets on the elevator pushing $15,000 worth of
computer equipment on a cart, ask in a very loud voice: "Good grief,
you take the elevator to go DOWN one floor?!?" That's another one that
cracks us up no end.
-
When the Finance folks are printing a 100-page spreadsheet
on the LaserJet, send your black and white print job to the color printer.
We get the black toner for free.
-
When you lose your car keys in Canberra, send an email to
the entire department. People in Perth like to keep abreast of what's going
on.
-
When you bump into a tech at the grocery store on a
Saturday, ask a computer question. We don't do weekends.
-
When you see a tech having a beer with a member of the
opposite sex on a Friday night, walk right up to them and ask a computer
question. We don't do dating; the reason why we have that horny look on our
faces is because we're discussing the new Intel processor.
-
Don't bother to tell us when you move computers around on
your own. Computer names are just a cosmetic feature in NT 4.0; they won't
be doing anything useful until the next major release.
-
When you can't access some shared directory on your boss's
machine, just tell us that you've lost your X: drive. We know all that shit
by heart.
-
If your son is a student in computer science, have him come
in on the weekends and do his projects on your office computer. We'll be
there for you when his illegal copy of Visual Basic version 6.0 makes your
Access 95 database flip out.
-
When you bring your own personal home PC for repair at the
office, leave the documentation at home. We'll find the jumper settings on
the Internet.
-
We're aware of that problem with computers just sitting
there and not doing anything. We're confident that with the next service
pack they'll be able to dance the jig.
-
The correct location to store important files is the Recycle
Bin. It's just like a real office, where you keep your tax receipts in the
blue can under your desk.
-
If you miss Windows 3.1, find the line that goes shell=explorer.exe
in your SYSTEM.INI file and replace it with shell=progman.exe. It makes
troubleshooting infinitely easier when we ask you whether you have a Start
button at the bottom of your screen and you truthfully answer us that you
don't.
-
If you curse every morning when you start to type your
password and the Virus Shield splash screen pops up in your face, disable
the Virus Shield. Again, this is just like real life: if you don't like
condoms, just don't use them, that's all.
-
If you hate PCs, get on the Internet and download one of
those desktop enhancements that make your computer look just like a Mac,
down to the sad faces replacing verbose error messages. We find it
refreshing to troubleshoot the nuances in that sad little face instead of
some cold forbidding hexadecimal integer.
-
When you detect a French accent in a tech's voice, switch to
French. We don't mind that your level of fluency is that of a Mildly
retarded 4-year-old; you don't make a whole lot of sense in your own mother
tongue either.
-
We don't really believe that you're a bunch of ungrateful
twits. It hurts our feelings that you could even think such a thing. We wish
to express our deepest gratitude to the hundreds of clueless losers
portrayed herein, without whom none of this would have been remotely
possible.