BOFH '00. BOFH returns from the dead
BOFH '00. BOFH goes to Hollywood
BOFH '00. BOFH unmasks the Printer Smasher
So I'm into the swing of things at the new workplace and everything seems to
be running as bad as expected. The company's computing and networking is so
old it qualifies for a pension (and disability too).
The new helldesk people are everything we hoped for and less, as is continually
proven by their penchant for handing any call with a computing buzzword onto
us.
Some form of re-education is needed. Meantime, there are phones to answer.
"Hello, is that the operators?!" a voice demands.
"Yes it is, how can I help you?" I ask, pleasant as can be.
"The bloody printer in the 3rd floor documents room has gone off again."
"By 'off 'you mean?"
"It's not printing. It's NEVER bloody printing! You guys fix it, then an
hour later it breaks again!"
"I see. Which printer is it?"
"The grey one."
"Yes, but which printer is that?"
"The one by the window."
"Ok, pretend I just started here and have NO idea what you're talking about.
Do you know what the queue name is, or what the printer is called?"
"A Laserwriter II"
>Rocket Scientist Alert<
"No, I mean what... It doesn't matter. Does it break down all the time?"
"Yeah, it's ALWAYS being fixed."
"Right. In that case, go into the documents room and push it off the table
onto the floor."
"Pardon?"
"Push it onto the floor. Actually, it's based on a Canon engine and they're
fairly robust. Best thing to do would be to stand on the table and throw it
on the floor. Two or three times should be enough. Then say it fell or something."
"You can't be serious!"
"Look, it's probably done 5 squillion pages and got electric arthritis.
It won't be replaced till it's completely stuffed, and if I fix the paper jam
it's most probably got, it's only going to break again in a week or so, isn't
it?"
"I suppose you're..."
"Or course I'm right, I'm the bloody operator. BUT, if you give it a bit
of gravity maintenance it'll be ruined beyond fixing, and you'll get a nice
new printer - possibly a colour one so you'll get to see Miss Kornikova in all.."
"How did you know a.." he gasps.
(complete newbie)
"..her natural beauty and it'll print so fast you won't have to wait until
out-of-work hours to queue them!"
"I..."
"See my point? Of course you do."
"But they'll.."
"Do nothing. Just say you the printer wasn't on the table squarely. Of
course, as a cover story you'd want to mention to a couple of workmates beforehand
that you have a slight obsessive-compulsive orderly nature - nothing over-the-top,
and you're home and hosed!"
"But they'll know I did it on purpose!"
"Puleeeeze! Who'd believe you actually did it on purpose? You'd have to
be a loony to do that. The odd person might wonder about it, but like I said,
only a loony would do it. But remember to mention the tidying thing or it'll
look a bit strange that you wanted to move the printer..."
"You think it'll work?"
"I *KNOW* it'll work!"
"Why don't you do it then?"
"I've already got a colour printer. And it prints glossy pictures too.
Why, with that and the laminator on the 4th floor you could have yourself a
waterproof piccy that you could take int.."
"I'll do it!"
"Excellent - And remember the orderly thing."
"Yep!"
I ring off and call security - just like old times.
"Hello."
"Hi," I blurt, "Simon, Operations - I think I found the guy who's
been smashing up all the printers around the building -- he rang me up bragging
about it. I traced the call to the 3rd floor, I think he's planning to do over
one of the printers up there!"
"I'll get right onto it!" the guard blurts, slamming the phone and
no doubt waddling to the lift at full speed.
I get there in time to witness the grand finale where my caller gets a truncheon
in the groin and a quick trip to the Security office.
"He's been very upset with the printer lately," the kindly old wrinkle
at reception tells me, "but I never thought it would come to this. He's
obsessive-compulsive, you know!"
"Sad isn't it?" I respond, sympathetically flashing my ID Swipe card.
"Which was his desk? - I'd better make sure he's logged out."
She points me to a cubicle and I kill a little time dragging his files into
the trash. Except the Kornikova snaps of course - they go straight into the
OPS share with all the other good stuff. For a couple of further nails into
the old coffin, I delete anything he's got access to on his departmental share,
then shut the machine down.
. . .
"Sounds to me like the typical 'workplace disenfranchised user complex'
- we see it all the time." I say, consoling the boss over the phone, "One
day, out of nowhere, they just crack and try to subvert the system from within."
"Terrible," the boss agrees, "But it's an isolated occurrence?"
"Hard to tell" I murmur, slapping some heat-sensitive glue onto the
back of another blank sheet of A4 and picking a company printer at random, "Hard
to tell.."
BOFH '00. BOFH goes to Hollywood
BOFH '00. BOFH specs the Quake Box From Heaven
BOFH '00. BOFH masters the art of creative accounting
So
we've got a visitor in at Mission Control for the next couple of days who's
going to upgrade the main financial software package that the company uses.
And wouldn't you know it, his hourly rate (I happen to notice, when his briefcase
accidentally falls open after I trip and insert a paperclip into its lock) is
such that it brings a tear to even MY trained eye -- and I, not being unversed
in the arts of extortion and general larceny -- am fairly hard to surprise.
Of course, his disguising it as a DAILY RATE gives the impression, to naive
types (The Boss, The H.O.D and Technical Contracts Group), that you're getting
a lot more for your money that 7.5 hours. Well, 4.5 if we're to be completely
honest and subtract food/ beverage and newspaper breaks.
However, as they say, you're paid for what you know, not what you do...
"So what you're saying is that he's extremely overpaid?" the PFY asks
when I explain these facts to him.
"Why do you say that?"
"Cos he knows bugger all!"
"Well he won't be a computing jack-of-all-trades like us -- his forte is
no doubt the accounting application and it's installation."
"So why's he reading the upgrade documentation?"
"A lot of this stuff is highly complex, with hundreds of pre-upgrade procedures
to be carried out," I remind him. "So he's probably performing the
checklists. What section is he reading at the moment?"
"The introduction -- entitled 'How to use this documentation'."
"Well, he's probably..."
"He's been reading it for an hour now.."
"Ah"
"Ah?"
"Ah. Meaning, it sounds like we've got a suck-it-and-see upgrader."
"Suck it and see?"
"The old-fashioned way of checking if mains cable was live"
"You'd suck a cable?"
"Don't be silly -- that's dangerous! You'd get an apprentice to do it!"
"Oh. So what does it mean now?"
"It means I think he'll skim the upgrade text, ensure we have a complete
backup of the system, then rush blindly into the upgrade, accepting all defaults
-- KNOWING that he can recover the data if needed.
"Ah."
"Precisely. And if it works, he comes out looking smokingly good at his
job, if not there's 'some incompatibility with our software or with the upgrade
pack' and we roll back."
"Rollback?"
"Yes, it's a nice way of saying that you've made a pig's breakfast of the
whole thing and want the evidence erased by a recovery."
"Has anyone ever called you cynical?"
"They may have, but they're just bitter.."
Our conversation ends seconds later with the reappearance of the person concerned,
complete with upgrade manual and highlighter pen.
"Ah, just checking that you've taken a full system backup before I start."
"Sure have!" I lie, nudging the snapshot tapes into the bin as he
leaves the room.
...Several Hours later...
"I'm afraid we'll need to rollback the upgrade"
"Oh, why's that?"
"Looks like there's an incompatibility between your revision of the Database
code and the version the upgrader expects" he murmurs.
The needle on my desktop Bollockometer wanders off-scale for a moment or ten.
"Sure," I cry, grabbing a tape from the pile of read-errored duds
on my desk.
..10 Minutes Later...
"I'm afraid the tape we wrote has read errors and is unrecoverable,"
I report.
"I..." he gasps. "Didn't you read it to verify it?"
"Of course" I respond, ignoring the ticking sound as the Bollockometer
clocks itself "but my guess is that the read pass must have been the straw
that broke the camel's back -- media-wise!"
"Can't you recover ANY of the data?"
"Nope, the error's at the beginning of the tape -- as you'd expect of the
most used area of magnetic media," I burble.
"Oh dear," he says, only minorly apologetic. "Our statement of
indemnity clearly states that we're not responsi.."
"Statement of indemnity?"
"Yes, as a matter of course we get a signatory from our clients to indemnify
us if there are problems as a result of the upgrade. I have it with me in my
brie.. ..Hmm, it's in here somewhe..."
"Oh dear. Don't tell me you've forgotten to get an indemnity form signed.
And I just BET you're a private contractor who signed an indemnity form with
your agency indemnifying THEM ?"
"I..."
"Which means it'll be you *personally* that our company will be pursuing
for damages..."
"I..."
"Unless, of course... But then..."
"Unless what?!?!?!"
"Well unless of course you re-enter all the data from the ruined tables
into the database before the beancounters get in the morning..."
"But the corrupt table's got about 200,000 rows!"
"Yep, it'd take ages to re-enter. Unless you somehow managed to bribe all
the women in our D.P. Pool to do it for you..."
"COULD I?!?!" he gasps.
"I dunno -- sounds a bit pricey to me!" the PFY chirps, right on time
"You'd be lookingat, I dunno, a couple of grand."
"I can manage two thousand pounds!" he blurts.
"Ah, that would be THREE thousand pounds -- by the time my assistant, myself,and
the Head of DP are taken into account."
"Would you take a ch.."
"CASH. If you hurry you could get it before the banks close and the DP
staff leave."
It takes about 10 minutes for him to rocket out of the building and collect
the wherewithal to make the transaction. I assure him the DP people will work
till it's done, or take the blame themselves for the error -- which appeases
his distress largely.
As soon as he's gone, I slip the PFY his share (500 quid) ignoring his protestations.
"Was it YOU who split the disk mirror this very morning?" I ask whilst
invalidating the data on the upgrade disk with a few well-placed keystrokes
and bringing the old version Online with only a few more. "Was it YOU who
stole the indemnity form from his briefcase? I think not! You got paid for your
two parts in this -- your estimate of the DP Pool cost at the right moment.."
"And?"
"Those pints you're about to buy me!"
"Of course!"
BOFH '00. agony uncle and bastard
"Hold on while I pull the answer to that question out of my ARSE!"
the PFY spits down the phone to some poor, unsuspecting user...
...who, admittedly, deserves it.
Nonetheless, the PFY's attitude is a little more abrasive than usual, so I feel
it's best to defuse the situation by taking the "Softly Softly" approach
and finding out what's up.
"You're running hotter than a 486 DX-1 Million with no water cooling --
what's getting on your tits then?" I cry, as soon as he's slammed down
the receiver.
(Softly Softly means you’ve got to be cruel to be kind.)
Sure enough, as expected, (and yet again), the lad's been unlucky in love. Seems
his latest dream date prefers the company of other blokes. Not LOTS of other
blokes, thank goodness, just one other bloke...
In our building...
"Well, you know what I always say..." I respond when the sordid story
is at last recounted to me.
"Kill -9 needs no justification?"
"Yes, but NO, that wasn't what I was thi.."
"A fool and his password are soon parted?"
"Ah No, was thinking more along the lines of.."
"An outage in time saves backup tapes?"
"NO! I always say 'Forgive and Forget!'"
"No you don't!! You'veNEVER said that!"
"Haven't I? I'm sure I have! What about that time that bean counter pushed
in front of me at the lunch queue?"
"The guy you tripped and subsequently face-planted the very hot beef curry?"
"An accident which meant noth..."
"And who got back to his workplace to find his machine on fire..."
"A Cooling Fan problem, completely unrelated to anyth.."
"..His gas-operated chair discharged.."
"Normal gaseous loss from a pneumatic device..."
"..And his family portrait hideously disfigured."
"Now WAIT JUST A MINUTE! It was hideously disfigured before I got there.
True, that's what his family looks like, but at least my modifications made
it look a bit less like a group photo from the Gorilla house."
"And that's forgiving and forgetting is it?"
"Of course. He's forgiven now - and I'd forgotten all about it until you
brought it all back up again."
"I don't think that's what people mean by forgive and forget."
"But revenge is an integral part of forgiving and forgetting! How can you
forgive if you carry a grudge? That bean counter now has a clean slate with
me - we've got a normal User/System Manager relationship now!"
"So why did you delete his file share yesterday?"
"Because we have a normal User/System Manager relationship! Anyway, he
rang to complain about his share quota, which is just GAGGING for it!"
The PFY can see this conversation is going nowhere fast, and opts out with a
small sigh and a forlorn look.
"So what does this bloke DO here?"
"He's something in marketing - don't know much more than that."
"His Name perhaps?" I ask, prompting as much as possible.
"'Dave' is all I know."
"Right, well let's just abuse the privacy of the corporate Database and
see who he is... >clickety click<. So, there's THREE Davids in marketing
- which is at the far end of the bellcurve if you ask me - And >clickety<
TWO of them are over 50, which I'm assuming puts them out of your beloved's
perfect match criteria, which leaves us wanting to check out the contents of
the local email of machine PCMKT14 >clickety<, which for some reason doesn't
allow Domain Admin access. So next up we check out the voicemail on...."
"It'll never work!" the PFY cries. "Voicemail is Pin Code protected
and only the telecoms engineer can bypass it! It's foolproof!"
We laugh, grab the audio file from the voicemail server, and play it. I leave
the pointer poised over the STOP button in case it gets a little hairy. So to
speak. Everything is however fairly run-of-the-mill and work related.
"Right!" I cry, grabbing a large black box with an RJ45 connector,
"Time for a flyby. Patch this into his Network line in Comm Room 4, Port
uh.. >Clickety< E31./"
"What is it?"
"It's a, uh... network card.. tester.... *OH*, if it gets wet don't try
and pick it up!"
A quarter of an hour later we get a call about a machine with a burning smell…we
decide to be proactive and visit the user.
"It just made this very high pitched squeal for about 20 seconds and stopped,"
Dave informs us.
"Really? Probably some intermodulation distortion with the carrier wave
peak."
***DUMMY MODE ON***
"Duh-huh. Is it broken?"
"Very, we're going to need to take it away."
"Oh. For how long?"
"Oh, only a couple of... I say, I'd get your chair seen to - it looks like
it's lost all its gas - you'd want to.. MY GOODNESS, that's not your FAMILY
is it?"
"W-WHAT THE HELL HAVE YOU DONE TO MY PHOTOS!"
"Done to your photos?" the PFY asks, "I'm holding a PC, I can't
do anything to anything! Next you'll be blaming me for urinating in your pot
plant while you were disconnecting the cables under the desk!"
"Don't be ridiculous! The plant people have obviously been!"
"Oh, my mistake. Still, at least you've got a coffee to keep you going
while we look at your machine -- drink up.."
It's a bit obvious, however, that Dave fails to notice the warning signs (the
PFY's keenness, the overfull mug) and quaffs deeply...
Later, at Mission Control, after we've dissected the contents of his hard drive
to no avail and drop-tested his machine a dozen times, the PFY makes some calls...
"Uh..." he says, popping back to the service desk.
"MMMmmm.."
"It was, ah, DOUG, not DAVE..." he murmurs sheepishly.
"Oh dear... Still - you've got to laugh! Anyway," I cry, handing him
the network card tester again. "Best test Doug's card then!"
BOFH '00. TWAT O
And what is this
supposed to achieve?" the PFY asks, dubiously looking over a project proposal
the boss has handed out with no small amount of gusto and enthusiasm.
"The plan is to lighten the administrative load on us and the new Helldesk
types by training up the most proficient computer user in each area to act as
a first-line-of-defence type, who can eliminate all the simple day-to-day problems
that plague us so much."
"You think it'll work?"
"About as likely as an unplagiarised Look-and-Feel interface."
"So you don't think the candidates are the full quid?"
"48p at best."
"Well I spo.."
"They couldn't retain WATER without studying first.."
"Yes, but..."
"They think firewalls are used in chimneys!"
"Yes, and you'l..."
"That only Jenny Craig makes thin clients..."
"U.."
"The only hardware they've ever handled's in the bedroom - and even that
was bug-ridden. They think that Linux is a character from Charlie Brown.. That
>BZZERT<"
The PFY, spotting a potential re-entrant mental loop, resets me with the help
of his trusty cattle-prod connectivity tester. (Which he'll regret later)
"So, what'll we teach them?" he asks thoughtfully..
"The very basics - how to put the lid back on a PC, get the CAPS LOCK key
off, where the Power switch is, what a network cable looks like - that sort
of thing."
"I see," he says, looking as doubtful as I feel.
. . .
"Now can anyone tell me the most important thing about computing safety?"
I ask, looking around the audience to see if any of the assembled people has
any answers. And of course WHENEVER you have one of these sessions there's always
some complete TWAT (pardon my Russian) in the audience who was programming an
Apple ][E in his nappies who has a thousand and one pointless, irrelevant and
meandering stories to tell you about the foibles of the 6502 instruction set.
And when he's not doing that, he's correcting your monologue with snippets from
the 'Pedant's Guide to Computing Knowledge'."
Ok, so I'm just slightly bitter.
"Bound to be the power supply!" today's installation of TWAT informs
us. "Lots of voltage in a switched mode power supply, stacked up in a electrolytic
capacitor and able to be discharged up to an hour after a device is unplugged
from the wall."
See what I mean?
"No!" I cry, "But we'll come back to that later. For now, we'll
talk about the SECOND most important thing about computing safety, which is
to secure your machine from unwanted accesses. Remember, a secure machine is
a safe machine! Now how would we choose a good password?"
"A pseudo random string of alphanumerics and symbols with mixed case,"
TWAT blurts, before anyone's had a chance to take in the question.
Because of the technical nature of the response, a couple of the onlookers are
fooled into nodding their head in agreement.
"NO!" I cry enthusiastically, adding a hint of conspiracy into the
pot. "That's just what they'd be expecting you to do!"
"What who'd be expec..?" my Royal pain asks.
"Industrial Spies!" I comment, lowering my voice "Believe it
or not, industrial espionage exists - even at our paltry level of commerce.
Sometimes it's just information they want - sometimes they want to disrupt our
processes!
Why just last week three people in accounting came to work to find their hard
disks completely erased and all the DIMM chips removed from their machines!"
A gasp of horror flows around the room, even though 98% of them wouldn't know
a DIMM if the found one in their coffee.
"But they'd have to get in the building to steal DIMMs, so your password
wouldn't matter," TWAT comments "They could take your harddrive away
and just examine the contents. With the new magnetic aura detection they could
read the files that you'd previously erased, even if you used an aggressive
overwriting packa.."
RIGHT! I've had enough!
"You're right, of course," I cry, pandering to the whole self-worth
experiment underway in front of me,"which is why I've asked for a massive
increase in the security budget! Anyway, that's enough about security, now onto
hardware. Memory Errors! Can anyone tell me the recommended way to reseat the
DIMMs in this box here?"
No prizes for guessing who's up, complete with wrist strap (which he brought
with him - sadder still) before I can finish the sentence.
"Well on this one you turn the power off at that wall >CLICK< then
flip the key to the unlock position like so >SNICK< push the two buttons
at the back like this >CLICK< then lift the cover up and towards you,
and Bob's your second cousin."
"Right, and now the reseating?"
"Simple, these are the DIMMs here, and you reseat them by taking them out
like so >ZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzzzz...<
"Now what has he done wrong here?" I ask the fireworks spectators.
>ZzzzzzZZzZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ<
"That's right, he's forgotten to check for a UPS unit in this cardboard
box marked 'Printer Paper'!"
>ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZeeeeeeerrrrrrrrrrrrrr... <
"And he failed to notice that someone's dropped an unfolded paper clip
into the machine which has, by a one-in-a-million chance got connected between
the Phase line in the power supply and the DIMM chip!"
. . .
Of course I switch the UPS off, eventually... ..and he's still bloody going!!
"I can't believe that UPS unit isn't isolated from ground!" he gasps
"It must be faulty - someone should fill out a >ZZZZZZZZZZEEERRRRT!<
"Woopsy," I cry, as my little helper plops to the ground in a daze.
"Now, can anyone tell me the most important thing about Computing Safety?"
I ask.
"Not to piss you off?" someone murmurs from the back.
And who says you can't teach people things?
BOFH '00. BOFH tracks down Arsonist
BOFH '00.
BOFH plays with Maggot
By:
Posted: 17/03/2000 at 14:34 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 10
"But my password CAN'T have expired," the user whines down the line
at me "I only updated it this morning!"
"If by UPDATED you mean changed it from 'maggot21' to 'maggot22', you're
out of luck I'm afraid, the new password system won't permit you to do that
any longer."
"But I like the word Maggot!"
"And I like the words Grievous Bodily Harm, but I don't use them as a password.
Not any more, anyway. "
"But I've never had these problems before!" he wheedles.
"That's right - the password change checker we had in place before today
would have let you change your password to anything - even a single letter."
"Really?" the user gasps, obviously thinking about how much time they
might have saved in logins..
"Yes really. But luckily for us it's been replaced with a far more secure
option."
"I still liked Maggot," he cries,"Why can't it let me use Maggot
again? Could you change it so it forgets about my old passwords."
"I could, but I'm not going to - that's just insecure. And besides we..."
>click< Our verbal exchange gets abruptly cut short when I hang up the
phone on myself.
"What'd you do that for?" the PFY asks.
"Its' the first rule of hanging up on people - ALWAYS do it when *you're*
talking. That way they don't believe you'd hang up on them!"
"Hello?" I respond.
"We must have got disconnected!" The user says, "the phone just
went dead!"
"Yeah, we've been having problems with crossed exchange trunks here, I
think BT's switching us around the city as we keep getting mix.." >Click<
The PFY smiles knowingly, the penny finally dropping.
The phone rings again, and Caller-ID Indicates it's our whiney user again...
"Hello Israeli Embassy, how may I help you please?" the PFY cries,
complete with very poor imitation of his impression of an Israeli accent. .
.
..and again..
"Australian Embassy Mate, what can I do you for?"
...and so it goes...
"LOOK I KNOW IT'S THE BLOODY OPERATORS, IT SAYS SO ON THIS PHONE!"
the user cries angrily.
"That's no way to talk to an Ambassador!" I say, grabbing the handset
from the PFY.
"Look, I want my bloody password set back to what it was!"
"Well I'll see what I ca..." >click<
>ring<
"Why're you hanging up on me?!"
"We're no.." >click<
>ring<
"Networks and Systems, Hel.." >click<
>ring<
"Ne..." >click<
>ring<
>click<
So now the PFY and I have to hide in the tape safe room, while The Boss performs
his rampage around the office routine, involving lots of stamping around the
department looking for us. All good fun really - just a pity the pubs aren't
open. The PFY and I have a bet about how many circuits of the floor The Boss'll
do before he gives up - just to pass the time.
"Boss is a bit energetic today," I comment, handing over five quid
after he exceeds his personal record of three circuits.
"He's been taking Vitamin Capsules," the PFY comments, "I saw
them on his desk."
"No, actually he's been taking hormone replacement tablets INSIDE vitamin
capsules," I respond, with just a hint of smugness.
"You complete bastard!"
"Nah, I'm not really. Next week, when I swap them for diuretics, or slow-acting
laxative -- I haven't quite decided -- THEN I'm a complete bastard."
"You locking the toilet doors again?"
"All but the one with the bowl that isn't screwed down properly, yes."
"You complete bastard!"
"Yeah, I spose you're right.."
Sneaking out of the tape room after a supposedly safe period, we run straight
into The Boss.
"Which of you bastards expired my bloody password!" he cries, entering
the room.
"Bastards?" I ask in a shocked and slightly hurt manner.
"I know you had something to do with it!"
"I just installed some new software, but that was all. What was your password?"
"A"
"As in the letter?"
"Yes, I don't have time to waste typing all those letters. Anyway, who
would guess I had a one letter password?!"
"Good point! And you have electronic authorisation of purchases up to WHAT
amount again?"
"That's irrelevant, there's been no problems before!"
"Yes, Pity. Anyway, there's nothing we can do about it, it's state of the
art software which the company needs."
"The company didn't need it before - where the hell did it come from?!"
"Oh, I saw it on TV once and remembered it when I saw an ad in a magazine."
"ON TV?!! You bought something you saw on TV!?" he gasps in mock horror,
obviously thinking infomercials.
"Well yes. I was only watching Beyond 2000 to see the advances in superconductors
and I..."
"Beyond 2000!" The Boss cries in revered tones, rapid about-face in
progress. "Oh, I didn't know. Ah well, I suppose a six letter password
is OK then."
"An eight-letter password, one of which has to be non-alphabetic, yes."
"I... Yes, it's probably wise," he comments, making his exit
"Uh, what just happened there?" the PFY asks.
"The old 'Beyond 2000' ploy -- mention you MIGHT have seen something on
'Beyond 2000' and the credibility of the product goes up tenfold. Course, you
might have seen it on the coffee table while you were watching -- so it's not
strictly porkies, and would pass a polygraph if necessary."
"You're joking!"
"Not a bit of it! So long as you don't overuse it, you could tell a lotech
that you saw an article on B2K saying that Electricity helped typing speed and
you'd have people
shoving paperclips in line cords in no time!"
"Crap!"
"It's true, it's just an extension of the *DUMMY* *MODE* principle."
Our conversation is interrupted again by our whiner.
"About my password.." he starts.
"It's some new software I saw when I was watching Beyond 2000!" the
PFY cries.
"REALLY?" the user cries excitedly, to the PFY's disgust "Well,
in that case I guess.."
"You'll change your password?" I prompt.
"I guess so.
"Well, it's an eight-character minimum, one of which cannot be a letter."
"You're joking!"
"No, but if it's the extra typing you're worried about, I saw this other
thing while watching Beyond 2000...."
Like shooting fish in a barrel..
BOFH '00.
BOFH discovers Voice Recognition
By:
Posted: 23/03/2000 at 16:49 GMT
BOFH 2000: Chapter 11
"Look at this baby," I say to the PFY, with more than a little bit
of pride, indicating a PC with an afro of wires and parts spewing from its open
lid.
"Yep, you've stuffed that one up alright - they won't be using THAT machine
for a long time!" the PFY agrees cheerily.
"What?!"
"That PC - You've rooted it up completely!"
"It's not rooted, it's ready for work!"
"Anchor work? Doorstop work?" the PFY asks unkindly.
"NO, it can do our JOB for us!"
"Bollocks!" the PFY responds, as well he should, from past experience
with rash statements like this.
"Five quid says it will!"
"Ten says it won't!"
"You're on! Phone this number," I respond, pointing to a label on
the internals of a phone in the heart of the tangle.
The PFY dutifully phones and a ring sound emerges from the heart of the machine.
"Hello, Networks and Systems, how may I help?" the PFY's voice asks.
"Hello?" the PFY responds.
"Networks and Systems, how may I help?" the PFY's voice again asks.
A penny drops in the PFY's brain. "You've put me into a Speech Recog IVR
System!" he gasps.
"I'm sorry, I'm not quite sure what you mean, could you rephrase that please?"
the PFY's voice continues.
"Uh, I've got a problem with my system."
"You have a problem with your system?"
"Yes it's not booting properly."
"You say it's not booting properly?"
"It's an Eliza program!" the PFY gasps.
"You have a problem with your Eliza Programme?"
"No, it's my hard disk!"
"It's your hard disk?"
"Yes, it's making funny noises"
"Your hard disk is making funny noises?"
"Hey!" the PFY comments, covering the mouthpiece. "This thing
has history!"
"Of course!" I respond, "But even the simplest Eliza's had that!"
"It'll get a bit tedious if it only asks questions. The callers are bound
to figure it out..."
"Don't be silly - there's more to it than that, just continue - before
it times out."
"Yes, my hard disk is making funny noises!"
"How long has this been happening?"
"Phase Two," I murmur, "Information gathering. Currently there's
only three possible questions: 'How long has this been happening?'; 'Has anyone
else had this problem?'; and 'Is it your floor that has the Gas Leak?'"
"Gas Leak?"
"Yeah, I couldn't think of a third question, but I figured that that would
end the call quickly."
"A couple of hours," the PFY says.
"It's been happening a couple of hours? Hmmm. Was there any diagnostic
message?"
"No" the PFY comments.
"Well it SOUNDS like a hard disk problem..."
"Duh.." the PFY comments, rolling his eyes.
"Which is probably caused by...."
The sounds of hefty random-access disk activity clatter come from the internals
of the machine.
"...Resonant Harmonic Distortion."
The Machine leaves a decent interval for DUMMY MODE to engage before continuing.
"...Although it's difficult to tell for certain in these cases."
"RESONANT HARMONIC DISTORTION! WHAT A LOAD OF BOLLOCKS!"
"Woopsy!" I cry "Bollocks is a Mode-Change Trigger Phrase"
"It's not uncommon to find Harmonic Resonance causing... >clatter<
...electronic distortion in Data Transfers..."
"Mode Change?" the PFU asks, mouthpiece covered.
"..although it could be a network file share giving spurious errors. What
was your username, and I'll check those out?"
"AH! Aggression mode-change. Like I'd give it my username!" the PFY
murmurs.
"You'd better, or it'll use the username of the owner of the phone line."
"This thing's got access to Caller ID as well?" the PFY cries, impressed.
"Caller ID is the tip of the iceberg! It's got your HR records, your car
park number, your voicemail box, and your browsing history. Mention 'You Wankers'
or some other trigger phrase one more time and it'll send a list of your top
10 web pages to your boss - if they're in the 'dodgy list'. Mention it twice,
it schedules a job for a random number of minutes after 2am, then orders Pizzas
and Minicabs round to your home address!"
"So if it's got access to that, why does it ask for a username?"
"Just being thorough. And for historic reasons of course."
The PFY gives the username of some soon-to-be poor bastard in accounts and mentions
a couple of trigger phrases for good measure.
"Just stress-testing the application," he murmurs.
"That's another thing I almost - Voice stress detection!"
"Voice stress, AND a pretty good Recog. How does it work?"
"Well the Speech Recog's a piece of turd, but luckily the technical vocab
required is fairly small, so it's pretty accurate. And the reason people call
us is always fairly much the same, so it works out pretty well. The Stress detection
is used to see how quickly you get wound up and stashes it, along with the conversation,
for our future reference..."
"Ok" the machine responds "I think we may have sorted this problem
out..."
"I.e. deleted all your shared files, changed your password to WONKER and
arranged to have your car towed," I comment.
"...although it may take an hour or so for the System synchronisations
to get propagated to your desktop."
"And there's the sign-off. So, what do you think?"
"It doesn't sound very dynamic."
"Dynamism - if it's a real word - is overrated," I respond. "Anyway,
successful demo complete, time for my lunch!"
. . .
Seconds later, I'm wandering past The Boss' office when he calls me in.
"My Application's frozen!" he sniffs.
"Oh, I'm actually on my way out, but... you can get the PFY on.... >scribble<
..this number."
"Right."
"Oh, and and could you tell him those passwords he was looking for were:
>scribble< Yew Anchors, >scribble< Ute Ossers, and >scribe- scribe<
Far Queue. If you could just pass that on..."
BONUS!
BOFH '00.
BOFH moonlights CRAP SOFTWARE
By:
Posted: 30/03/2000 at 12:50 GMT
BOFH 2000: Chapter 12
Some mornings, you just KNOW that someone up there is working against you. (Fifth
floor, not God, obviously.)
And so it is that an internal mail envelope negotiates it's way to The Boss's
desk, into his bin, out of his bin, over to the coffee station, to the toilets,
back to his desk, gets opened, stared at blankly for 10 minutes, gets a couple
of the larger words within it looked up in the dictionary, has a few scrawly
notes taken from it, gets taken back to the coffee station, back to the toilet,
back to the coffee station, then to my office.
I assume...
"Just take a look at this, will you?" the boss mumbles as he slaps
over a mass of glossy brochures designed to impress the mentally feeble.
"It's a bit of bog paper," I comment.
"What?! Oh, yes, how did that get there. No, not that, this!" he responds,
shaking the offending scrap of double ply tissue free.
"What is it precisely?" I ask.
"Ah, it's some new software to make our business run smoother," he
chirps, hurriedly.
"Really? I don't suppose there'd be much of a market for any other kind
of software," I respond drily, "Unless of course OS2 makes a comeback.."
"Yes, yes, of course" he mutters to himself, obviously sidetracked
with the weighty task of wondering what's on the lunch menu. "But give
this a quick shufti and tell me what you think."
"Righto," I concede. "It's a set of colourful brochures, printed
on.. 100 gsm paper, using a dithering process not unlike what you'd get in any
glo..."
"THE SOFTWARE IN THE BROCHURES!" he snaps.
"Oh, the software! Well, lets have a look then."
My first estimations are correct. The "THE SOFTWARE YOUR BUSINESS *CANNOT*
TO IGNORE!!!" banner is a dead giveaway. "TEN YEARS IN DEVELOPMENT!"
just reinforces it.
"It's a piece of crap!"
"How can you say that - you haven't even looked inside!"
"I don't need to look inside, these brochures are all the same. Inside
the cover will be some bulletpointed stats supporting whatever they're trying
to hawk, a small picture of a weedy guy in glasses with a Phd in Computer Science
who loves it, and names of companies sad enough to have bought a copy of it.
On the back page is the SPECIAL, ONE TIME OFFER."
"I hardly think that..." he falters, as he opens the document to discover
I was right. "Well, I'm sure that it's well-researched."
"Well-plagiarised, more likely."
"But it's developed by seasoned professionals who understand business orientation
- a fact which helped it rapidly become the... uh... undisputed market leader
in... Message Protocol Middleware!"he blurts, partially from memory, partially
relying upon the front page of the top brochure.
"RAPIDLY BECOME THE UNDISPUTED MARKET LEADER IN.." I remark, "In
other words: 'We've just thought up a new way of doing the same old thing, slapped
a buzz-phrase on it and are the market leader because no-one else has heard
of it!"
"I hardly think..."
Oh Look!" I cry, pointing to the PFY, "Here comes the person who rapidly
became the undisputed leader in carrying cable from the storeroom. Or, as we
call it 'Physical Data-Carrier Warehousing Management'."
"Yes, yes, very funny, but I think.."
"Hang on, I'm just getting a call on what has rapidly become the undisputed
leader in Technical Communications protocol," I cry, answering my phone,
"Do you think it might be the person who has rapidly become the market
leader in Nutrition-Based Vending Feedback - asking if I want mustard on my
lunch?"
"You're a very cynical person," The Boss sighs sadly, shaking his
head as he makes towards the door.
"CYNICAL!" I cry, trying - and failing - to keep a grip. "That's
Computer Sales - an industry created to give used car dealers a second career
option!"
But it's too late, The Boss has gone.
"What was that about?" the PFY asks.
"Crap software alert."
"Undisputed Market Leader in Message Protocal Middleware?" the PFY
asks.
"Yes - how did you know?"
"Saw it days ago - I chucked your copy in the bin, though."
"Thanks. So what was the Message Protocol Middleware software anyway?"
"A patch of a public domain email package with your company's logo in the
startup banner."
"Smooth. How come you know so much about it?"
"It's my brochure!" the PFY admits smugly.
"YOU'RE MOONLIGHTING CRAP SOFTWARE!?!?" I cry, mildly disappointed
in the lack of the PFY's character, "Without cutting me in!?"
"Nah, you're the second brochure - 'Undisputed Leader in Platform Independent
Data Transferral'..."
"?"
"FTP. With your Company's banner, etc."
"What's it wholesaling at?"
"The whole package - four quid per licensed user."
"Bugger."
"Too expensive?" the PFY asks.
"No, I just bagged it in front of The Boss. Now he'll need more convincing."
"Damn. We could fake a Press Release from Gartner?"
"Too obscure for him - he doesn't even know who they are!"
"Photoshop-enhanced photo of Gates holding a copy of the software?"
"Warmer, but we really need something with credibility.."
"Fake cover of a Computer Rag!"
"A SCORCHER!" I cry.
. . .
Half a day and one more glossy page later, the boss is sold and the orders are
coming in. As an added bonus, he's told one of his mates in another company
about it and he's keen too...
Integrity is the key. Once you can fake that...
BOFH '00.
BOFH interpretation
skills test - try it if you DARE
By:
Posted: 06/04/2000 at 14:35 GMT
BOFH 2000: Chapter 13 (THAT's unlucky...)The Bastard wants to know: how're your
interpretation skills?
Interpret the following:
1. You get called by the most recent in a looooong line of saleswomen for a
large software company. Judging from past experience, she'll be absolutely gorgeous
and know as much about computing as Sonny Bono did about skiing through trees.
She proceeds to tell you that the product she's just received, which, believe
it or not, is the best thing that she's ever seen. You know immediately:
A. It's an excellent and well-researched product
B. It's probably a fairly good product
C. It's crap
D. There is no product, they're selling vaporware, but you're going to buy one
anyway.
2. An Engineer visits your site and, after setting a new speed record for ripping
the guts out of your kit and stuffing most of it back in the box, pronounces
it fixed and ready for action. This means:
A. It'll work till he gets back to the office
B. It'll work till he gets to his car
C. It'll work till he gets in the lift
D. He's turned it off at the wall so that it won't catch fire till he's out
of the building
3. One of your users calls up to see what sort of back-ups you keep. He assures
you that he has NOT deleted any files at all, and his system is sound. This
means:
A. He's just checking on back-up policy out of interest
B. He's deleted a file that it would take a small amount of time to recreate
C. He's deleted a file that it would take a large amount of time to recreate
D. He's deleted someone ELSE's file, and now knows not to own up to it
4. The beancounters deep-six one of your equipment purchase orders because they
say it's too expensive. What they REALLY mean is:
A. It's too expensive
B. It's slightly expensive, and more research might find a less expensive option.
C. They say that to anything over 50 quid.
D. They want a morning of power surges and file share outages.
5. Your Boss rolls into your office with a fist full of Purchase orders that
haven't yet been signed. He tells you that he's going to need justification
documents for the kit you've proposed to buy. He obviously means:
A. He has to answer to the Head of Department like everyone else
B. He has to justify expenditure like everyone else
C. He's no what the kit IS, but doesn't want to look stupid.
D. He's got his eyes set on a new laptop+desktop combo, which your purchases
are going to put the kybosh on.
6. Security sends a memo around informing everyone that they'll be running their
usual site-safety workplace/office check in the next few days. What they really
mean is:
A. Office safety is paramount and they're concerned about accidents
B. Office security is paramount and they're concerned about break- ins
C. They've noticed the similarity between the marks on the door of the vending
machines and the pry bar that you keep for "floor tile removal"
D. The head of security wants his safe back.
7. You're reading a trade mag which tells you that a certain popular operating
system of the 80s is making a comeback. In plain terms this means:
A. Serious development has produced results at OS/2 central
B. Serious money has produced results at VMS central
C. Guru Meditation has produced results at Amiga central
D. Alcohol has produced results at the editorial office
8. You're looking for new staff when a slave trader rings you with a fantastic
person to join your team. From your experience with slave traders, you know:
A. The applicant will be perfect for your needs
B. The applicant will probably be OK
C. The applicant will probably recognise a computer if they see one
D. The applicant won't find their way to your office
9. You're at a trade show where the latest and greatest hardware is available
for perusal. The demonstrator of the kit in front of you (which looks EXACTLY
like the kit the boss bought last year) tells you that their product is the
new version with twice the performance for half the cost!!! You realise:
A. The kit is AMAZING!
B. The kit sounds amazing
C. The boss would think it was amazing
D. It's amazing they had the balls to turn up at the show!
How did you do?
Mostly A
You are green aren't you? Are you sure you're not Management reading forbidden
literature? Meantime I have an attractive land package in Leeds known for it's
tourist draw-card mini-putt course...
Mostly B
Or maybe YOU'RE the Manager in the pie. I know there's one in here somewhere,
sniffing about.
Mostly C
That's more like it. The tinge of cynicism and worldly experience. With a little
bit of practice you could become and asset to society.
Mostly D
COME ON DOWN! We have a winner! You're not fooled by the thin veil of lies used
so often by other parties to obscure their real purpose (trying to take you
for a ride). Congratulations. Now, about that Leeds investment...
BOFH '00.
BOFH signs up for M$ soap slush fund
By:
Posted: 12/04/2000 at 07:04 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 14
So the PFY and I are having a chuckle at Microsoft's Anti- Piracy Message in
Popular Soap Opera Initiative when we see a disturbing sight. No, not a development
license for OS2 software signed by The Boss, Even worse...
"Who's that then?" the PFY asks, indicating a young suited lad industriously
engaged in checking the speed setting of his naso- anal interface with The Boss.
"Looks disgustingly like one of the 'new breed' of techos," I respond,
"judging by the well pressed suit, the belt that matches the shoes, AND
the ostentatiously silk tie.."
"What's he want?"
"MY guess is he's some protg of The Boss's - mowed his lawns as a kid or
something - who's worked his way through college and considers himself a dab
hand at computing. In fact, I'd go so far as to say that The Boss is grooming
him for the vacancy in IT."
"There's no vacancy in IT!"
"Oh, didn't I tell you?" I comment. "You're about to be let go.
Something to do with unprofessional conduct."
"What?"
"Yes, apparently they think that you throwing that Beancounter's monitor
out the window was a little over the top."
"I was degaussing it by moving it through a static magnetic field."
"Static Magnetic field?"
"The *Earth's* Magnetic field!"
"Of course. However, I think the bit they objected to was that it was tied
to the beancounter concerned."
"It got caught on his clothing!"
"Caught with a double reef knot?"
"I don't know anything about that" he lies unconvincingly. "Anyway,
how do YOU know about it?"
"I happened to receive a piece of misaddressed email on the subject."
"Misaddressed to whom?"
"The CEO."
"And how's that misaddressed?"
"In the manner that anything you want kept secret shouldn't be addressed
to the CEO."
"Ah. So what's it to be?"
"High Jump for you, I'm afraid - Not quite as high as The Beancounter's
was mind - and you won't be landing heavily amongst monitor parts on the top
of a heavy freight vehicle - but a high jump nonetheless. And then I'll have
the pleasure of the new guy's company till he decides to further his career
elsewhere."
"So I should reapply for the contract in two weeks?"
"One week should be sufficient."
So sure enough, it happens - the PFY gets to go to an INTERVIEW from which he
doesn't return. And in his place I get a kid so shiny and new he almost smells
of furniture polish. And dead keen to make an impression - and not on the footpath
outside, sadly.
"Hi, I'm David - I've just finished a degree in Computing and Networking
and am really keen to put it into practice!" he chirps, grasping me
enthusiastically by the hand.
"I know you guys have been at the Rock Face for ages, but hopefully I can
bring you up to speed with the fantastic advances in technology in the ten or
so years since you last visited the industry."
I stifle the feelings of nausea and ill-will and indicate that he should follow
me to visit a few clients - that should put the fear of God into him. First
stop, the Serial Whiner, to break his spirit. I mention he should make a minor
alteration to her machine, (ie. move the mouse), which'll mean the next 1000
problems she has will be his fault.
Phase Two is to get him some unsolvable technical problem which will stress
him out majorly.
"...and it just crashes all the time!" the user burbles.
"Well it's funny you should mention that, because a Windows Professional
magazine that I was reading just yesterday says that the leading cause of crashes
is installation of pirated software. You don't insta..
WE INTERRUPT THIS EPISODE FOR A SUBLIMINAL MESSAGE FROM PARTS OF THE SOFTWARE
VENDING COMMUNITY.
PFY: Gosh, I think Software Piracy is bad, and would not like to think that
someone who pirates software would associate themselves with my fictitious character.
Especially Microsoft Products. That will be 1000 quid please.
Bastard: Me too
Boss: Me too
PFY: Who cares what you think? You're an extra that needs replacing. Get us
a coffee and be snappy about it!
WE NOW RETURN YOU TO THE STORYLINE IN A MANNER THAT OBSCURES THE SUBLIMINAL
MESSAGE TO YOUR CONSCIOUS MIND, WHILE SIMULTANEOUSLY BRINGING IT TO THE FOREFRONT
OF YOUR SUBCONSCIOUS (BUY COKE!) THOUGHTS
..ll Pirated software?"
"No," the user lies.
"Change any of your system settings?"
"Never!" he continues, pinocchioing away
"Well, quite frankly I'm stumped then. It could be a bad application, but
in my final year I did a paper of software testing standards, and I can assure
you very little is released in the market that hasn't undergone stringent testing."
The nausea I was feeling before increases somewhat. He's so green he needs pruning!
Even worse, he's conscientious and punctual and my best efforts at dissuading
him from staying with the company appear to be ineffectual - he's completely
devoted to the intricacies of solving computing problems. My main concern now
is that the users are going to expect the same service level from me - wandering
up to their office every time they've stuffed about with their monitor settings
or changed their default paper type.
It's not going to happen! Even accidentally trapping his tie in the door so
that his arm was just out of reach of the swipe card reader doesn't work. Still
cheery, still happy to meet any technical problem head-on. HAS THIS MAN NO ACHILLES
HE..
Of course! Why I never thought of it before is beyond me!
"So," I murmur, sidling up to him in Mission Control and introduce
a topic close to his heart if my observations are correct, "making a *VERRRRY*
good impression on the secretary, I see."
"Really? She told me to stop pissing around with her printer."
"Smokescreen. She knows what workplace gossip is like and wants to throw
us off the scent - surely you noticed?"
"I..."
Two days later...
"So how DID you get him to email nudey snaps of himself to her?" the
PFY asks.
"Just told him that as an artist she appreciates the male form and mentioned
she'd probably be quite impressed with someone who could scan such stuff. As
expected, like most of these Nuevo-techs who spend most of their lives inside
computing labs and outside of the real world, he had absolutely no idea of the
fine line between tasteful and tacky."
"So he's gone then - dismissed?"
"Even better, awaiting trial for exposing himself in a RailTrack Photobooth."
"What?"
"Yeah well, I told him that the first set were probably not 'gritty' and
raw enough for her."
"You bastard!"
"Don't you forget it!"
BOFH '00.
BOFH dreams of justifiable user homicide
By:
Posted: 24/04/2000 at 20:54 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 15
So it's 3:17am and I'm safely asleep in my bed, dreaming of a world where "dumbness"
is grounds for justifiable user homicide, when the phone rings.
"Hello, I know it's late..." the voice starts.
"It's not late, it's early..."
"Yeah well, I had to call because it's an emergency!"
"Uh-huh. And how did you get my number?"
"It was in the After Hours Contact List, under 'Pakistani Embassy' - your
Boss told me where to find it."
Of course the question has to be asked as to HOW the Boss found out that it
was my home number as, to my knowledge, the only person with that Information
is the person who's going to be vacuuming the subfloor of the computer room
with a keyboard vacuum cleaner for the next few weeks...
"Anyway, I was calling because the laser printer in room 440 is running
low on one of its toners and it's probably going to run out before we finish
printing the interim customer survey results for tomorrow's, well -TODAY'S -
strategic alliance direction meeting with the US company."
"Why not just print them on a different printer?" I sigh, trying to
be helpful.
I must still be half awake...
"We CAN'T, there's special paper loaded into this one!"
"Special in what way?"
"It's got the word DRAFT printed in red in the background!"
"Of course - and you couldn't move the paper to another printer, nor use
one of those expensive colour printers scattered around the building which could
just print DRAFT on a page as a red background layer..."
"Ah... Yes, point taken."
I'm barely back to sleep when the phone rings again.
"Hi, it's me again!" my least favourite user chirps happily - and
the thing that gets on my tits is that we're now like old friends because we've
shared a printer moment in the pas...
"Of course - The Paper goes in face up."
"Oh."
"You know, like it was when you took it out of the other printer..."
"Oh. Of course. It's just that I don't want to stuff this up.."
"This" being the operative term of course. If by "This"
means "The report" then he's probably on fairly solid ground. However
if by "This" he means "My Career", "My
chances of an Xmas Bonus" or "My prospects of getting out of the department
toilet cubicle without a freak electrical spike causing a sewerage backflush",
it's far too late already.
That's fate for you.
Fate intrudes again at 4:16am when he calls to ask what the printer name is
for the printer in the plot room on the 4th floor is.
"I don't know, what does the white label on the side say?"
"Uh... A4PS04331."
"As in A4 Postscript Level 4, Room 33, Printer 1?" I ask testily.
"Is A4PS04331 the printer name then?"
"No it's just some numbers and letters we slap on the side of printers
to make them more interesting," I snap.
"Oh. Well what's the printer name then?"
Sigh.
4:47am sees me plotting manslaughter after being asked how to change a toner
cartridge...
5:02am...
"It's not printing, BLANK PAPER IS COMING OUT!!!!" he gasps.
"Did you pull the toner separator out like it says on the instructions
before you put it in the printer?"
"OF COURSE I DID!"
"And what did it look like?"
"A piece of black plastic!"
"No strip of transparent plastic attached to it then?"
"NO!"
"Then the separator strip is still in there."
"What do I do?"
I count slowly to 10.
Sigh.
"Well as you can't get the strip out because you've broken the tab off
it, you're going to have to dissolve it. Do you have some aromatic contact adhesive
solvent?"
"Duh-no?"
"What about in your stationary cupboard?"
"I don't think so!"
"Well check. If there's none there you're going to have to get some from
a service centre. No, wait, they won't be open now. Tell you what, just grab
some petrol. Half a gallon should be enough..."
Later that morning...
"And the printer just BURST into flames!!!" my user gasps to some
new blood from security as I sneak past the remnants of room 443.
"And you say he told you to just pour petrol into it?!" The security
guy asks.
"Yes to melt the glue! It's just lucky I switched it off beforehand or
I might have been standing right beside it when it went up!!!"
"Yes, very lucky indeed" security nods gravely. "Well, if you'll
come down to the office we'll fill out an incident report and notify the authorities."
"I'll call the lift," the user smirks.
"Are you sure you want to use the lifts?" security asks, looking around
carefully, "there's been... rumours about how they run a bit strange..."
"Good point - we'll take the stairs!"
. . .
"And he unfortunately slipped and fell down the stairs," security
recounts later to the boss
"Fell down a flight of stairs!" the boss gasps, echoing sympathy.
"Two flights of stairs actually - breaking his left leg and his right wrist!"
security murmurs to the boss.
"Obviously we checked the stairwell carefully, but nothing seemed to be
amiss. Naturally, we'll follow up on the initial complaint when he recovers,
but for now we're not pursuing the matter..."
Strange. Stranger still when I ask the PFY and he denies all knowledge.
Not so strange later on in the day when a familiar blue-suited figure joins
the PFY and I at the table with a cassette which looks all too much like a 24-channel
voice recorder tape.
"Hey!" the PFY starts "aren't you..."
"Your new silent partner?" security asks. "In the flesh, on a
stool, and waiting for a pint!"
BOFH '00.
BOFH meets the Bitch Operator - match made in Hell
By:
Posted: 28/04/2000 at 17:48 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 16So I'm working on a piece of kit when my nose picks up
a smell that can only mean one thing - the PFY's been cranking up the supply
current to some of our more sensitive equipment.
Only the PFY's on holiday for a week, - I'm genuinely mystified. It can't be
a fault?! Not in my kit.
But it appears to be so. Following my nose to an area where the smell is strongest
I notice a rather old disk unit with a heat-marked label on its front panel.
It doesn't look good.
I check out our maintenance schedule, and of course, it's been discontinued
as the boss's thinking in this manner is "If it hasn't misbehaved in the
past it's unlikely to fail in the future" - The Yorkie Terrier rule of
maintenance.
So it's stuffed, and - being ancient - the replacement cost of the full height
disk is the same price you'd expect to pay for an entire desktop computer with
10 times the Processor Power and Disk Space. Only then you'd still only be talking
a P75 with a 2gig disk in it, so multiply that figure by 10 too.
While you're at it, add the non-customer callout fee of 200 quid (for the Zone
1&2 travel pass), plus 150 quid an hour, and we're starting to talk a lucrative
business that I really should be thinking about getting into.
I'm fairly surprised at the technician who presents herself to my office. She's
interesting on several accounts, not the least of which is that she doesn't
look in any way stupid, nor the sort of ugly that parents use to frighten their
children when they play with matches. In fact, I would go so far as to say that
she was rather attr..
"So where's this disk drive then?" she asks.
"In the computer room."
"Have you got a maintenance access card for me?"
"Yes, but we have to oversee all work in the computer room - sensitive
data and all that," I adlib. "So I'll just let you in."
She follows me into the computer room and shows no hesitation in shutting the
machine down in an orderly manner by flicking off the power switch.
I like it.
In double quick time the disk is replaced and the machine is back in business.
"Coffee before you go?" I offer.
"Go on then," she says, after consulting her watch and message pager.
I whip out of the office and return in double quick time with a coffee made
to what I'm sure are her exacting standards.
"Can't I'm afraid, just been paged across town and it's just about lunchtime
rush, wouldn't want to put a dent in the P76!"
A P76 Leyland, the epitome of offensive driving. A veritable land canoe! CAN
THIS WOMAN DO NO WRONG!?!
It's only when she's gone I notice that my wallet is too. And there's a 8mm
tape drive missing from the PFY's desk...
THIS COULD BE LOVE!
. . .
So she's back in the office a day later to fix a server which accidentally fell
out of a rack three times (at a maintenance cost that was so excessive I think
the Boss lost control of his bladder when he read the quote). This time I'm
not stupid and make sure I keep an eye on the contents of our desks, and have
my wallet in the safe.
And the funny thing is I never even noticed the gaping hole in the beancounter
server where their 4 x 50 Gig spool disks used to be until about 2 hours after
she'd left...
The beancounters, on the other hand, knew quite some time before that.
Ah well.
Not wanting to draw any more attention to the situation, I slap in some replacement
disks from the surplus spares pool that the PFY and I keep on hand for... uh..
installing licensed software onto, (and definitely NOT MP3 downloads) and claim
it was caused by a the area being set to RAID
level MINUS 1, doesn't store the data at all. They buy it, which only goes to
show...
Something has to be done, if only because the PFY will be back next week and
is bound to ridicule my inattention.
. . .
So after she comes in to fix the console keyboard which bears all the hallmarks
of having been hit with a large blunt instrument, but which in fact is just
suffering from wear and tear, I slip five brand spanking new drives into her
toolbox when she's not looking, and leave her to her thoughts.
Thoughts which I cannot begin to fathom when I find the five drives later that
afternoon, sitting on top of a machine in the computer room. Where a tape stacker
used to be.
Something has to be done.
I call her company immediately, and ask to be put through to her. Eventually,
she answers and it's time to sort things out once and for all.
"So, how about a quick drink after work?"
She accepts and we agree to meet at a nice place out of the city later in the
evening.
Later arrives. We make small talk, till get down to business and ask her why
she's such a klepto.
"Oh, I'm not a klepto, it's just boring doing the same old thing day after
day. So I distract myself relieve the boredom."
"Which explains why you took the stacker and left the drives."
"The stacker, 4 of your pens, your coffee mug and the book you used as
a backing to sign the Work Done form."
"The visitors book?!?" I gasp.
"I spose so, I didn't look. The more blatant the theft, the more interesting
it is. I suppose you didn't notice that your office is down by two wheelie chairs
then?"
Yes, it could be love.
To cut a long story short, we have a great evening, ending with me walking her
to the tube station AND staying with her till her tube arrives.
And stealing her wallet - lets face it, you can't let a catch like that get
away...
BOFH '00.
BOFH and The Mahariji
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 08/05/2000 at 11:23 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 17
"You're LOSING IT!" The PFY cries, in a manner that could be construed
only as unkind.
"I think you’re..." I respond, defensively, being cut off mid
sentence by the PFY's next outburst.
"YOU ARE! Look, you're even filling in Job Sheets! 'Reset user's password'.
Helped a user with a Microsoft Office install'."
"Just noting work done to aid the service process."
"You HATE job forms - You used to steal them from the helpdesk just to
prevent them getting work bonuses! You said it was Virtual Brownnosing."
"I said it was VIRTUALLY Brownnosing. Virtual Brownnosing's where you get
one of those greeting card places to send your boss a birthday card every year.
In any case, that's a very negative point of view."
The PFY's next diatribe is pre-empted by the rapid arrival of The Boss.
"Just wanted to thank you for the help with my home machine; it's running
much faster now!"
. . .
"You helped THE BOSS, with a HOME machine!!? You HAVE lost it! It's not
going to affect next week's Contract Renegotiation any!"
"Contract Renegotiation? I have transcended the need for wealth and power
by donating my savings to the Mahariji's trust and don't feel the need to encourage
favour with my superiors."
SUPERIOR!!! You've gone SOFT!" the PFY cries disgustedly. "I KNEW
something was up when you let that Security Guy get the better of you. The OLD
Bastard would never have let that happen!"
"The OLD Bastard was a relic. Not at all in tune with his aura."
"His Aura?"
"Yes, the mantra of his personal consciousness."
"Personal Consciousness?! It's that Engineer, isn't it! She's got you wrapped
around her finger!"
"I have to admit that our relationship was sweet, but the Mahariji showed
me that it was simply a manifestation of my own deep- seated needs. The relationship
ended and I am a fuller person now because of it."
"You're a fuller Nutter now!"
"I'm sure the OLD Bastard would have responded to that statement with negativity
- probably manufacturing some cataclysmic sequence of events for which you would
be blamed... But I will not. The Mahariji has shown me that helping others is
the only path to true aura maintenance."
Nutter!" the PFY repeats.
"The Mahariji says that namecalling is a manifestation of sadness. The
Shiny Aura is rewarded by happiness."
"Fifty quid says I'll be the happier person at the end of the day."
"A wager? I do not need money!"
"One hundred quid!" he cries.
"I don't rea.."
"FIVE HUNDRED QUID!"
"Please stop!", I cry. "This is unseemly! I will take your wager
on the condition that you pay my winnings - if it happens - to the Mahariji!"
"Done!"
The deal is struck once my assistant has added a side wager that the loser has
to buy the entire IT department drinks on Friday night - AND listen to their
complaints about service. Not something that even an enlightened individual
would look forward to..
We've barely shaken on it when we're summoned to The Boss's office - no doubt
to receive more thanks for problems solved...
"Ah... I've just had a complaint about some of the service the users have
been receiving!" The Boss mutters sternly, looking in the PFY's direction.
The PFY, as expected, looks away with an expression of innocence...
Sigh.
"I must apologise for my assistant's youth," I interrupt. "He's
young and impulsive and sometimes doesn't give the client the benefit of the
doubt, but I'm sure that with a little..."
"Enough!" The Boss snaps. "Changing a user's password to a disgusting
word repeated three times isn't what I'd call impulsive - it's a calculated
act!"
"?" the PFY responds, before I can step in for his defence. "Probably
some form of misunderstanding on my assistants part," I add. "He may
have thought that the user had REQUESTED that password - some of them have a
history of using fairly colourful language when a problem occurs. It may be
that he thought that they were supplying that word as a password - it has happened."
"Oh yes? And what about telling a user that Microsoft Office installs faster
if you hammer all the developer CDs into the drive at once?"
"I... I..," I murmur, looking at the PFY in horror.
Which, as it happens, is the same way he's looking at me. Of course he's thinking
of my new credibility as opposed to his (should he claim it was me) and the
500 quid down the gurgler PLUS eight or so hours of people whining about how
the systems used to run faster back when, and how they like one letter passwords...
Not to mention his chances come Contract Renegotiation time...
"Leave it with me," I murmur to The Boss. "I'll have a little
word with him..."
. . .
"You bastard!" the PFY shouts when we get back to Mission Control.
"This Mahariji stuff's a load of crap! Well laugh again. The deal was 500
quid to the Mahariji, so the cheques going there."
"Excellent!" I cry. "Would you like me to send you one of our
pamphlets as well - I've just finished one on the Divine Shiny Aura."
"You're the Mahariji?"
"You betcha! I bought up the office of this New Age fruit- eating commune
after they had a bad batch of apples or something and closed down - and now
have an iron-clad tax haven. For a couple of years anyway! Absolutely brilliant.
So all I have to do is print a couple of pamphlets a year, advertise dull meditation
courses in some well-known magazines, publish a massive yearly loss and I'm
in the clear! Unless of course the Beatles reform.."
"So who should I make the cheque out to?" the PFY asks, sighing heavily.
"The Divine Aura of Tfosorcim Society."
"Tfosorcim? Microsoft spelt backwards?"
"Like it? - you know, like Inverse Evil."
"I hate you!"
"Now, now, that's not helping your Aura!!!"
BOFH '00.
IHATEYOU Virus sweeps through BOFH Land
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 09/05/2000 at 09:56 GMT
b>BOFH 2000: Episode 18It's not even midday when the boss trundles into the
office when I'm barely into my morning paper. True, I'm a bit behind - having
taken a reasonable amount of time out to examine the exceptional colour rendition
that can be achieved these days on low grade paper.
"This page three girl is so lifelike you almost think she's real!"
I comment to the PFY, who looks up from his financial broadsheet (the sad bastard)
with a measure of distaste.
"Yes yes, you say that most days," he responds, tucking his gaze back
into who's screwing who pages of the drier of the morning's reading.
"But look at that high quality dithering!" I cry.
"Um" the boss interrupts - while we're on the topic of dithering -
"If you're not busy..."
His trepidation is well-placed, as history has proven that I'm not at my most
congenial before my quadruple espresso breakfast.
"Yes?" I ask pleasantly, breaking the habit of a lifetime and trying
the passive approach.
"It's about this ILOVEYOU thing."
"Don't be disgusting - you're not my type. You're not even the right sex!"
"No, the Virus."
"HIV? Well, I applaud your honesty in these trying times, but..."
"Not me, the email virus, ILOVEYOU!"
"Oh that"
"Yes! What are we going to do about it?"
"Well the PFY and I have been discussing this at length and we believe
that we will trust our users to follow the simple instructions that we've given
them time and time again - which is 'Don't open attachments from people you
don't know'"
"That's all very well, but someone's bound to do it," he adds worriedly.
"So you've infected your desktop?" I sigh.
"Uh, no - the secretary's. She asked me to see if it was the Virus."
"So you opened it to check?"
"Ah.. well.."
"Well indeed. Looks like our Windows 2000 project has a pilot victim. I
mean test subject."
"Is there nothing we can do?"
"Apart from not opening attachments that is?"
"Uh, yes"
"Not really - a reinstall is far easier, just to be sure."
"Oh, well could you prepare some documentation about this for noticeboards
and the like?"
"I suppose we could, but we're really a bit more concerned about the 'IHATEYOU'
virus and what will happen if THAT gets here."
"The IHATEYOU virus? What's that?" he gasps horrified.
"Well it's a derivative of the ILOVEYOU virus, only it's effects are far
more damaging"
"ARE THEY?" he gasps
"Oh yes. It looks like a Notepad document, but in fact does all the usual
stuff plus more. From memory, it scrambles your NT Registry - admittedly, Microsoft
did get there ahead of time; randomly reschedules any netmeetings you have...
EVERY time you login; uh, sends the entire contents of your "Sent Items"
and "InBox" folders to everyone in your address book - which, I might
add, is especially bad if you've got any personal correspondence that you haven't
clea...
The Boss gasps perceptibly at that one.
"...ned up; and, um, prints every jpeg in the cache folders of your browser
to every defined printer - which can also be bad if you've been to any porn
sites in the last two mo..."
The boss rockets out of the room at top speed, no doubt with an unplugging mission
in mind.
"I take it you sent him a message with IHATEYOU, in the Subject?"
the PFY asks.
"THREE messages to be precise. With an attachment Notepad document entitled
'10 reasons why I hate you'."
"What was in it?"
"Just 'Because you're a plonker' 10 times over.."
"No virus?"
"Nah, too much effort. It's far better this way. Though it's a pity he
ran off so quickly as I was just about to mention that it responds to all new
mail with 'Sod off you pretentious tosser'!"
"Save it for later?"
"You betcha! Now all we've got to do is forward the contents of those folders
from his backup share to everyone in the building and print a load of porn about
the place"
"So I should just slap a couple of dozen images from the smut archive off
to some printers randomly?"
"Yeah... NO! No, go to the Web and get a swag of gay stuff. That way when
they start printing we can act like we always knew he was like that after his
professions of love earlier in the day"
"He'll deny it came from his machine!"
"Sure he will. As an excuse I don't think "I only browse straight
porn" is going to cut much with the higher echelons."
...
"Honestly, it has NOTHING to do with me!" the boss pleads, as the
PFY and I look on suspiciously.
"Of course it wasn't," I respond kindly. "Now are you sure there
isn't something you'd like to tell us?"
"Those AREN'T my pictures!"
"No, that wasn't what I was hoping you'd tell us."
"What were you hoping I'd tell you?" he asks, confused.
"Well, I was HOPING that you'd tell us that you were very sorry for disturbing
our morning paper and that it won't happen again."
"I..." he starts, as it sinks in "YOU did this!?"
"All water under the bridge now!" I cry. "And unless you want
the printing logs from this morning - with YOUR machine nameALL OVER them -
finding their way into the Head of IT's hot little public- enquiry orientated
grasp..."
"Yes!" he gasps, thinking of his job prospects if the Old Boy's network
gets a hold of a rumour like that.
"You'll be off down to Caffe Uno for a quadruple espresso, and a double
for the assistant."
"All right," he sighs, resignedly.
"..for the next fortnight."
"Yes..."
It's a dirty job, but someone's got to do it...
BOFH '00.
BOFH for hire on Starship Enterprise
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 22/05/2000 at 10:16 GMT
BOFH2000: Episode 19 (THE EPISODE YOU NEVER SAW)
"Captain's Log, Start Date Twenty Nine point two point thirty six, twenty
four, thirty six, Mmmm Mmm. Following some problems with the ship's computer
we've travelled back in time and space to the planet Earth during the early
21st century and beamed aboard an expert who may be able to help us with our
problems."
- - - - - - -
So I wake up on the Enterprise, and it's so obviously a dream I don't even bother
thinking of something so horrible (i.e. a career in Telemarketing) that it'll
force me awake. I decide to run with it for a bit and see how it goes. I do,
however, pause to see if I'm wearing skintight mustard and black fatigues -
in case it's a nightmare.
Luckily, no.
"Welcome aboard," Kirk smiles, walking up to the transporter and extending
his hand.
"Thanks, Captain," I reply, slipping off his space age watch mid-
shake, "and I'd just like to say how much I like those uniforms."
"Really?" Kirk responds happily.
"Yes, not very much at all. Now what seems to be the problem?"
"Well it's something to do with the guidance systems - Every time we go
into orbit around a planet the ship seems to veer off on a tangent."
"Like your show, you mean?"
"Hunh?"
"Nothing. So it's a guidance system problem?"
"Yes. I expect it's a loose wire or something"
"Get a lot of that do you?"
"Not really, come to think of it..." Kirk responds
"And it's not something trivial like Spock spilling a cup of Bovril down
the back of his console, or someone pressing a lot of the wrong buttons when
they're thrown around during a mid-space battle?
"No, we checked all that."
"Ok. And no one's performed any upgrades on anything?"
"No"
"So what's Spock doing with that box of floppies?"
"I was attempting to install a vendor certified diagnostic package designed
to determine the true cause of the malfunction by a process of strategic elimi.."
Spock burbles, before I cut him off mid- stream.
"If that's Service Pack 6 I'm leaving right now!"
After a few mumbled denials I agree to give the ship the old technical fish
eye...
"Uh, That's the coffee maker."
"Of course it is, but I prefer the holistic approach to computer maintenance
- every part being interconnected, and therefore reflecting on the whole. Besides,
I always think better after an Espresso."
"Expresso? Uh, we only have instant!.."
Perhaps it's a nightmare after all.
"..and what were you saying about Holistics?"
"Well, take this coffee maker for instance. See the brown sludge collecting
in the drain tray and the way the steamer looks really clogged?"
"Yes"
"Well it's quite possible that your crucial guidance systems are clogged
in much the same manner"
"By coffee?"
"No, but by leftovers from poorly executed maintenance."
"I hardly think..."
"Look at the grime on those dilithium crystals!"
"They're not dilithium crystals, that's our dinner - it's just not been
hydrated!"
"If you tell me that's a kebab with a side of chips and I'm going to puke!"
. . . six hours later. . .
"Ok, I'll need a RAM Removal tool, an Earthing Strap, a sonic screwdriver,
a .."
"A sonic screwdriver?"
"My mistake, wrong programme - a demagnetised head flat blade screwdriver
with internal AC detecting Neon"
"Sorry, we don't have one of those" Scotty murmurs, rolling up with
toolkit in hand.
"What about Swiss Army knife and Panelbeating hammer?"
"Can do!"
. . . Ten Minutes Later . . .
"Right, that should about do her," I cry slamming the cover of one
of the nastiest jobs I've done since I used an orbital sander to clean some
tape heads.
"So what now?" Kirk asks.
"Well, run her up and see how she performs." . . . Another 10 minutes
later . . .
"Well she seems to be taking the orbit ok now," Scotty murmurs, looking
up from his instruments "..although I AM getting a overtemperature reading
from the navigation motherboard."
"Oh, that'll just be the duck tape holding the fan giving way. She should
be ok so long as we don't run into a..."
"METEOR SHOWER, ship taking autopilot evasive action" Spock cries.
"... ah, well, there you go then. If you could just teleport me back down
to earth ASAP, that would be Sterling Moss."
"No can do," Kirk yells "Scotty, get us out of here, full power
reverse!! "
"IF I GIVE HER ANY MORE SHE'S GOING TO BLOW!" Scotty yells excitedly.
"No, I think she's going to blow anyway!" I cry stepping into the
transporter and pressing the "Reverse Co-ordinates" button...
. . .
What a strange dream.
Still, at least I have this cool space age watch...
BOFH '00.
BOFH skills test: How are you with Marketing Blurb?
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 30/05/2000 at 09:46 GMT
BOFH2000: Episode 20We've all seen it, and, some of us have even read it. Sadly,
though, with the advent of gas-fired barbecues not many of us get to use it
any more.. But today The Bastard would like ask some questions about your interpretation
of their propaganda.
1.Reading the Advertising blurb for a product which may suit your needs, you
notice the phrase: "Runs on most PC Compatibles". This means
A. Any X86 box will run it
B. Most X86 boxes will run it
C. Runs on DOS boxes
D. Doesn't run on DOS boxes
E. Doesn't run
2.In the same blurb you see: "Developed by a highly skilled team of programmers"
A. It was developed by a crew of like-minded supergeeks who we managed to lure
away from the space program with large salaries
B. It was developed by a team of grad students working for us nights and weekends
C. It was developed by two grad students as a thesis paper, and we stole it.
D. It was developed my two high school students learning Visual Basic
E. The skills we were talking about were Juggling and Morris Dancing
3.You also notice that it claims to be "fully compatible with international
standards". This means
A. It adheres to current industry standards
B. It adheres to ad hoc industry standards
C. It adheres to the new standard that they've just made up (See Microsoft Standards)
D. They'll stick to their story about standards, even under interrogation
E. The wrapper will adhere to your foot if you stand on it
4.Finally the brochure mentions "Fully Manned Personal Worldwide Support",
which really means:
A. There's a support team in every country for 24hr support
B. There's a support team in one country, with 24hr support
C. They've hired one full man for Worldwide Support
D...and by "full" they mean drunk
E...and he only speaks Hindi
5.The accompanying Company Propaganda claims that they are experts in the "Fully
Fault Tolerant" field. That means:
A. They have a large amount of experience in delivering 24x7 applications
B. They have a large amount of experience in using 24x7 applications
C. They know there's 24x7 hours in the week
D.. They know about Full Fault conditions
E... and they tolerate them in their software.
6.The Company Profile also mentions that they're "Firmly based in Silicon
Valley", i.e.
A. They're based in the heart of the Computer world
B. They read Computer World
C. They've heard there's Computers in the World
D. It was a typo which was supposed to read
DEATH Valley
E. Nope the typo was supposed to read Silicon "Alley" - they back
on to a TV Repair shop
7.Good Lord! It says down the bottom of the page in Huge, emboldened letters,
that the software is Completely Free! This can only mean
A. It won't cost you a penny
B. It's crippleware
C. It's crippleware that also has a service connection charge
D. Did they mention you have to sign up for 24 months.
E. PANTS DOWN and BEND OVER, HERE COMES THE RED HOT SPIKE!!
8. "Contact us now and we'll get someone to call you". This means
A. They'll only call you if you respond
B. They'll only call you if they think you didn't get the blurb (i.e. don't
respond)
C. They call on you regardless
D. They'll add you to their mailing list if you don't respond, hoping to wear
you down
E. They know your name, they know where you work and live, and they're calling
Readers Digest!!!
9."Can your business afford to pass up this Opportunity?"
A. No
B. Don't know
C. Yes
D. To dob them in to Readers Digest? I think not.
E. To ring the Armed Response Unit to inform them that a man wearing a "I
hate Western Civilisation" badge, and carrying a large ticking parcel,
mumbling to himself that "The Capitalist Pig Dogs will never take me alive",
etc. No.
10."For More information Please put your name and address here". This
means
A. They will keep you informed of items relevant to your business
B. They will keep you informed of items relevant to THEIR business
C. Both A and B, long after you've left the company, the country, your partner
and threatening messages on their answerphone
D. The guy in the next cubicle's going to be getting a lot of mail soon
E. But not as much as every single beancounter will be getting once you make
some calls...
How do you work out your score?
I know what you mean - some answers seem so... equal don't they? If so, that's
-10 for a start!
Other than that, it's 0 points for every A (and - another 10 points if you think
that's harsh), 2 for every B . . . 8 for every E.
-20-20 You don't deserve a Computer. In fact, it's surprising you can read.
But I do have some Leading edge 1 Meg SIMMs that you could buy at 20 quid a
pop
20-40 About those leading edge 4 Meg SIMMs at 50 quid a pop... Not buying?
Worth a crack, though. Still, you need more work.
40-60 Yes, that's more like it. You're unlikely to be taken for a ride so easily.
Well done - though you're still giving them the benefit of the doubt.
60-80 Yes, you're right, the only benefit they deserve is a sickness benefit.
And to qualify for that, they're going to have to have had a nasty accident
of some kind....
80-100 You cheating bastard! Take another 20 points for trying it on.
100-120 My Hero
BOFH '00.
BOFH: What the Microsoft break-up really means
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 05/06/2000 at 09:42 GMT
BOFH2000: Episode 21So I'm doing some equipment audits, which basically means
wandering around peoples’ desktops while they're away and making sure
that what the service database says they have, and what they REALLY have, correspond
with each other.
Not a challenging task by any stretch of the imagination...
And as per usual, it has to be done early in the morning so that I don't get
exposed to the mindless questions of the using masses. (There's only SO many
times you can be asked how to change the desktop wallpaper, a password, or tweak
the screen brightness before you feel like stuffing the person's pay-cheque
into the shredder)
I'm just finishing stuffing someone's pay-cheque into the shredder (pre-emptive
strike - the best defence being a good offence and all that) when an early rising
user walks in, wondering why their desktop machine has its cover off.
"Just taking an inventory of the hardware your system's configured with,"
I respond to their inquiry.
"But you already did that last year!" he blurts. "We do it every
year," I reply, "so we can keep track of all the upgrades that have
occurred and equipment that's been added."
"Well I hope it goes smoother than last year - I'm sure that my machine
ran a lot slower after you'd run that hardware checking program on it."
Sigh.
"Sometimes the cataloguing program notes systems anomalies like overclocked
CPUs or misconfigured memory configurations, which will eventually lead to Access
Violation problems and frequent Bug Checks," I respond, "so we rectify
them."
*DUMMY MODE ON!*
Of course, I could tell him the real reason - that the cataloguing software
noted that the system concerned REALLY DID have a serious memory anomaly - it
had 64 Meg when 32 would do. No sooner noted than rectified with the aid of
a common household DIMM removal tool. (I could be Father Theresa, my life is
so devoted to helping people).
"Oh. Ok. Well how long will it be till you're done?"
"Oh, I'm finished now," I cry happily, suppressing a momentary feeling
of guilt as the last of his pay packet disappears into the slot of death. "I'll
just pop the cover back on your box and you'll be back in business!"
"Actually, while you're here, do you mind if I ask you a question?"
"By all means!"
"Well I've been reading about this break-up of Microsoft - will any of
my programs be affected by it?"
"You mean will the change in the corporate structure of company affect
the software made by that company and currently installed on your machine?"
"Yes."
My feelings of remorse disappear quicker than a hardware warranty after clock-chipping
and I'm back to normal self.
"Well, it's hard to say. You see, what the ruling in effect means is that
Microsoft has become far too powerful and has begun monopolising the market
– it's the US government's form of a practical joke really."
"Huh?"
"Well they encourage people to build a big company and pay huge amounts
of tax, and yet when they do so, they say it's bad and tell you that you have
to break it up to be less competitive"
"But weren't they using unfair business tactics?"
"The term 'business' makes the term 'unfair' redundant in that sentence."
"You sound like you AGREE with them!"
"Can't stand them, to be honest, but that's hardly the point. Now back
to your question - will it affect your desktop?"
"Yes"
"Unfortunately it probably will. Because of the split up, you'll probably
have limitations on the size of documents created with the applications. It
shouldn't affect you a lot - as long as you don't have any documents over 20k
in size"
"But MOST of my documents are over 20k in size - I do the employment contracts."
"Really?" (This just gets better and better.) "Well what will
happen is that they'll probably set a limit on the amount of pages of data you
can edit at one time. Probably one."
"ONE PAGE! All of my documents are longer than that. How do I get around
it?"
"Well.. I don't know if I should tell you this..."
"Oh please, it'll kill me to have to split all my documents up."
"Well.... ..Ok, I spose I can tell you. You have to DELIMIT the documents"
"How?"
"Just go into DOS, and type DEL *.*"
"HEY! Doesn't that Delete them?"
"No, the Delete command is REM - They changed all that years ago - you've
been using Windows too long."
"Oh."
"And while you're at it you'll probably want to delimit everyone else's
files too, plus all the ones on the server -I think the delimit command gets
replaced with the new Operating System we're installing later today."
"Oh, Ok, I'll get right onto it."
"Good. And while you're at it, you probably want to delimit the NTLDR,
the boot.ini, and everything in the Profiles directory on the disks too - just
to be on the safe side in case they want to split out the Multination Characterisation
of the Interface to the Base Operating System."
***DUMMY MODE IRREVOCABLY ON***
"Du-Ok."
Like shooting fish in a barrel.
BOFH '00.
BOFH gets Blood on His Hands
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 10/06/2000 at 12:06 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 22
So, as part of the Company-wide lip service to Health and Safety, anyone in
an area deemed potentially dangerous has to go on a First Aid refresher course.
And wouldn't you know it, because of a minor statistical anomaly in the workplace
accident figures, the Computer Room is found to be the most dangerous place
in the Building.
As it should be.
Still, The PFY and I are REQUIRED to attend the course, which isn't so bad when
you consider the company's picking up the Tab for a day off work.
And we do get a shiny first aider badge.
To wear to the pub.
At our respective wakes.
"Yes, that IS the correct way to use a defibrillator," our instructor
informs The PFY calmly. "However it's not generally the recommended method
for treating a broken arm, which is what we're looking at currently."
With a sigh The PFY puts down the paddles of the unit, which is no doubt suffering
from a seriously depleted battery and leaves the resuscitation manikin to smoulder
out.
"Now back to broken arms; what's the best treatment for them?"
"It depends on how they were broken.." The PFY answers, beating everyone
in the assembled group for our tutor's attention, like the closet brownnoser
he is.
"Yes, true," she responds. "If the fracture is what we call an
'Open' fracture, we would want to treat it differently than a normal 'Closed'
fracture."
"Oh. I was thinking more along the lines of 'did I slam their arm in a
door, and should I give it a twist to make my point - for luck'. Sort of thing."
"Yessss.." she replies, clearly deciding not to dig any deeper into
that particular quagmire. "Anyway, what we're looking at is whether there
is bleeding associated with the injury or not, and whether there's a necessity
to treat that first."
The Boss, meantime (here because he too values the idea of a day out of the
office) is looking just a tad queasy - obviously not too keen on the blood idea..
Best go easy on him.
"Blood you say," I cry loudly, "Would that be like a LOT of blood?"
"Well it depends really on the organs involved, and how they're affected."
"So the blood could just GUSH out, ALL OVER everything, or if could just
OOOOOZE?"
The Boss is now looking like a Procol Harum song and starting to waver in his
chair, which is the perfect time for an interlude...
"I think we need to get him some fresh air," I cry, pointing out The
Boss to the instructor.
"Yes, yes, very good idea."
"I'll bring the shock machine!" The PFY cries, leaping toward the
device in question.
"That won't be necessary" she responds, "All he needs is a little
lie down in some cool air for a minute or two."
The PFY barely hides his disappointment, but rallies -- by snaffling The Boss's
wallet and standing on his personnel disorganiser -- while helping him to the
window. A gust of fresh diesel fumes to the nostrils and The Boss is back in
the Land of the Living.
"Where's my wallet!?!" he cries, performing his Power on Self Test
true to form.
"Here it is," The PFY offers, "Just looking after it."
The Boss scrabbles through it, but everything seems to be intact.
Ten minutes later we've all seen a sling in action and managed to pair up to
give it a try ourselves. I, sadly didn't quite get the hang of it, so to speak,
and mistakenly wrapped the noose - I mean bandage - around The Boss's neck.
And it's true what they say about a well-tied reef knot - it doesn't slip.
After The Boss has his second bout of fresh air, we begin again, pausing during
the bleeding stage for The Boss to recover yet again. Sigh.
The next day we're all back on fine form and I'm showing The Boss some of the
sights of the computer room. He wants to go through every SINGLE bloody accident
that's ever happened in the place and see if our course has covered it - before
he pays this invoice. Sigh.
. . .
"And this is where that engineer slipped and tripped down the raised floor
tile - breaking his arm - which incidentally that accident happened the very
day after he told us that we didn't have 24 hour response.."
"Yes, yes," The Boss murmurs, ticking off something on his clipboard.
"We'll have to put up warning signs on the walls about that."
"..Oh! And this is where we had that mild electric shock when wear and
tear on the power cable accidentally connected phase to this cabinet. Nasty
burn and a bit of hysteria there."
"Yes, perhaps we should make it a rule that everyone entering the room
has to use insulated gloves," he burbles.
"Ah" The PFY cries, "This is where that consultant who was always
complaining about not having access to the computer room accidentally climbed
on top of the machine. And this is where he broke off one of the smoke detectors
with his head - causing the halon to be released."
"Really - he broke it off with his head?"
"Near as we can tell - he quit after the accident, so we didn't have a
chance to ask him about it."
"Yes. Those consultants all have First Aid certificates, don't they? I
know, I've got an idea! Why not let them all have access to the computer room
- which should increase the safety of the area many times over!"
!!!
"Let them into my computer room?" I ask.
"Yes," The Boss replies happily.
"Well I suppose so," I respond, ignoring The PFY's look of horror.
"They certainly would have come in handy that time I cut my finger on the
sharp edge of the inside of this cabin... oh look, I've done it again!"
I pull my arm out of the cabinet and sure enough there's a large cut along it
with a generous amount of blood on it.
"And this," I say, indicating a stretch of floor tile to The PFY,
"is where The Boss fainted that time and >KATHUD< broke >STOMP<
his index finger."
Desperate times, desperate measures.
You'll get access to my computer room right after you pry the Halon test key
out of my cold, lifeless hands.
BOFH '00.
BOFH: Bad Hair Day
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 18/06/2000 at 18:20 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 23
I think I'm going to have a seizure. I've tried to calm down, I've counted to
10, I've even played a couple of games of sneaky-cheat Quake II against a couple
of feebs from marketing who can't figure out why they kept exploding when I
shot them with an ordinary looking pistol.
But it's not working. I've had enough. The week has gone on one day too long
and they've finally got to me. The users, The Boss - even the PFY is getting
on my tits....
..It all started this morning when I had to put a simple proposal in for the
purchase of a swag of new disks to replace the old crap that sits in a standalone
cabinet hanging off a SCSI-1 chain on one of the larger Database machines. Disk
that's so old it's got marks from Noah's screwdriver on the side. And he wasn't
much of an installer if the cabling's anything to go by...
Be that as it may, I slap together a quick document and push it over to The
Boss.
"There's no competing quote for the equipment," he says, skimming
down the page.
"Company policy is that a competing quote isn't necessary when the purchase
is under 2000 quid," I respond.
"Yes, but there's several disks here, which, with VAT, totals... 2014 pounds,"
he replies, after bashing some numbers into his desktop calculator and –
finally - managing to get them in the right order.
So 10 minutes later I'm back in his office with TWO orders for two sets of half
as many disks.
And he signs them off. Well, wanders off to the secretary to borrow her dictionary
to see just whether Disc or Disk is the preferred spelling.
"I can't believe you did two orders to avoid getting a competing quote,"
he says smugly as he returns, just letting me know that I can't put one over
on him.
I've no doubt his smugness will last well up to the time he discovers the wallet
on his desk strangely empty, his coffee cup strangely full, and his voicemail
diverted to a phone sex line.
I take the order up to Beancounter Central, only to find the beancounters won't
be processing it today. (It's Accounts policy to send out all orders in the
morning mail. And by now it's past 11am.)
My offers to type it myself are rejected. There are no exceptions. Rules are
rules.
But that's OK, I can put up with that. Then I get back to Mission Control and
the PFY's having a deep and meaningless with the latest woman of his dreams...
"I *SO* agree" he gushes, gesturing to a console message warning of
a tape drive needing a cleaning cartridge.
Being the benevolent type, I slap the tape in the drive and pop down to an early
lunch.
And wouldn't you know it, I'm just getting my second pint in when a group of
furry-teethed geeks from the electronics company down the road bowl in.
"And I said to him: 'you can't port Debian to a car computer - IT'S NOT
AN OPEN SYSTEM' - WAAAAA HA HA HA!" one of them cries, setting the rest
of them off in a fit of laughter.
...
I make a break back to work only to find The PFY on the phone, the Tape warnings
still unresolved, a consultant wanting someone to help him with his computing
problem (which he no doubt caused), and a couple of users stacked up on hold
because all the helldesk people have gone to lunch at the same time...
Something has to be done.
I get rid of the users in record time with a two-word solution involving sex
and travel (disguising my phone line as a helldesk extension in case any of
the callers has a digital phone), and then decide to tackle the PFY problem.
I indicate the tape warnings that he's been ignoring for the last hour or two
then show him the plug of death, which to all intents and purposes looks like
a plug with a single throw heavy duty switch where the cable should be. Not
knowing what it is, the PFY seems unfazed.
Which incidentally is what his desk and phone are when I plug in then push the
button, grounding the live wire and popping the circuit breaker.
"What the hell di..," The PFY starts, stopping abruptly when he sees
me passing a small parcel to him. He knows two things: (1) the mailroom only
delivers parcels at 10 and 3, and (2) most parcels don't have highly conductive
tin foil on them. "I'll just get those tapes then.."
Problem solved, it remains only for the attack of the killer consultant with
his problem of doom. Sure enough, seeing me alone in the office, separated from
the herd as it were, he decides to strike.
"I've been having a few problems installing NT," he burbles, wandering
over and showing me a piece of paper with the "error text" written
on it. "There's no floppy in the drive," I murmur.
"No, there ISN'T a floppy in the drive!" he cries triumphantly.
Sigh
"The machine doesn't recognise the CD drive and NEEDS a boot floppy to
load the NT disk," I respond.
"No it doesn't! It's never needed one before."
Double sigh
"It does. It's uncommon, but it happens."
"Look, I should know, I install these things all the time!"
"Uh-huh." I sigh yet again, then have a minor brainstorm. "OH,
Actually! What service pack is the CD you're using."
"Six."
"Ah, use Seven, it has the CD drivers built right into the CD."
"But how does that work?"
"You've heard of data readahead?"
"No?"
"Well this is the same thing, it's an enhanced readahead which allows the
system to cache the driver for the CD."
The glazed expression tells me all I need to know about the credibility of that
particular lie.
"DuhOK."
"Help yourself, they're in that silver package over there..."
One high-pitched scream later, a small battery powered inverter kit drops to
the floor. The Boss, ever on the alert for something to make his day pass quicker,
investigates.
"What's going on here?" he asks ignoring the doubly glazed expression
on the consultant sitting in a courier basket.
"Oh he's just pleased because the latest enhancement to Solitaire arrived
today."
"YOU'VE GOT A BETTER SOLITAIRE!" the boss gasps, his day peaking.
"Yeah, the install disks are in the shiny parcel on the floor - haven't
had a chance to.."
>EEEEEEEEEEEEEE<
Ah, maybe it isn't such a bad day after all.
BOFH '00.
BOFH wants to know: how dangerous are your users?
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 24/06/2000 at 09:23 GMT
BOFH 2000 Episode 24 (Quiz no.3)Sure, they look about as likely to rebel as
the pack of mindless sheep that they are - but can they be trusted?
Are your users reading forbidden literature?
Are they trying to climb the technical greasy pole behind yourback?
How will you know?
Can the cattle prod be trusted to solicit the truth?
It's time to put it to the test!
Put yourself in your users' place and answer these simple questions to see if
things are going according to plan at YOUR workplace.
1. A MAC Address is:
a. A place you get Quarter Pounders
b. A street address in Scotland?
c. Something Technical
d. A Hardware Address in Networking
e. Something technical a system administrator changes to cause the Boss's machine
to lose network connection.
2. You ring your Systems and Network people because the server
has just gone down and you want to know when it will be up again. You expect
them to tell you:
a. A number of minutesb. A number of days
c. To sod off
d. The incriminating evidence they found in your email folder
e. The incriminating evidence they just placed in your email folder
3. The low-power components in your laptop are optimised to
run at what voltage?
a. DC?
b. AC?
c. Whatever the adapter says
d. Just under 3 volts
e. 240 volts AC, and not a volt less!
4. You bring a box of 9 track tapes of your life's work to the
operators to read in so that you can download them to your PC. The operator
tells you it should be there in an hour. This means:
a. It will be loaded into your home share in an hour.
b. It will be loaded into your home share today sometime
c. It will be loaded into your home share this week sometime
d. It will be loaded into your home share when hell freezes over
e. The Operator's bin has recently become full
5. You smell smoke in the building. You know immediately that:
a. You should sound the alarm
b. You should make your way quickly to the exit, notifying staff as you go
c. You should turn your machine off in case the sprinklers activate
d. The System Administrator is interviewing consultants again.
e. The operator's bin doesn't need emptying any more.
6. The faultiest piece of crap in the building is:
a. Sitting in the bin outside the head of IT's office
b. Sitting on the floor outside the head of IT's office
c. Sitting on the floor inside the head of IT's office
d. Sitting on the desk inside the head of IT's office
e. Sitting on the chair behind the Head of IT's desk, talking on the phone.
7. The best place to backup your files is:
a. To your Home Share, just like the System Admin said
b. To the TEMP directory, just like the System Admin said
c. To ZIP disk
d. (c) to Several Zip disks, and possibly CD-ROM
e. To the Recycle bin, to save the System Admin the trouble.
8. The danger of leaving your machine switched on is:
a. It could catch fire
b. It could become a security risk
c. The disk could crash
d. It wastes lots of power
e. The processor might burn the System Administrators hand when he replaces
it with a... faster one... late at night.
9. The security and integrity of your email is protected by:
a. Your password
b. Company Policy
c. PGP Encryption
d. Microsoft's pursuit of excellence. Waaaaaa ha ha ha!
e. Two pints for the System Administrator every Friday night
10. A System Administrator slaps a piece of paper down in front
of you with lots of large technical words on it... which don't mean anything
to you. He also indicates a line, with a large X beside it. You:
a. Sign on the line
b. Sign on the line
c. Sign on the line
d. Sign on the line
e. Refuse to sign on the line then check on your life Insurance Payments.
How did your users
do?
Mostly A
Nothing to worry about here. Your users are so feeble minded you're lucky they
can manage a keyboard without filling it with dribble.
Mostly B
As with B, you're pretty much in the green here. You might want to cancel any
geek magazine subscriptions just in case someone's found the bin you're dumping
them into.
Mostly C
Still not TOO much to worry about, but you probably want to check offices for
books entitled anything "for Dummies" (after cancelling the above
mentioned magazine subscriptions).
Mostly D
This looks serious. It would somehow seem that someone technical has slipped
through the resume screening process (i.e. the shredder). Did someone say Inquisition?
Mostly E
No no no, you're supposed to pretend to be one of your USERS! Not yourself!
What were you thinking? Advance to go and try again!
BOFH '00.
Lies, Damn Lies and BOFH Statistics
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 06/07/2000 at 12:01 GMT
BOFH 2000. Episode 25
So I get this tape in from the courier and it's marked - AS PER USUAL - "Ultra
Urgent". Which means that The Boss is going to be in any time to see how..
"How's that tape going?" The Boss asks, trundling into the office
at warp factor .0000000003 before I have a chance to nudge it off the table
and into the bin.
"What tape?"
"The Survey Data tape!" He cries. "Very important stuff that.
We paid a survey company twenty five thousand pounds to do an electronic survey
to find out what our customers really want."
"You mean like a good product at a reasonable price?" the PFY chirps
in.
"No, no," The Boss smiles condescendingly. "We want to know what
the customer REALLY wants - product colour, naming, whether to use chrome or
not."
"All important stuff then," I comment, rolling my eyes at the PFY.
"Yes! So where can the tape be?"
"Probably hasn't been delivered," I say.
"Well it's funny because I saw the courier on the way out," he cries
triumphantly, producing a delivery receipt from his pocket. "And he says
you DID get one."
"Yes" the PFY jumps in, knowing my policy on signing for things only
too well "- or rather someone named.. uh.. John Major did. Does HE work
here?"
"The beancounters maybe?" I suggest helpfully.
"It doesn't matter," The Boss cries yet again, with a hint of triumph
in his voice, while producing another tape. "I got a copy delivered just
in case!"
He hands itover, chomping at the bit to get the tape read-in.
"Chop! Chop!" he cries. "What's on it?"
"Well, as I've only just got the thing, it's hard to say," I respond,
not appreciating The Boss's attempts to grease the gears of media reading.
"Well it's really important!" The Boss burbles, stating once more,
for the benefit of the COMPLETELY bloody stupid, the reason for his visit.
"Yes, yes," I murmur, slapping the tape into the external drive on
my machine.
Normally - I have to admit - I'd only be reading a foreign tape once I'd run
it through the Virus Scanning Bulk-Eraser (Never had a Virus that's survived
a good, hard, scanning from that baby). HOWEVER, if I do that it's only going
to have The Boss skulking about for even longer. And I don't think I could handle
it.
Once it's in, I run a quick tar, an od, and finally a binary dump to come to
an interesting conclusion.
"The tape's blank," I tell The Boss, ignoring his disbelieving facial
response.
"It can't be, it was written by a professional archiving company!"
"Then it must have been written in Braille."
"Or marker pen!" the PFY cries, recalling a past habit of mine of
writing: "The Boss is a Winker" on the leader of 9 track tapes, to
give the tape monkey something to cheer him up at backup time.
"Well fast forward the tape along a bit, maybe the data starts further
on.." The Boss cries, getting a little disconcerted. "Perhaps they
didn't rewind it properly before they wrote it."
"Can't happen," I respond. "All tapes have a beginning of tape
mark of someform. If there's nothing after that mark, there's nothing on the
tape."
"But.. But.. "
"Look, I'll show you" I cry, grabbing a recent addition from the rubbish
bin and yanking it's label off before The Boss can cop a dekko, "Here's
a tape with, uh, intermittent read errors, which we chucked out."
I slap the tape in the drive and run it up.
"Look, see, data!"
"I see."
"Which starts at the beginning of the tape. All valid data. Actually, how
were you going to interpret your data?"
"Oh, with this program," The Boss burbles, pulling a floppy out of
the Pandora's box that is his business suit.
I chuck the floppy into my machine and run up the executable (without even virus
checking because I like to live on the edge) and pump the data at it.
"Well" I cry, "if we used the data on THIS tape for instance,
it says that... 68% of people prefer British Racing Green or Cobalt Blue, while
11% prefer reds and browns... 73% of people prefer a name that is orientated
to the British and/or American markets as opposed to Asian... 67% like chrome,
although 53% of those didn't like it to be a dominating influence... uh, 67%
of the respondents were in the upper quartile of income earners, and a staggering
83% say they buy our products recently."
"Well, that's believable as the survey was of our clients, and a lot of
them are rather well-to-do," The Boss says.
"Remember," I add, applying a pin to The Boss's bubble. "this
is just a tape I pulled out of the bin. The results are just an interpretation
of the binary data."
"But it's so accurate - it's almost like it WAS the survey data!"
he responds.
"Hmmm. And you're not suspicious?"
"Suspicious? Why?"
"Well if a survey confirms EVERYTHING you expected, why spend a large amount
of money on a survey? I certainly wouldn't like to be the person who suggested
an expensive survey like that when it comes out telling us what we already know..."
The Boss is strangely quiet at this.
"No," I continue. "What you want is a survey that breaks new
ground -tells us something we don't know. Similar data, but varying by certain
degrees."
A 15-watt bulb suddenly illuminates in The Boss's mind.
"Have you got any data like the data on that tape?"
"I don't know," I mumble, looking to the PFY for inspiration. "What
was on that tape?"
"Soft Core Porn," the PFY cries, obviously mistaking it for one of
our archive tapes.
"WHAT?!?"
"We, uh, take copies of stuff we delete from the users' shares," I
ad lib,"just in case they complain, then deny having it."
"Ah. So I want to use soft core porn as the input."
"NO!" I cry. "Soft core didn't work, the data was totally unbelievable.
You're going to have to use some DIFFERENT data. Hardcore porn is probably best"
"Hardcore?!" he says anxiously.
"Yes," the PFY adds. "Possibly even bestiality. IF you want good
data to cover your arse.."
. . .
Two days later, at The Boss's leaving drinks (after the Big Porn scandal, which
was after the Big Survey scandal where The Boss presented the data that people
liked the idea of Purple and Yellow- embossed Chrome product, with names like
Kamakuza which would be bought en masse by low income types)...
"How on earth did they find out?" The Boss cries.
"Well, I think the giveaway was when you attached the data file to your
email and didn't change the file extension from .jpg," I murmur.
Sigh...
Still, it was time for a change....
BOFH '00.
The Bastard gets taste of own medicine
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 12/07/2000 at 11:18 GMT
This episode is based on real experiences with some of the largest computer
companies in the globe. Names and Companies have been changed to protect the
guilty. .
----
So I'm ringing Tech support and, as usual, get put through to their lifeline,
which is more like a life sentence when you're waiting for help. And of course,
when you're talking to the lifeline you have to talk to 47 different IVR systems,
which is almost as time-consuming as IVF, only you feel more screwed with IVR..
. . ."..if you would like to log a software call press 1-7. If you would
like to log a hardware call, press 2-3."
I press 2 3.
"I'm sorry, your command was not understood, please re-enter, If you would
like to log a software call, press.."
I slowly press 2, then slowly press three.
"Welcome to Software support, please have your customer number ready."
I hang up and dial again.
"Welcome to Technical Support. If you would like to speak to an operator,
please press 0-0 now. Otherwise if you would like to loga.."
I press 1 and 7 slowly.
"Welcome to hardware support, please have your Machine serial number ready.
For our ultima-premo line of products, press 74, For our Fantasma-Blanko products,
please press 99, for all other products press 21."
I don't trust it, and wait.
"..except for our Enterprise models, for which you should press 03."
I slowly press 0 3.
"I'm sorry, a technician isn't available to take your call right now, please
enter the model number, followed by a serial number and we will call you back
from the number on the purchase details of that machine."
I type in the 4 digit model number and am about to type in the serial number
when...
"I'm sorry that number is not recognised by our system. Valid Model Numbers
are: B101, B102, B103, B104, B1."
I hang up because I just know that the alpha keypad isn't going to work, and
recall the number and press 0 0 slowly. Twelve minutes of ringing later the
phone is answered. (I could learn something from these people.)
"Hello, Lifeline, what is your Client Reference Code?"
"Uh, 2734278," I respond.
"No, that's your customer number, I need your client reference code,"
she replies sternly.
"What would that look like?" I ask, never having heard of it before.
"The Client Reference Code is a 17 letter alphanumeric identifier attached
to the top of all invoices," she replies.
"I'm afraid I don't have that with me at the moment, can I use my Customer
number?" I ask politely.
"I'm sorry, my machine only accepts the Client Reference Code," she
responds.
"Right, call you back soon."
I look thru the swathe of maintenance invoices to find that the client reference
code was only issued in the past 2 weeks and is to be used for all maintenance
calls. Excellent. I phone back.
"BBETA7873884A671F," I answer, in response to her answer, some 10
minutes later.
"I'm sorry, we don't have a record of PPECA7873884A671S," she responds.
Of course not.
"Sorry, I'll repeat, BRAVO, BRAVO, ECHO, TANGO, ALPHA, 7873884, ALPHA,
671 FOXTROT."
"Ah," she replies with what I believe is a tinge of disappointment,
"here we go. What was your PIN number?"
"Pardon?"
"Your PIN number for this Reference Code."
"0000," I guess.
"OK, she responds even more glumly. "And what seems to be the problem?"
"We have a hard disk failure."
"I see. What was the serial number of the hard disk?"
"I'm afraid I can't tell you that because opening the case would void our
maintenance agreement," I respond, knowing only too well the odds are against
me.
"Uh-huh. And your contact number?"
I give her my direct number, which she duly takes down. I get her to repeat
it till she gets it correct - no fool me.
"Alright, I'll have an engineer call you within the next working week."
"Within four hours, I believe."
"Um... No, you're on Premium Cover, that's response within a working week."
"No, four hours."
"No, four hours is for Premium Direct Cover, You only have a Premium Contract."
"I see. Can I ask a question off the record?"
"I suppose so."
"How many people get this far?"
"What do you mean?"
"As far as actually getting a technician to call them."
"Off the record?"
"Yes."
"About Three per cent. Twenty per cent get put off by the difficulty of
IVR, another 10 per cent get lost in the IVR system and probably lose their
mind, 13 per cent or so don't know, and never find, their Client Reference number.
Eight per cent do, but don't know their pin, 25 per cent supply me an 'incorrect
contact number', and 18 per cent can't wait a week and upgrade to Premium Direct,
and three per cent go insane and get taken away."
"So do you have any engineers?"
"Off the record?"
"Uh-huh."
"One. He lives in Wales. We mostly use the Premium Direct money to get
you a service contract with another service network - one that gives us a discount
if we have less that three calls a year. Otherwise you have to wait for him
to get a discount train fare into London."
"And how many staff in your company?"
"Apart from me and the engineer?"
"Yes."
"None."
"I see. So I'll be expecting your engineer.."
"Dave."
"..Dave, in a week or so then."
"Yes."
"It's been.... real."
I feel humbled.
BOFH '00.
Do not buy a PC from this Bastard
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 17/07/2000 at 15:14 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 27
So I'm at Tottenham Court Road peering at some overpriced kit when I notice
that one of my former users is in the house.
Well, when I say "user", I mean a: "This machine must be broken";
"I can do it faster by hand" stick-in-the-mud Luddite who still uses
a black and white toaster.
And Roger me silly with an extended keyboard if he doesn't have a heavily bookmarked
computer buyer's magazine in his grip. Opportunities like this don't come along
too often, so I leap into the void like a trooper.
"CAN I help you sir?" I ask, smiling ingratiatingly and assuming the
fawning subservience he no doubt expects from the computer working class
"Yes you ca - Why, it's Simon isn't it? I heard you'd left - WORKING for
a living now are you?" he chuckles.
"Well you know, have to make ends meet", I mumble deferentially, head
bowed like a true sales professional.
"So you work HERE do you?" he asks, scanning the place with a critical
eye, unable to resist the urge to gloat.
"Well, I do what I can." I mumble.
"CAN I help you sir?" a Salesdroid asks my man, seeing the mag and
smelling blood in the water..
"No thanks.. uh.. Ahim," I say, scanning the name badge and treating
him to an overdose of familiarity "I'm looking after these people."
"Well just let me know if there's anything I can do," he murmurs,
wandering off.
"Shall do" I cry happily, then turn back to my victim. I mean, "customer".
What was I thinking?
"Cut-throat business, sales," I tell my man - George - info supplied
courtesy of the subscription sticker on the back of his mag. "Now, what
can I help you with. You looking for computer then?"
"Well not exactly," George says evasively - not wanting to commit
his soul - whilst nodding in the direction of a similarly aged woman, "Alice
here would like to learn a bit about them and so we decided to buy one and I'll
teach her what I know."
It's borderline, but I think Alice might JUST be up to the exciting two minutes
of typing terror as they switch on.
"Excellent. Well, I see you've been reading up on the subject. You definitely
don't want to rush into a purchase like this."
"No, no, I've been getting this book for a couple of years now, just biding
my time..." George admits sagely.
"A good idea," I respond. "Now, what did you think you wanted
to look at?"
"A Pentium III 733 with 128 Megs of RAM, 18 gigabyte hard disk, Windows
2000, Microsoft Office, a 56K modem, a Colour Inkjet printed and an internal
ZIP drive" he blurts out, reading from his copious handwritten notes."
"A Pentium III. Really? Well, I SUPPOSE you know what you're doing."
"What do you mean?"
"Well you've read the Pentium IV is out."
"Yes."
"Well the price in Pentium IIIs is bound to plummet when the Pentium IV
is released - Specially," I look around furtively, "... when the public
find out that it's actually Two Pentium IIs on top of each other."
"Really?"
"Of course - that's what all those extra pins are!!"
"But they're not releasing Pentium IVs yet!"
"No, but you COULD set yourself up for an upgrade."
"How?"
Again I look around furtively before responding "Well, You buy an upgradable
Pentium II, and then, when the Pentium IV is released, just solder another Pentium
II on top of the other processor. But it has to be an upgradable one.."
"Why don't I just buy one and upgrade it now then?"
"It's not supported by the operating system yet!"
"Oh, of course!"
"Now the only other thing that concerns me is that you're not buying any
floppies for backup."
"Well no, I'm getting a Zip disk!"
"They're good, of course - but often stolen with the machine. That's why
we recommend buying floppies."
"But to backup an 18 gigabyte disk I'd need..."
"About 180 boxes of floppies, yes. Or 18 Zip disks. Now which would be
easier to steal?"
"The Zip disks!" George cries.
"Whereas the boxes of floppies would just slow the villains down."
"I never thought of that."
"Most people never do. In fact," I add, again looking around. "A
lot of salespeople try and talk you out of buying floppies.."
"Why?"
"Well, I'm not pointing the finger" I respond "But on the 'GUARANTEE
FORM' they get your Name and ADDRESS."
"You mean they ste.."
"I never said that!" I cry. "But I NEVER put my real name or
address on one of those things."
"I see. Point Taken. But the rest of what I want is spot-on then."
"Well, the 56K modem's a bit... well..."
"What?"
"Oh it probably won't matter to you of course, but, well, SOME modems have
porn detection circuits in them which ring Freephone numbers at night to tell
government agencies if you're a pervert."
"You're joking!"
"I wish I was. It's been in place in modems ever since the 38K ones were
released."
Round about now I'm starting to feel like a real bastard, but then I remember
his jibes.
"Did I say 38K?" I cry, "I meant 19K! But it never pays to take
chances - 9600 to be certain. The beauty of it all is that all this stuff is
dirt cheap now - PIIs, floppies, 9K modems.."
"Well I'm certainly glad I spoke to you," George cries. "Now,
how about you sell me it?!"
"Actually, I'm a consultant and don't do sales, but I'll line someone up
for you," I cry helpfully.
I break like the wind and get to Ahim.
"Hi, my friend here's a collector of older equipment and would really like
to pick up some equipment for a working model of the computing of the late 90s.
Could you help him out?"
Ahim has gone before I've finished the sentence and is already thinking of the
accolades he's going to be getting from his boss for offloading all the crap
that tourists don't even buy.
As for me, my job here is done - I wait till the trolley load of legacy kit
is out the door before heading down to the Rising Sun for a celebratory lager.
Life is sweet, but revenge - more so.
BOFH '00.
BOFH wants to know - would you make a good engineer?
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 25/07/2000 at 14:43 GMTSo you think you've got some idea of what hardware's
all about then? Think MAYBE you could mix it with the big boys of computer repair
and come out relatively unscathed? Well now's the time to put it to the test!
1. You hear a loud clatter from one of the fan units of a machine you're servicing.
An Amber FAN light at the front of the machine is on. The other FAN is stopped
completely. You know intuitively that:
A. One fan down, one fan about to go down
B. One fan down, one fan can be fixed on a later service call
C. One fan needs oiling, the other needs replacing
D. The stopped fan is probably a standby, and the other one is still going,
so no need to fix anything
E. A diagnostics problem is probably causing all this
2. It's 11pm, you're
in bed and get a call about a faulty disk drive. Your immediate response is:
A. I'll be right there after I stop for a replacement unit
B. I'll be right there but I may have to leave for a replacement unit
C. I'll be there in the morning as we have no replacement units in stock
D. I think you have the wrong number, this is Dave's Minicabs
E. I'm on another job out of town at the moment - my phone's on divert - I'll
get back to you next week sometime, with the replacement unit and the Penalty
call fee
3. 24 x 7 x 4 means:
A. 24 hour, 7 day, 4 hour repair
B. 24 hour, 7 day, 4 hour answerphone response
C. 24 hour, 7 day, 4 hour delay before response
D. C., then 4 hour delay before you get out of bed
E. 24 Day Repair, 7 minutes till your contract expires, 4 hours waiting for
someone to pick up the phone
4. You're called
into a job to service piece of kit you've never ever seen before. You don't
even know what it does. You:
A. Admit this to the client and call another engineer out
B. Admit it to the client
C. Look at the manuals
D. B, then C
E. Break out the screwdrivers - HOW HARD CAN IT BE!
5. After E, above
you put the kit back together and have a large box of spares left over. However,
the green light still comes on when you press the power button. You:
A. Look at the manual now, and put the pieces back
B. Leave the pieces with the client
C. Sell the pieces to the client as service spares
D. Put them in the bin
E. Take them home and build your own unit from the parts you'll have left over
the NEXT time you service one
6. You're called
out because an earth leakage detector is tripping on a piece of your kit. You:
A. Check the Power Supply
B. Run a continuity-to-ground test with a multimeter
C. Run a continuity to-ground test with a Megger tester, which patently says
on the outside "Not to be used on computer equipment"
D. Tell the client this unit isn't meant to operate on earth leakage detectors
E. Epoxy the Trip-reset button down
7. You have NO
F***ING IDEA what is wrong with a piece of kit you're servicing. You:
A. Ring a fellow engineer for advice
B. Replace the whole unit
C. Just keep plugging away for HOURS in case you find something
D. Piss about till the client leaves the room, then pack up and bugger off
E. D, and take the kit with you, then deny ever having been there
8. The phrase "No
user serviceable parts inside" means:
A. The unit is not easily serviceable by the client
B. The unit is compose of modular components that need to be replaced, not serviced
C. There is great danger for the client in opening the case
D. There's a bit of danger for an engineer too, to be honest
E. You'll be replacing the unit sight unseen
9. "Warranty
VOID if Seal Broken" means"
A. The seal guarantees that a product failed in service, and
not due to tampering by the client
B. The Seal guarantees that the entire unit has not been tampered with
C. The Seal stops people being nosey
D. The Seal stops people from finding out their 2000 quid unit consists of a
tiny circuit board and a bag of sand to make up weight
E. C, which is why you slap them on anything you can find from the stash in
your tool box
10. Ohms Law states
that two resistors in Parallel are:
A. Equal to a resistor of 1/2 the sum of the two resistors
B. Equal to a resistor less than either of the resistors
C. No substitute for a resistor of the correct value
D. Will do at a pinch
E. Can be charged out at twice the parts cost, to disguise the huge Labour charge?
How did you do
then?
Mostly A You're obviously not an engineer - it's patently obvious. You're too
honest and know too much. You must be stopped.
Mostly B You too know too much for your own, or your company's good. Stick to
your graduate studies and leave the real world alone.
Mostly C Honesty with occasional flashes of insight. You must do better if you
want to enter the fast pace charge-now-ask-questions- later world of engineering
Mostly D You've got what it takes, but you don't really know how to use it.
You need to sharpen those skills a little till you're at peak performance
Mostly E A large number of important vendors would snap you up in a trice. You
have the special blend of non-accountability, blatant irresponsibility and ignorance
that will make you invaluable to any organisation that chooses to employ you!
Good work!!!
Didn't do well? Perhaps you'll do better in Part Two - coming soon.
BOFH '00.
Are you BOFH Engineer Material - Part 2
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 01/08/2000 at 22:48 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 29
So you still want to be an engineer, eh? Not put off by the compulsory lobotomy,
the fashion-victim slacks? Well, this should sort out your destiny once and
for all.
1. You've just replaced a bit of dud kit in a client's machine. The old part
will be:
A. Sent back to the manufacturer to determine what went
wrong
B. Left in your "Dead Parts" store
C. Chucked into the Bin
D. Left on a table with other, similar, WORKING parts
E. Shoved in a bag with a "Serviced Used Part" sticker on the side
2. Ohms law says
that two resistors in series:
A. Are equal to three resistors of the same amount, in parallel
B. Cost more than one resistor
C. Are longer than one resistor
D. Are equal to the value of the root of the sum of the squares of the other
two sides
E. Require more soldering that one resistor (or two in parallel) and so therefore
can be charged a greater labour fee
3. "No questions asked replacement Policy" means:
A. We will replace a faulty part immediately, for any reason,
without question
B. We will replace a faulty part - if it is faulty, immediately, for any reason
without question
C. We'll replace any part that is faulty, and untampered, without question
D. We won't ask which part - we'll just replace something
E. The customer isn't allowed to ask questions - like: "When's my part
going to arrive?", "Hello, is this the hardware support people?"
4. Ninety per cent
of a particular disk release has failed. This would tend to suggest:
A. The units are unreliable
B. There may be a service issue with the device, or how they're configured
C. The clients abuse the units
D. Aliens have been infiltrating our air space and destroying the units (because
they're so good)
E. It's a government conspiracy - they're installing clipper chips in the new
ones
5. A machine you're
working on fails boot diagnostics for no apparent reason. This is probably because:
A. There is a low-level fault with the system leading to no
diagnostic message
B. There's a fault in the diagnostics themselves
C. The kit may - now don't quote me on this - be faulty
D. You didn't shake your lucky rabbit's foot three times before you powered
the kit on.
E. You're going to have to replace all the shiny things you stole from the kit
6. You have a bit
of a mishap and set a client's machine room on fire. You:
A. Apologise profusely and call your company's insurer
B. Apologise for their kit failing in that manner, and call the CLIENT'S insurer
C. Tell them to call their insurer
D. Remove all evidence that you have ever been to the site
E. C, charge for your fire-fighting time, sue for emotional stress, and take
three months-off traumatic leave
7. Your company
markets a HOT SITE recovery service. This is:
A. 24 hour, 7 day machine room to recover a client's systems
B. Next day recovery of client's systems, depending on availability
C. B, if you're using the same ancient hardware that we keep on our hot site
D. C, and have all your data on 300bpi 9-track tapes
E. We leave the heaters on at the office and have a couple of Pentium 80s you
can hire on an hourly basis
8. A client rings
you about cancelling the maintenance contract on a piece of their kit. You:
A. Take the information and cancel the maintenance
B. Take the information and cancel the maintenance after the agreed three month
cancellation notice period
C. B, and charge the client a maintenance modification fee of up to nine months
maintenance charge
D. Send them a maintenance cancellation form, in the mail, addressed to their
company, in Peru
E. D, then eventually B, then re-instate the maintenance at the beginning of
the next maintenance calendar year - when they'd least expect it
9. You visit a
site and see a POWER SUPPLY FAIL light glowing brilliantly. You know you don't
have one in stock, and also that your maintenance agreement
states that you must have a replacement unit within six hours. You:
A. Get one shipped in from where-ever, at ANY cost
B. Tell the customer and ask them to bear with you
C. Tell the customer and credit them for the inconvenience
D. Do a "Preventative Maintenance" site visit to another site and
STEAL a replacement Power Supply
E. Tell the client it's a lamp failure and disconnect it
10. You're servicing
a piece of kit and realise that your earthing strap has disappeared from your
kit. You:
A. Tell the customer and go back to the office and get a
replacement
B. Tell the customer the problem was worse than you thought and pop back to
the office for a new one
C. See if the customer has a replacement to save time
D. Clamp the metal frame of the device firmly with one hand and continue working
E. Pretend you have one on. They're overrated anyway. Juggle some memory chips
whilst running around some carpet in your nylon slacks while you're at it
Marking? Prizes?
- Didn't we do that last week?
BOFH '00.
Trust me, I'm a Bastard
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 10/08/2000 at 10:53 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 30
So I'm working hard after a quiet several pints at lunchtime when the phone
rings. Feeling magnanimous - and wanting the phone to stop ringing so I can
get back to sleep - I pick up the receiver..
"Hello, is this the Systems guys?"
"It certainly is!" I cry, full of the joyful spirit that denotes a
post-lunch computing professional.
"Um, OK, I'm configuring my new PC and it says I should write some stuff
down on the configuration card at the back of the book for my own records."
"You're WHAT?"
"Configuring my new PC. My old one was really slow so The Boss said I could
use the one he was using at home if I reinstall it from scratch."
"Ahh - you shouldn't be doing that, a home machine might be virally infected."
"No no, it's fine I ran a virus scan across it just this morning."
"Which scan software did you use?"
"I'm not sure, but it's one that I found on a Bulletin Board last year."
"I see. Okay then, that's probably OK - which machines were you going to
access with it?"
"Just some of the desktops in my department - do you think that would be
OK?"
"Hmm. Do you have write access to their Shares?"
"Yes.."
"Ah well that's fine then - shouldn't be a problem at all. Now, what"
'stuff' do you need to know?"
"It says I need to write down a MAC address?"
"Hmmm. We usually use the nearest one, which is just around the corner.
I think the number's on the side of the building from memory. Just jot that
down and pick me up a couple of burgers and one of those ice cream desserts
while you're there."
"Duh-huh."
"What else did you need to know?"
"It says: 'printer driver?'"
"That's Dave, he's the new stores guy, but he delivers printers too."
"...OK, Dave. Next it says: 'Memory' and 'M.B.' - do I write down 128,
like what it says when it starts?"
"No, write down 32."
"But the machine doesn't say that!"
"Don't worry, I'm sure we'll have that corrected by morning..."
"Oh, Ok. Great! Now it says my IP Address. What's my IP address?"
"127.0.0.1 - you'll need to configure that into the TCP/IP setup of your
machine too. Then use the 'Ping' program to make sure that it's working."
"Subnet Mask?"
"Ah, that would be 0.0.255.255 - what we call a B-Minus Subnet mask."
"Righto. Name Server Address?"
"*NAME* Server address? How do they spell that in that manual?"
"N-A-M-E."
"I think there's a spelling mistake then - it should be SAME server address.
The same 127 number you used before."
"Why do they want that?"
"Oh, it's a typical computing ploy - They give you a lot of boxes to fill
in so that you think you're getting value for money. I've seen some supposed
manuals that ask for things like, oh, WINS server addresses and all sorts of
other mumbo jumbo!"
"I've got that here!"
"Oh dear, do they ask for a DNS suffix as well?"
"YES!"
"The Don't Need Service suffix - I mean who would say they didn't need
service?'
"So why's it there?"
"Same as usual - if you put it in the Customer thinks they're getting better
value for money"
"I can't believe people would do that!"
"Happens all the time. Now, do you mind if I get some info off you for
the Helpdesk records - just helps us in future if you have any problems with
your Machines."
"Uh, OK."
"Office Number?"
"302."
"Phone Extension - 4781 right?"
"Yes."
"Name: Jim Forford?"
"Yep."
"Network Port Number?"
"Sorry?"
"The number of the plug hole the blue network cable plugs into.."
"Oh, ah... ah.. >scrabble< 302-R-1."
"No, that would be your BLACK Power Cable, we'll get to that later. For
now I'm after the BLUE cable. The Socket number has your room number and a U
in it"
"Oh, Ok. 302-U-4"
"Right. Access Swipe Card Number?"
"Hang on, >scrabble< 301009"
"Does it have an Issue Number under the Card Number?"
"Yes, Issue 1."
"So you're new here?"
"Yeah, just started two weeks ago."
BINGO!
"Right - and lastly, your Bankcard pin number?"
"What do you need that for?!?!"
"Well just in case the High Coarsivity Magnetic Strip on your Bankcard
overwrites the Low Coarsivity Image on your swipe card, we need the PIN number
to pass to the security access control computer to let you into the building."
***DUMMY MODE ON***
"Oh, of course. 4732."
"Right. And now we just need the pin depth of the Power Socket your machine
is plugged into."
"Huh?"
"Just need the depth of the holes on the socket 302-R-1. To make sure your
machine gets all the power it needs."
"How do I do that?"
"Shove a paper clip in the earth hole and measure how deep it goes down."
"Isn't that dangerous?"
"No, it's the earth."
"Oh, Ok. Uh..... >scrabble< >scribble< Ah, about 1/2 an inch."
"Right now measure the other two with another paperclip while keeping yourself
earthed with the first one."
"Ok, Uh >scrabble< uh just under 1/2 an inch... and >scrZZZZZEEERRRRRT!"
Quick as a flash I'm onto the PFY who is, as luck would have it, sleeping in
the third floor Comms Room...
"Right, C.P.R PRACTICE, Room 302. Then ATM Withdrawal Practice, lucky number
4732."
"On my way!" the PFY cries, dropping the phone in his haste.
It's like a well-oiled post-lunchtime machine - Perfect.
But for now, Morpheus calls.
BOFH '00.
BOFH takes the Piss
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 19/08/2000 at 10:49 GMT
BOFH2000: Episode 31
So The Boss has volunteered my services to the Beancounters to upgrade some
software an PC-based unix system to its latest (and last, if there's a God)
revision - from the current version they have - which was probably installed
on the Ark.
And as is always the case with vendors of old, dodgy software, there's more
clauses to the Warranty than there is Warranty (or Documentation), so it looks
like a suck-it-and-see job.
I hate it.
I offer to slap Linux in and rebuild their system for them, but apparently some
equally crap chunk of interface software absolutely HAS to have this EXACT flavour
of Unix to run, or it'll just sit mindlessly in the corner like most of its
users.
Eventually I come across the licences for the software, which probably cost
more to print than the product is worth - and notice that the licences are for
the old version of the software, and not the new version they were delivered
with.
Sigh.
So I've got to choose whether to back the whole lot up on floppies using a brain-dead
version of the only backup package the system has - cpio - and then perform
the upgrade, or give it a miss altogether.
So I'm packing up my kit when The Boss rolls in.
"So what's it look like?" he asks, peering at the documentation and
pretending he can read multiple syllable words. "Looks tricky.."
"More than tricky" I respond, "A pig's breakfast - The licences
aren't valid and the documentation is shite!"
"Nonsense, it's just a misprint!" he cries when I show him the evidence.
"It's bound to be a typing mistake!"
To top my day off, the user of the machine concerned arrives for his twopenn'th
of information.
"How's it going?" he asks nervously.
"Fine!" the boss cries, "Just about to get started! Well, I'll
leave you to it!"
He trundles off with the user for a cup of something which I can only hope is
toxic..
And I'm left wondering what Lassie would do... would she dial the suspiciously
short US 24hr freecall number? Would she ring the local "Value Added"
(pfft) Reseller and ask what the hell's going on? Or would she just relieve
herself on the cabinet and wander off?
So I'm relieving myself on the cabinet (with the Power OFF, of course) when
the user returns to the office. ..
Slightly shocked by the look of it.
"Thank goodness you're here!" I cry, adlibbing like a daemon, "Quick,
get a fire extinguisher - I think I'm holding it at bay!!!"
He rips out of the office like a madman while I escalate things a bit by kicking
the tower over and jumping on it a couple of times until the lid pops off, to
"stifle any lingering flames".
When he gets back I empty half a cylinder of dry powder into the floppy and
CD openings just to make sure that it doesn't "spontaneously re-ignite".
. . .
"Better safe that sorry!" I mention to my helper as I empty the other
half of the cylinder into the cooling fan inlet of his machine's power supply.
"My system!" he gasps. "YEARS of work!"
"Oh, don't worry about it, it's all backed up," I reassure him.
"Really?!"
"Nah, couldn't be stuffed. But hey, they hard drive's still OK!"
"You think so?"
"Almost definitely - there it is there, hardly a scratch on it, except
for those heel marks."
"What heel marks?"
>CRUNCH< >CRUNCH< >CRUNCH<
"Those ones!"
. . .
So I'm in The Boss's office and he's not buying the fire story for a minute.
Neither is he buying the: "my dog ate the backup tape" story.
"You're for the high jump now!" he cries, grabbing the phone and punching
in security's number. "You're as good as gone!"
"Gone?!" The PFY cries, arriving in the nick of time. "That's
great! I can't believe my luck!"
"?" The Boss hmmms.
"Well *I* get to be in charge! I get to make decisions for myself! Crash
the systems when I want, leak your dodgy Website browsing to the HOD, randomly
disconnect network connections f.."
I non-maskably interrupt the PFY with a quick >SLAP!< before he can get
all the way to meglomaniacland. Still he does dribble on a bit about making
the user's lives a misery in his own way, making IT Management look like the
prats they are, and so forth. Another NMI brings him back to the real world..
"Well, maybe I was a bit hasty in my initial estimation," The Boss
adds nervously, thinking carefully about the devil he knows.
"No, no!" I cry, realising the vast untapped fear potential stored
within the PFY, "I think you were more than justified! I'm a walking technical
timebomb! I'm a menace to myself and others. I can't be trusted near equipment!
Like your monitor."
"My monitor?"
>CRASH<
"Yes!"
"An accident," The Boss cries, "could have happened to anyone!
Look! See!"
>CRASH< a laptop joins the debris.
10 minutes later every piece of kit in the place is in pieces on the floor as
the Boss strives to prove that I'm not a completely malicious bastard after
all, and just prone to workplace accidents like him. It's all rather fun really.
Even more fun when security rocket up in response to the sounds of crashing
on the phone call they just received in time to see the boss "accidentally"
push his bookshelf over.
"Thank Goodness you're here!" I cry, using a line that's served me
well in the recent past. "He's gone completely mad you know. A walking
timebomb - a menace to himself and others! Why only this morning he directed
me to urinate in a mach..."
The rest is just history, like The Boss. The wailing, the gnashing of teeth,
the denials - it's worse than a Presidential Impeachment.
Still, best get 6 or 7 cups of coffee if I'm to complete that upgrade....
BOFH '00.
BOFH gets Outsourced
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 30/08/2000 at 00:43 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 32
"Outsourcing!" The Boss and Head of IT chuckle delightedly to each
other as they roll, in tandem, into Mission Control. "It's brilliant!"
Sigh.
"No it's not!" I cry, looking up from the Games Patch page I'm currently
engrossed in, "We get some outsourcing company in here, let them charge
us through the nose for a per-call support contract, seeing them one day a week
- if that - and in the end we'll have to take on more staff to fix the problems
they cause because they don't know the infrastructure! It's giving someone a
licence to print money!"
"That's just the point! It's a Goldmine! We can make a fortune!!!"
"*MAKE* a fortune?!"
"Yes, there's bound to be a ton of companies out there who need the skills
that you and your assistant have!"
"Sorry, you're suggesting that you outsource US?"
"Yes! We'll just contract out your spare time. You know, the time you waste
browsing the Internet."
"Keeping abreast of the industry you mean?"
"Or two breasts, if your assistant's browsing is anything to go by"
the Head of IT remarks, unable to drag his eyes from the pink hues emanating
from The PFY's screen.
"I'm actually reviewing the content of the web-cache to determine it's
feasibility for company business!" the PFY responds - aggression set to
STUN - appearing from behind a bookshelf.
"Web-cache?"
"Yes, I'm determining WHY the Cache always appears to be full of images
instead of any information related to work. When I've a complete list of the
users downloading the images we'll be able to save a mass of network bandwidth
AND MORE IMPORTANTLY make an estimate of the amount of time they spend browsing
porn in a day instead of working for the company."
"I hardly think that's a valid use of your time," The Boss responds
nervously.
"Yes, I can't see that there's any call for this sort of make-work activity!"
The Head of IT concurs, equally nervously. "In fact I think you should
cease this sort of activity - we're paying you for your technical expertise,
not to embark on some form of witchhunt!"
. . .
Any doubt in our minds about the source of the material in question disappears
in a flash...
"And that's exactly the point!" The Boss cries, clambering up to the
moral high ground."You have free time which we could be recovering revenue
from!"
Within a day an outsourcing deal is struck with some old-school chum of the
Head of IT with shabby technical support. The PFY and I are completely against
the idea until we find out that the company is in fact a modelling agency with
a free lunch bar. Fashionably clad models in need of IT support need the professional
services that only The PFY and I can provide...
[Later that same day]
"Well here we are!" Brian, our new subcontracted boss cries proudly,indicating
a mass of machines and cables laid all over the place in a rather warm office.
"A pig's breakfast in other words," I say, gazing at the mess unfolding
before me.
"NO!" a furry-toothed geeky type cries from behind us. "Every
system is in top working condition - I know, I installed them all."
"If by 'installed' you mean stacked them on any free horizontal surface
- yes, you have done well. But no airconditioning, no UPS - the whole place
could go tits up at any moment!" the PFY cries.
"I hardly think that's a likely occ..." the geeky type starts.
"There's not even a lock on the door!", I cry "Why, any disgruntled
former model with a face like a camel's backside and bitter about it could just
wander in here and turn the kit off! I'm actually surprised that no-one' stripped
over a power cable and brought the lot down before now!"
. . .
A quick "woopsy" from the PFY later (always quick to take a hint)
and Brian has accidentally stepped backwards onto the reset switch of a plugbox
which he probably could have sworn wasn't there a few seconds before...
Such is the ability of a computing professional to foretell the future..
Proof positive of our technical ability, Brian immediately converts to the side
of good.
"My goodness! It's a timebomb! All our model and contract info is on those
machines! It's worth a fortune!"
"We'll need a computer room," I warn Brian.
"Of course!"
"Some place that's well-airconditioned and has a healthy amount of electrical
wiring, as opposed to a jury-rigged office," The PFY suggests, "Preferrably
somewhere that we can put a couple of vertical racks in.."
"I don't think we have anywhere like that here - we've only got three floors
of the building," Brian responds.
"Somewhere with a LOT of LIGHT too?" the PFY prompts, "so we're
easily able to keep an eye on the servers?"
"No, can't think of anythi.."
"Perhaps with a lot of SPACE surrounding it, in case of airconditioning
problems..."
"THE BASEMENT!" Brian cries, "A STOREROOM!!!"
"Danger of flooding," I offer. "Also, we'd need somewhere with
RESTRICTED ACCESS.."
"THE PHOTOGRAPHIC STUDIO!" Brian cries, finally taking the hints!
"Of course!" the PFY cries, sucking up so energetically he'll be needing
a dustbag shortly "Why didn't I think of that!?!"
. . .
And the worst thing about outsourcing is it's all WORK, WORK, WORK!
No sooner have we set ourselves up in business (took a while for the geek to
carry all the kit up the stairwell [because someone convinced Brian of the electrostatic
dangers of lifts]) than we're called out to look at access problems, and wouldn't
you bloody know it, there's a swimsuit shoot on and the problem is so intermittent
that it looks like we're going to have to hang around the place till the problem
recurs.
Ah well, that's the price you pay, I guess.
BOFH '00.
BOFH gets Committed
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 15/09/2000 at 12:46 GMT
BOFH2000: Episode 33
So I get into work - very early for a change - and am swiping myself through
the door, when... nothing happens. Retrying the swipe card isn't notably useful
either. Around now I feel it's time to bring security into the game by tapping
on the glass and waking them from their productive sleep.
Having had dealings with IT in the past, they let me in and I wander up to Mission
Control, only to find I can't get into my area either. Using plan B, I open
the release box and remove the breakglass to let myself in.
15 minutes later security rolls up to respond to the emergency.
"Card wouldn't work" I mumble, showing the offending item to him "must
be stuffed!"
"No I checked that before you came, the register says that you don't work
here any more..." Security mumbles apologetically "..which means that
I have to ask you to, ah.. if you want a coffee?"
"That'd be lovely - Black no Sugar please"
. . .
An hour later, when personnel arrives, the mystery is discovered. It would appear
that everyone whose contract rolls over in July is automatically presumed to
be departed if they don't renew their contract (as opposed to get a new and
more lucrative one) by the same day number in September.
"It's just a little foible of the program!" I'm assured by the Fielding,
the personnel helpdesk person whose only practical experience of programmes
would be Coronation Street.
"So when will it be fixed?"
"Well that's the tricky bit - as you're no longer working for us officially,
you can't request an update - we need a more superior member of staff to vouch
for you.."
"Superior in what way?" I ask.
"Higher up the ladder."
"Corporate or Evolutionary?"
"Corporate."
"So you want my boss to give you a ring?"
"Uh, it has to be done in writing."
"And if my boss is out of the office?"
"His boss?"
"Away with my Boss on a Junket.."
"Do you know the CEO?" he smirks audibly.
"No."
"Well, we've reached an impasse then haven't we?" he declares smugly.
"It's more than my job's worth to falsify records."
"Would that were the case for everyone in the building," I respond.
>Clickety Click<
"..There we go, the database now reflects that myself - and my offsider,
who also appeared to have departed - are back on the contracting Payroll."
"Well I'm sorry but I can't..."
"Of course you can't" >clickety click< "Ohmigoodness, I've
just typed DROP EMP!"
"It's ok!" he cries quickly. "No harm done, so long as you don't
type COMMIT."
>clickety click<
"Ok, typed COMMIT like you said, what now?"
There's a pause while some similar clickety noises and the sound of a return
key being hit with increasing ferocity occur.
"I said: 'DON'T TYPE COMMIT!'" he gasps in horror. "We'll have
to do a roll back!!!"
"Can't roll it back, it's committed!" I respond, with similar mock
horror.
"A recovery!!!"
"Can't do that either!'
"Why not, we've got backups!?!?!"
"We have, but we don't have DBA's - they don't TECHNICALLY work here any
more!"
"You'll have to do it!"
"Well I COULD do it I suppose, but..."
"But what?"
"Well, you don't work here any more - TECHNICALLY - so I can't really accept
a request for recovery from you."
"But you KNOW I work here. Just add me back to the database!"
"I think we may have reached that impasse again..." I respond.
"WHAT?!"
"Well it's more than my job's worth to falsify records!"
"BUT YOU JUST DID IT BEFORE!!!"
"Yes, but I wasn't WORKING here TECHNICALLY then, remember - now I'm back
and have a job at risk!"
"You're just as gone as I am!"
"Yes, but actually NO. Contractors aren't in the EMP table.."
"But..."
"But I SUPPOSE if you could get a more superior member of staff to vouch
for you.."
"My Boss?"
"In the EMP table.."
"His Boss.."
"EMP table - Do you know the CEO?"
"No?"
"Well that exhausts the Corporate Ladder. Let's try Evolutionary. Do you
have a goldfish at work?"
"No."
"Any rats?"
"What?!"
"What about... an Assistant IT Professional?"
"Who?"
"My offsider for instance."
"Yes, would he vouch for me?!??"
"It's possible..."
"Well can you give him a ring?"
"Uh, I THINK I'll be needing the verification in writing."
"I'll write it and give it to him!"
"We're very particular about the verification.."
"How?"
"It should be written on 50 pound notes. Four of them.."
"THAT'S EXTORTION!!"
"Yes, well spotted! Best you hurry along though, wouldn't want to miss
the Bank Opening and get locked out of the building, or worse still, have to
submit to a strip search as a non-employee roaming the building...."
. . .
20 minutes and one strip search later (couldn't resist the call) the PFY and
I are a ton richer.
"Right!" I cry when Fielding rings back ."So recovery is complete
and everything's back to normal."
"I, Uh," Fielding responds, "OK."
"That's OK, don't mention it!" I cry, disconnecting.
>UPDATE EMP SET STATE = 0 WHERE SURNAME='FIELDING' AND FIRSTNAME='PAUL'<
"Hello security? I think that bloke's back again...."
>COMMIT<
BOFH '00.
BOFH: No service therefore no denial
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 22/09/2000 at 15:23 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 34
"I'm a bit concerned about these viruses that seem to be springing up all
over the world!" the Boss burbles upon entering Mission Control under a
medium head of steam - obviously someone's accidentally exposed him to a broadsheet
newspaper on his way to work.
"Virii?" I ask, attempting to divine the purpose of the visit
"Yes. Like the D.O.S.virus"
"You mean the one perpetrated by Microsoft? I thought only I knew about
that!"
"What?! No, the Denial of Service Virus"
"Ah, the Denial of Service *VIRUS*. Yes, I've been a little worried about
that myself. But we found a way around it"
"And what's that?"
"Well we've found that if you don't actually *HAVE* a service, it can't
be denied.."
"What?!"
"A little joke!" I lie, "But we've not been hit by a Denial of
Service Attack so far"
"How would you know?"
"Because the service of a particular SERVER would go through the floor"
"Yes, but how would you KNOW?"
"Ah, I see! Well generally, a denial of service attack would affect us
like so."
>CLICK!< >WHIRRrrrrr....<
"What did you just do?"
"Switched off the Financials Database machine"
"Why?"
"To illustrate a point. As I was saying, a denial of service attack is
usually first noticed by the users..."
>ring ring<
>Click< >wwwwwWWWWHHHHIRRRRR...<
"And see all those call lights on the phone? That's how WE know."
"Unless of course we never left our desks and continuously monitored machine
performance" the PFY adds, trying to find a reason to browse porn sites
for 8 whole hours a day, without the normal break for lunch...
1/4 of an hour later, the financials server is back in business but the boss
has obviously been wound up by someone and wants to delve into the whole virus
quagmire.
"So we have antivirus products for our mail server and our Windows machines,
but what do we have for our Unix Servers"
"Nothing. They don't need it per se"
"But how do you KNOW?"
Sadly, the boss slams the cover on the server before I can repeat the demonstration,
which just goes to show you can teach an old dog to be afraid. Very afraid...
"I don't know what you mean"
"Well years ago when I was a Unix Admin..."
I only just manage to suppress the cry that he wouldn't even qualify as a unix
admin's ARSEHOLE, as he continues..
"..I used to just use strings to see if anything nefarious was going on"
the Boss finishes, letting us in on a technical secret bound to take us to the
top of our chosen field.
"Strings?" the PFY asks, feigning stupidity "You mean like the
non- null terminated jobbies that let you read on into virtual memory?"
"?" the Boss responds in turn, before continuing "No, I mean
the program strings"
"Strings.." I add thoughtfully, allowing the Boss his moment in the
technical sun "No, doesn't ring any bells with me"
"Oh for Pete's sake, you call yourself professionals!" he burbles
happily, milking his supposed advanced knowledge for all it's worth "Strings
- it's a great program to extract the text from files. Then you can search it
for things that don't look right"
"Oh, so you're saying we should get the text out of these files, see if
any of it looks suspicious or not, and if so delete the infected files?"
"YES!" he gasps, marvelling at the beauty of his plan
"But what if they use some trivial encoding method to ensure that plaintext
strings aren't included in the file?"
"Well obviously there's a few programs that it won't highlight, but we
can clear those up later by looking for modification dates" he counters,
obviously having read the text entitled "hak3r hunt1ng f0r m0r0ns",
circa 1981
"Right, so what should we be looking for?" the PFY asks, flipping
to the Finance Systems AIX server console.
"Suspicious strings" The Boss says, really adding value to the conversation
"Like?"
"I don't know, suspicious ones"
"What about ones that refer to the password file?" I suggest helpfully
"Definitely! They'll be stealing names and passwords!!!"
"No.. .. .nothing.. " the PFY mumbles quietly, "NO WAIT, there's
something in a program called init and another in a program called cron!!!"
"The sneaky bastards!" I cry, figuring what the PFY's up to "They
put them in programs commonly executed by the superuser which no- one kno..."
"..and in id, at, and atrm!!!"
"It's worse than we thought!!!" I cry "What do they do, grab
the password and give error messages?!?"
"There's error messages in there - do you think they're using it to cover
up the access"
"Of course!" the boss cries excitedly "That's how they hide what
they're doing – With Error MESSAGES!!!!!"
"Uh-oh, I see there's a root process running cron now!!!"
"Kill it!!" The boss gasps
>clickety clack<
"ls has error messages in it too!!!" the pfy cries, keeping the level
of panic up to
100%
"DELETE IT QUICKLY BEFORE SOMEONE USES IT!!!!"
And the funny thing is, it's fairly surprising how long a system will stay up
when you remove all the executables, most of the libraries, and trash a filesystem
or two.
"THEY'VE CRASHED THE SYSTEM!!!!" the PFY cries, even more urgently
"THAT MEANS THEY'VE MOVED ON TO ANOTHER SYSTEM!!!" I cry, before the
boss can see reason....
And the rest, as they say, is history.
The boss took it well though - fell on his sword with only the slightest wimper.
I feel a tinge of guilt - but then realise there's plenty of Unix Admin jobs
out there waiting for him....
BOFH '00.
BOFH goes to War
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 03/10/2000 at 19:42 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 35
Couple of problems with the Firewall machine overnight," the PFY says as
I wander through the door to Mission Control. "Looks like it stopped a
denial of service attack by crashing."
"Always good to know that there's a backup plan for kit if we need it,"
I respond. "Are we back up and running?"
"Yep, looks like our utilisations at it's normal point on...WHAT the HELL
are you wearing!?!?!"
"What this old thing?" I reply, fingering the finely blended wool
and nylon mix that is my one and only suit.
- Only been worn three times.
"No, THAT!" he cries, pointing in horror.
"This is called a TIE. Predominantly used to engender respect for the wearer
- which more often than not is undeserved."
"And you're wearing one - because?"
"Because, as they say, today is the first day of the rest of my life."
"Uh-huh. And you're going to brown-nose the new boss perhaps? I thought
you said he was a shocker - ex military with no experience of comput.."
"Yep. They're the best sort..."
"Ah excuse me..." a timid voice interjects.
Our conversation is interrupted by the departmental secretary informing us that
the Head of IT has some form of rare and virulent food-based illness which prevents
him from being in to show the new Boss around...
What a coincidence...
"I'll do it!"
. . .
"Hi there" I burble, greeting the new Boss-type with a good firm handshake,
making specially sure to hold it for just a tad to long to be comfortable. "I'm
Brian, the Head of IT. First off, I suppose you want to look over the kit we
have about the place."
"Hi, I'm Dave - Uh, I actually saw the computer suite during my interview
- with the, uh, Head of I.T."
"The other Brian?" respond, covering well. "Yes, a bit confusing
I suppose. Still, you'll be dealing with me from now on, after.. well, you know."
"Well actually I don.."
"Yes, a bit of a tragedy, but then again, we knew it was on the cards when
we found that hole in the microwave dish shielding. They tell us they've repaired
it though, so I'm sure you've nothing to worry about. Anyway, I'd best show
you around to give them a chance to pack up his stuff before you move in. Had
a CT scan recently have you?"
"No, why?" Dave asks nervously.
"Oh, no reason!" I respond."But probably best to sit on the LEFT
hand side of the room till we're sure."
"The left hand side as you're looking in or out?" he asks.
"Yes, that's right. Now you've no experience of computing till now?"
"No, I was in the armed forces, but decided to break into Computing when
my 20 years were up."
"But surely you've used computers there?"
"No our work revolved around troop movements, armoury inventories, that
sort of thing, but I'm sure I'll get the hang of it. How hard can it be? We'll
have you running like clockwork in no time."
So it's decided then...
"Did HR Issue you with an Access ID card?" I ask, as we enter mission
control.
"Yes."
"Right, I'll just get one of the Systems and Networks guys to validate
that.."
The PFY rolls over with the bulk eraser, and a short >BZZZZZeeerrrt< later
Dave's building access is severely curtailed...
"Right, we need to get you to your office. Right this way..."
I walk Dave down to Brian's office - the plausibility of my story going up as
the bin appears to have been used to store the 'overflow' of the food which
upset him so much yesterday.
"Oh dear," I sigh. "They haven't got round to packing up his
things. Actually, perhaps you could help? Just chuck all the personal stuff
in a box."
"B.b.but isn't this YOUR office?" He asks.
"Ah, not any more. They decided I should work down the corridor, you know,
after everything. So if you could just pack up that stuff and remember to stay
away from the left wall.."
"Stay AWAY from the lef.." Dave mumbles as I close the door.
"Doing some tidying for Brian," I tell the secretary as I wander past
to mission control tapping my temple. "Obsessive about it apparently.."
The PFY and I have a 10-minute microwave laugh break, I outline my plan then
head back for round two.
Dave's sitting in the dead center of the room, unable to decide which is left
and what proximity he should have to it..
"Right well, I suppose we'd better get your manager's pack from the secretary,
with your business cards, signing authority and company credit card..."
"Ok" Dave accedes, happy to be leaving the danger zone.
"So I guess you've never ordered supplies online before..?"
"Never.."
"That's a piece of luck, as I'm in a position to step you through the process."
Two hours and several large Internet purchases later Dave leaves the office
with a bit of a sweat on, from what he believes to be microwaves. I make sure
that the secretary gets a couple of glimpses of him wearing an aluminium foil
"earthing hat" before filling him in on some of the background of
computing..
"..and that's why they call it rebooting.." I explain, pointing Dave
in the direction of the stairwell and slipping him a pair of steel-caps. "So
if you could just give us a hand and sort out the 4th floor machines, I've got
a fire alarm to test."
"Always willing to muck in!" Dave cries obligingly, rising to the
challenge in a shot rather than return to his office. . .
Later that day I explain the whole sordid thing to security - How Dave - who
wasn't all that stable to start with (confirmed by the secretary) had had a
Shell-Shocklike flashback to a war Nam, Korea or some other disastrous war zone
like Leeds and had gone on a machine- wrecking rampage through the building.
"I'm surprised someone like that can even GET a gun licence," the
PFY comments, ensuring that Dave's next working day will be eventful.
Almost makes me wish I hadn't told him it was virus combat costume party day
tomorrow. Black out face paint optional...
BOFH '00.
Pay reviews for Bastards
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 13/10/2000 at 07:14 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 36
So as his immediate senior, I get to give the PFY his performance appraisal
review, and as my "senior" The New Boss - Release Version II - gets
to give me one (although not in the biblical sense).
All a bit of a problem for him really as he's so new he has to rely on the reports
of his predecessor and other managers to come up with something that both keeps
the workers happy whilst looking effectual. Pure PR of course, now that he's
realised his role's not one of the more popular in the company.
"So how did it go?" he asks conversationally, wanting to know the
ins and outs of the PFY's review.
"Very well actually. Overall I'm quite pleased with his progress although
there were a couple of areas I was disappointed in."
"Yes?" The Boss asks, keenly interested any negativity directed away
from his role.
"Yes, yesterday I noticed he answered the phone ONCE!"
"That's terrible!" The Boss cries.
"I know - I would have let it ring. As I said to him - 'Its only a user
- they'll ring back if it's important enough and restarting their machine doesn't
fix it. And their desk's not on fire...'. I'm starting to wonder if he actually
thinks he's there to help people."
The boss laughs nervously, not really believing me. "Desk's not on fire"
he chuckles.
"..So of course I told him that muting the ring on his phone will help
solve the moral dilemma of whether to help people or not."
"Well, TECHNICALLY, you ARE there to help people.." The Boss mentions
quietly.
"No, I think you'll find that our contract quite clearly states that we're
responsible for the smooth running of the networks and systems - it says nothing
about the users. IN FACT, it's only because I'm of a benevolent nature that
I even let the users ACCESS the machine, as theoretically they're UPSETTING
the smooth running of the systems and networks. Call me an old softy I guess.."
The Boss again chuckles nervously, not wanting to open this particular can of
worms either. Instead he decides to get down to business.
"So", he starts. "Lets look at your role and the Key performance
indicators.. >scrabble< Let's see... SYSTEM UPTIME - reasonable."
"Reasonable"?
"Apparently I'm told there's been a lot of unscheduled outages."
"What? - I ALWAYS notify users of outages!"
"Yes. I think that senior management believe that multicasting... uh, Bruce
Springsteens's 'I'm going down' doesn't constitute notification!"
"It makes people disconnect!"
"I'm sure it does NOW - but I think you should be giving people advance
notice! My last position required advance notice well ahead of outages."
"THEY GET TILL THE END OF THE SONG!" I cry.
"n'Yes.. Anyway, moving right along. Helpdesk calls resolved - Limited."
"Of course it's limited, I can never connect to the helpdesk server to
resolve them!"
"Would that be because you.. uh, >scrabble< ran an angle grinder
into the network card?"
"An accident. I was trying to cut through the padlock that was stuck on
the back of the machine."
"Stuck because someone glued a matchstick into the keyway with epoxy resin?"
"Yes, vandals strike everywhere!"
"Even in the rooms only YOU two have access to?"
"Especially there. It's the last place you'd expect. Quite clearly a setup!"
"I see. So your poor Helpdesk resolution record is due to a damaged network
card preventing you from closing calls?"
"Yes. But we resolve calls passed to us on paper!"
"How?"
"We file them. One hundred per cent hit rate so far!"
"You've solved all of them?!?"
"No we get them all in the bin. Uh, I mean low-profile circular filing
cabinet."
"Yes... I think I might change that to *VERY* limited. Now 'Complaints
about work' - frequent."
"I'm sorry, but I find that very hard to believe!"
"Well I've one here as it happens, from an executive member of the accounting
audit group. He says you told him there were constraints on documents to be
emailed."
"Yes - we have an SMTP limitation of 2 Meg, which once an attached document
is encapsul.."
"He says you told him to chop his diary up and push it into the floppy
drive of his machine if he wanted to share it with his secretary!!"
"That's just preposterous!" I cry, remembering the good laugh the
PFY and I had over that one.
"It doesn't stop there!" he responds, cranking up the tone a little.
"He also claims you bought several copies of Red Hat Linux under the safety
and security budget, trying to pass them off as Fire Warden Helmets!"
"I think you'll find the Operating Systems were purchased for the Security's
desktop machines."
"And that's where you installed them then?"
"Unfortunately the media wasn't compatible with their CD Drive."
"Non ISO Format?"
"No, the drive had matchsticks epoxy-resined into it."
"This is just ridiculous!" he cries. "You can't seriously expect
to solve all your problems with epoxy resin!"
"No, you're right. I bought a brazing kit yesterday."
Once again The Boss chooses to ignore a confession in favour of pursuing some
other line of enquiry.
"And here - apparently you assaulted a user?!?!"
"Water under the bridge. A simple mistake that anyone could make.. We were
configuring his network and I gave him the choice of colour-coded cables, and
I misheard him saying that he wanted the violet option. I thought he said VIOLENT
connection option."
"Who on earth has a violent connection option?!"
"We do. Now."
"But who would ask for it?"
"Well, only one person so far..."
From then on it just goes downhill, and I'm forced to retire to my office well
chastised.
"Should I go and see if I can defuse the situation?" The PFY asks,
fingering the government-disapproved cattle prod he just ordered as an 'Uninterruptible
Power Supply'.
"Oh, I shouldn't bother just at the moment."
"What, given up the good fight?" The PFY asks disgustedly.
"No, someone brazed his door handles solid yesterday and epoxy- resined
his windows shut."
"Bastards!" the PFY cries
"Yes. Lets hope they don't set his desk on f..." %% >Jangle<
>Jangle<>Jangle<
"Ah well."
BOFH '00.
BOFH: Call in the Specialist
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 23/10/2000 at 21:25 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 37
"..Well I think in that case, perhaps we should get a specialist in!"
The Boss counters in response to the sad news that neither The PFY nor I know
a single thing about 'e-tail' - and are unlikely to want to learn in the foreseeable
future. "In fact I might know just the man. Worked with him in Beirut you
know!"
"The HEART of Electronic Retail!" The PFY comments dryly.
"That's got nothing to do with it! Anyway, he wasn't in computing then,
he was repairing planes!"
"So he's more of a commuting professional that a computing professional?"
I chuckle, unable to resist a quick aside now that there's blood in the water.
"Of course not! That was years ago! No, now he's VERY thick in computing."
"As opposed to being thick AT computing?" the PFY asks, not at all
subtly..
"LOOK, HE'S THE MAN I TELL YOU! And I'm *GETTING* him in!" The Boss
cries, making his executive decision.
. . .
"Cowboy!" I predict to The PFY once we're in the safe confines of
mission control.
"He didn't sound THAT ba.."
"Mark my words, he'll have his own mini-screwdriver set - which he's had
since the airplane days, AND which has been used to repair computers when he
did THAT for a living - and will come complete with sets of acronyms and buzzwords
that no-one's ever heard before."
"I still thi.."
"He's the sort that makes friends with Management and excuses for stuff-ups.
He'll be gone in a week, the project will be deader than Beta Video AND we'll
be blamed for its failure, for not working in with him!"
"Why don't we wait and se.."
"100 quid?" I ask, choosing stakes designed to engender a bit of forethought.
"Deal!" The PFY cries, largely bypassing the thought bit in pursuit
of prospective readies.
. . .
I don't know what it is about The PFY that makes him such a sucker for a wager.
Whatever it is, it can't be good for him however, and I feel it's my duty to
take his money to ensure he learns.
. . .
And MY money's looking pretty good a day later when Jim, our new contracted
expert turns up - as luck would have it, between jobs at the moment.
No surprises there.
"So, they tell me you're a bit of a wiz at this online retail stuff,"
I mention in passing, once we've got the introductory formalities out of the
way.
"Online Retail?" He asks blankly.
"Yes, you know E-tail, E-Commerce?"
"No, I - OH! You mean Internet-Based Commercial Marketing, as we like to
call it!"
"'We' being?"
"Oh, just us in-the-trade people."
The PFY can see his 100 quid disappearing down the tubes and decides to give
Jim a couple of hints to help him along his way.
"You'll be wanting to see the commerce servers we've got, along with our
certificated web servers and bank interface then?" he asks.
What a cheat!
"No, no, I find that stuff all takes care of itself, we need some flashy
moving-type images to draw people to the electronic company marketing site."
"Animated gifs will bring people to our website from far and wide?"
I ask, whilst showing the PFY the space I've just made in my wallet for his
money.. "That's a little har.."
"Obviously a well-tailored portal would encourage confidence in customers,"
The PFY chips, just as The Boss shows up.
"See!" The Boss cries, hearing only some semi-positive statements.
"I knew he'd be just the man for the job. Now, what sort of delivery time
are we looking at?"
"Should be up and running inside a week," Jim responds, pulling a
ridiculous figure out of his backside.
ONE WEEK LATER
"..because they don't seem to want to help install the software!"
Jim burbles "But I SUPPOSE if I do it MYSELF we can have it all sorted
out inside a week..."
"Oh I'm sure I can COUNT on these two to help you out" the Boss murmurs,
in a tone intended to imply our lack of choice in the matter.
ONE DAY LATER
"It's fantastic!" The Boss cries, surveying the website which has
more plagiarised content on it than your average WareZ zone. "Those moving
pictures really DO draw the eye, don't they."
"Like a road accident," I agree. "It's only a pity Jim couldn't
be here to see it. Where did he say he was again?"
"Oh, he left a message saying something about popping back to Beirut for
a bit - apparently he's packed up and moved on - but not before completing this."
ONE MINUTE LATER
"And you're really going to let Jim take the credit?"
"For the website containing large amounts of copyright images and content,
some of which is bound to result in legal action. Yes, I think so!"
"But he also gets paid for it!"
"True. But then he'll need money when he gets to Beirut..."
"But did he really go to Beirut?" The PFY asks suspiciously. "It
all sounds a little shady to me."
"I can almost guarantee he's going to Beirut. Eventually."
MEANWHILE, IN A PACKING CRATE AT HEATHROW, INSIDE A CRATE LABELLED "LIVE
ANIMAL EXPORTS"
"MMMmmmMMMMF!!!"
"MMMMMmmmMMMMMMMMM MMM M MMMMMMFFF!"
"MMMMMMMMMFMFMFMMMMFFF!"
Mind you, 100 quid is, after all, 100 quid.
BOFH '00.
The Bastard hits Cruise Control
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 01/11/2000 at 21:17 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 38
SO I'm debugging an App I've only just cobbled together to monitor the browsing
histories of senior management (just prior to contract renegotiation time as
it happens) when the company cruiser walks in.
I hate the company cruiser. And every company has one - the person who doesn't
really have a job outside of collecting stats on how winnable the Solitaire
game on their desktop is. But so as to disguise this fact, they spend most of
their time out of their office "working" with others.
"Morning," he burbles, unaware that his presence is about as welcome
as Bill Gates at a Linux users' beerfest. "What're you doing?"
"Ah, just debugging an application," I respond, trying to maintain
my train of thought.
"Oh yes, I used to do a bit of programming in my earlier days," he
meanders, no doubt recalling the cutting edge of technical pressure of remembering
to press return at the end of the line.
Now call me a pedant, call me ELITIST even, but if there's ONE THING that *REALLY*
gets on my TITS, it's someone claiming to be a "programmer" because
they had to type a PIN number in every day to operate a cash register, enter
word processing documents or generally confuse the crap out of themselves
"We used to use the old black boxes." he continues, unaware of the
"Did you ever use one of them? Tricky pieces of machinery, those, not like
these days with all the help screens and things you have to make it easier.
All we had back then was the F keys, and they weren't much help. No, you'd have
to nut out problems yourself!..."
He meanders aimlessly and I start wondering how long it's going to take to get
to the great Tab-key crisis of '83, and, more importantly, how full the skip
at the building site down the street is, and if someone would notice a heavy
6ft computer cabinet in it..
"...The number of times I had to resort to F2-ing the document - can't
recall what it used to do now, but it was a last resort that we had to use from
time to time. Look - tell you what - do you want me to give you a hand, I was
a bit of a dab hand with computers once, programmed quite a bit of stuff in
the editor - all sorts of stuff!"
"OK," I respond, wondering if he'll leave me alone when he finds how
out of his depth he is.. "What do you know about Perl?"
"Pearls, Uh, that would be the, uh, 30th anniversary," he burbles
proudly.
"No,Perl, the scripting language," I say, through slightly clenched
teeth.
"Is it like vi?" he replies, "I programmed in vi a couple of
times - not a buff, mind, just a talented amateur, if I say so myself!"
Nggg.....
My mind is now blanker than a blank thing, and welcomes the interruption afforded
by the sight of The PFY at the door. He, and my last hope, disappear quicker
than alcohol at a press release, JUST before the cruiser can catch sight of
him and regale him with stories of how he was an assistant once and how Philips
head screwdrivers are a lot easier to use these days, what with posidrive and
all.
The Bastard!
"Well it's not MUCH like vi - but what I'm trying to do is find out why
an array appears to be overflowing on what SHOULD be a trivial amount of input,
when I'm only selecting the first couple of fields from a varying length input
string which is never null"
"Uh.."
I'm faily sure he was with me up to 'array', though it can't hurt to put the
slipper in a couple more times..
"So did you get that on your vi encounters?"
"Uh.."
"Or was your work more of a scalar nature?"
"Well as I said, I'd done more in the way of programming on the Black Boxes
we used in the old building - I tell you, sometimes you almost didn't know WHICH
button to push!"
I realise the futility of the Dummy Mode plan - he *LIVES* there so he's immune
to its effects. Which leaves the backup reserve plan..
"I can imagine!" I concur, "Actually, I think I know what the
problem is - it'll be the 3rd array desynchronisation counter. The problem is
usually in the hardware for those!"
"Hardware!!" he gasps "Now *THAT* I'm pretty good at!"
I mentally put aside the number of times we've been called to reassemble the
PC of someone he's "helped" and continue. "Well you might be
able to help then, here I'll show you..."
"It's an empty computer cabinet!" he cries viewing the box in front
of him.
"No, the desynchronisation counter is mounted at the back. This is just
the heatsink!"
"Oh yes, I see >clamber<. And this stuff, which looks like noise
cancelling cloth - isa that some form of thermal insu.."
>*SLAM*<
SO I'm debugging an App I've only just cobbled together when my thoughts are
again interrupted, this time by the passing of a large truck carrying a very
full skip.
Lucky I caught him.
Now lets see *strptr++ is WHERE precisely...
BOFH '00.
BOFH: Lights out for Contractors
By: Simon Travaglia
Posted: 13/11/2000 at 12:01 GMT
BOFH 2000: Episode 39
So I'm investigating a routine fault ("My machine won't work") in
the Basement - which I usually avoid like the plague because of the weirdy types
who are cellared there - when my enquiries result in forcing me to go to the
basement Comms room for the first time.
With some trepidation - having seen the rooms in other parts of the building
- I open the door to the Comms Room, take a quick look, then slam the door shut.
Well, TRY to slam the door shut. I slip a wedge under the door before any more
cable can slop out the gap while I go to find The Boss.
"What" I ask him, when he's wheezed his way downstairs, "the
*HELL*, isTHAT?"
"That's a COMMS room!" he blurts, topping his previous personal best
effort by reading the label off the door without sticking his tongue out.
I open a door to reveal the horror of the room within. A rat's nest of cabling,
thinwire, thickwire, UTP, some stuff that could be unshielded serial, and -
oh dear - what looks to be a token ring experiment...
"Obviously a little tidying is needed.." The Boss admits grudgingly.
"A little?"
"Well, not so much as to cause an outage or anything, but perhaps you could,
uh, repatch them, a few at a time."
A few minutes and one "Facts of Life" briefing later, The Boss is
informed about of the infinitesimal chances of fixing this without a major outage.
"I see. So it would be an overnight process then?"
"Overnight would be how long it would take just to get the cables out of
the hardware - if we used a gangmower and an axe. Outside of that, it's anybody's
guess as to what's in there and what it's connected to."
"So what do you suggest?"
"Someone's going to have to go in there and fix it."
"Someone?"
"Someone with networking knowledge..."
The PFY starts beating a surreptitious retreat.
".. A bit younger and more agile than me.."
The PFY accelerates somewhat..
"..someone who could get lost for days without anyone knowing or caring!"
"A CONTRACTOR!" The Boss and PFY cry in unison, both happy that they
don’t meet the exacting criteria..
"Yes, and what better contractor than someone who KNOWS about the cabling
firsthand, someone who perhaps, PUT it there in the first place," I cry,
fingering a self-promotional label on the back of the door.
"THE ORIGINAL CONTRACTOR!" The boss cries, enlightened.
BINGO!
. . . ONE DAY LATER . .
It's been a several of hours since the cabling contractor went in - after some
bad-mouthing of 'The current IT unprofessionals' to The Boss when he thinks
he's out of our earshot. Still, after he'd extorted a hefty hourly rate from
the boss, he was more than happy to sign on for the job.
"Poor bastard," The PFY mumbles quietly, shaking his head, proving
once and for all that he bears no grudges against people who disparage his good
name.
"But not so poor that you didn't wedge the door shut again once he was
in..."
"I was worried about.. uh.. loss of.. uh.. aircooling in the riser.."
he adlibs.
"We don't HAVE cooling in the riser.."
"Oh. Oh well."
. . .
In the end we open the door in response to the complaints about a "loss
of Internet" and discover that the poor sod's in a bit of a state.
"Which of you bastards turned off the lights?" he cries, a bit on
the hysterical side
"Are you sure it wasn't a breaker tripping? - it happens all the time in
this building!" The PFY suggests helpfully. "Apparently you installed
budget electrical cabling too.."
"Oh yes and it just SO HAPPENED that the handle on the inside of the door
is missing AND a box of thinwire connectors just HAPPENED to fall down the comms
riser.."
"That's where they got to!" The PFY responds. "I was looking
for those - couldn't find them anywhere! Course, it was dark with the lights
not working in the riser, so maybe I accidentally knocked them down the cable
gap.."
"..Then I tripped on the floor ventilation grill which wasn't secured properly!"
our contractor continues.
"And my, you have made a bit of a mess!"
"It was a mess when I started!"
"Yes, but it was a WORKING mess. In fact, that's why the company always
puts penalty clauses into its standard contracts - to recover lost income, etc,
in an outage situation like this. I hate to think what this must be costing
you!"
"But this has nothing to do with me!"
"The cables pulled themselves out of the patch panels and switch gear?"
"Y-No, but it wasn't my fault!"
"Of course it wasn't. It wasn't like you installed all the cables in the
first place, charged a hefty premium on the top by selecting the longest cable
length possible, didn't document your work, didn't label any of the gear, provided
no strain relief, AND cut corners on the electrical cabling spec and circuit
breakers. I'm sure the court will find in your favour."
"COURT!?!"
"Well, these things usually end up there after an outage of this magnitude.
And the repatching's will probably take you days to complete, which'll mean
even more mo.."
"Well what can I do?"
"Well, I s’pose you could hire a couple of contractors with intimate
knowledge of the network structure to give you a hand... But then again at such
short notice it's probably going to be expensive...."
"I'll pay!!!"
"Well, I think we can help you out. Course we'll need someone to feed all
the broken fibre up from the sub-basement spool for resplicing.."
So it's decided, he'll give us a hand. No sooner has he signed a large cheque
than we promise to say it was a routine outage and he's installed in the sub-basement
comms room with the fibre loom.
While The PFY's placing the wedge and flicking the lights breaker, I'm popping
up a couple of stories with five boxes of thinwire terminators.
Just like clockwork.
BOFH '00. Just when you thought BOFH had disappeared...
BOFH '00. Who Put the Mug in Smug?
BOFH '00. BOFH Takes the Wind out of Sales