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What Was Your Worst Computer Accident?
Posted by
timothy
on Sun Jul 04, 2004 01:44 PM
from the you-mean-besides-the-railgun dept.
from the you-mean-besides-the-railgun dept.
Anonymous Writer writes "I learned years ago to backup regularly and never keep a drink on the same table as a laptop. I accidentally spilled a drink onto my laptop's keyboard where it drained into the laptop's innards, ruining the motherboard, CD-ROM, and hard drive. Thousands of dollars and all my data disappeared in a flash. Considering that there are even people out there that intentionally damage hardware, I was wondering what kind of disasters Slashdot readers have experienced."
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What Was Your Worst Computer Accident?
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Worst computer accident? (Score:5, Funny)
Honest (Score:5, Funny)
After more than 15 years in Unix-land, why did I make *that* move? What was I thinking? I'm so glad that it was about that time that Linux made Unix accessible "for the rest of us".
Re:Honest (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Honest (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://squinky.gotdns.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday February 25 2004, @08:01PM)
Re: " Open-XP " (Score:4, Funny)
As Windows XP Pro prices approach those of Linux it's quality and usability increase dramatically. I still only use it on one PC, and run Linux for real work, but as a game machine 'Open-XP', as I like to call it, isn't a bad OS.
Argh, I better go feed my parrot.
Re: " Open-XP " (Score:5, Funny)
(http://j-ftp.sourceforge.net/)
Re:FOR THE LOVE OF FUCK (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Honest (Score:5, Funny)
The dangerous tool that is called dd (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://www.metatrontech.com/ | Last Journal: Monday November 19, @08:51PM)
dd if=floppy.img of=/dev/hda
when I meant to type
dd if=floppy.img of=/dev/fd0
And of course I was logged in as root because only root had raw access to the floppy.....
Re:The dangerous tool that is called dd (Score:5, Interesting)
rpmbuild -bb --build-root / specfile
Don't ever use the --build-root switch unless you really know what you are doing. The build-root directory is a temporary directory where the package will be built and installed before it is packaged up into an RPM. The first thing RPM does is to clear the build-root directory to make sure there are no files there that will interfere with the build process. Yes you guessed it, it does an rm -rf , or in this case rm-rf
Luckily there were backups of the data, but it still took them most of the night to get the system back up and running
Re:Yeah that's why DOS was so great can't screw it (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Yeah that's why DOS was so great can't screw it (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Honest (Score:4, Insightful)
(Last Journal: Wednesday September 14 2005, @10:17AM)
Re:Worst computer accident? (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://insidewoodland.com/)
I had put in my two week notice, and on my very last day of work, I had to install a UPS (uninterruptable power supply) at a customer's office is Los Angeles. (The place I worked was in Orange County)
So, I cruised on over, and started the install. This type of UPS actually used car batteries, wired in-line. 8 of them went into the unit. I set it up, tested it, and all I had to do was finish up...
Well, while putting the case back on the UPS unit, I dropped it, and the metal case hit the + and - terminals. The thing was sparking like crazy, the case got burnt, and one of the batteries was bubbling up on top. And the fuse (50 amps) blew.
Since this was about 3:00, and I still had to drive back to OC (geez, people actually associate OC with that crappy show now) and it was my last day. I just plugged everything back directly into the wall, closed the door on their equipment closet, and told them everything was cool.
Went back to the office, got my final check, and of course, didn't mention anything to the boss.
To this day, I still feel bad about it...
(My wife is standing next to me, wondering what the hell I am doing posting this inane story on
Re:Worst computer accident? (Score:4, Funny)
(http://shoesfullofdust.f2o.org/)
Re:Worst computer accident? (Score:5, Funny)
(Last Journal: Thursday May 13 2004, @02:58PM)
Do you realize I got blamed for that? Thanks loads, buddy.
Re:Worst computer accident? (Score:5, Funny)
Don't give him any new ideas.
Re:Worst computer accident? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Worst computer accident? (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's just say that again: accidentally installed a boot loader.
But Win9X is the big accident, oh yes
Re:Worst computer accident? (Score:4, Funny)
cd
cd
It worked, saved all kinds of space, until the next time I tried to run a program and boot
mkswap (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://gelsoft.ath.cx/ | Last Journal: Friday February 18 2005, @07:14PM)
instead of swapon
hda1 = data
mda3 = swap
Re:On a similar note... (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.epscylonb.com/)
Re:On a similar note... (Score:5, Funny)
That was a *mistake*?
Re:On a similar note... (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.epscylonb.com/)
I was 11 at the time, and when my dad found out he wasn't very happy...
Re:On a similar note... (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.cs.utah.edu/~andersbr/)
One of my instructors in a networking course had a five year old son (We'll call him Sammy, even though I don't know his real name). The instructor had been playing around with a Linux distro, and left the CD in the drive when he powered it down. The next person to boot up was Sammy. Something unfamiliar appears on the screen, and he asks his mom what to do. Mom, not paying attention, says, "Just click OK!"
Whoops.
The kid ended up installing a new OS and wiping out all my instructor's data.
Re:On a similar note... (Score:4, Funny)
(http://www.onionology.com/ | Last Journal: Monday July 05 2004, @03:42AM)
Re:mkswap (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:mkswap (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.gigapants.com/)
rm -rf
Didn't think about the fact that ".." matches ".*" d'oh!
Re:mkswap (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://jwsmythe.com/ | Last Journal: Saturday September 08, @03:38PM)
How about this..
On my workstation, I plugged in a hard drive destined to go into a server. My drive was
`fdisk
and I got interrupted. I [ctrl]-c out of it, and do what they need. I come back and again `fdisk
`mkfs
For some reason, because the partitions were still mounted on
That lasted for about 3 months. Then the power went out in the office. Dammit.
Mouse Pee (Score:5, Interesting)
Got home. The screen's frozen on the computer. Ctl-alt-Del...Nothing. Reboot... the monitor doesn't even come on! Ok, take the cover off, get out the canned air, blow dust off the components, see if anything is loose.
Holy shit! I see a mouse wandering around inside the computer!
I think about getting something to kill it, but don't want to mess up the hardware, so I shake it out. It drops out and neither the cat or dog see it as it scurries under the couch.
After about 30 minutes of sleuthing I find that the Ethernet card is blown. It's got a nice little burn mark on one of the chips where the mouse apparently PEED on it!
Well a quick trip down to Compu USA and everything is back in order. The cat's still sleeping on the couch -- but it's only a matter of time before one of us frag's that mouse!
Lesson: Don't leave any of your slot covers off the back of your computer.
Re:Mouse Pee (Score:5, Funny)
(http://del.icio.us/jvz | Last Journal: Sunday December 03 2006, @12:45PM)
Re:Mouse Pee (Score:4, Funny)
(http://www.martingunnarsson.com/)
Re:Mouse Pee (Score:5, Funny)
Are you sure that's the computer manual and not your Mogwai [google.com] manual?
Re:Mouse Pee (Score:5, Funny)
(http://shay.ecn.purdue.edu/~herbertd)
I think my sig says all that is needed...
Re:Mouse Pee (Score:4, Interesting)
The mouse built a nest on the HDD to stay warm. The PS fan had sucked in some of the threads, feathers, grass, etc the mouse used for the nest. The PS smoked, I think the mouse panicked, and pissed on the NIC.
With all the mouse turds scattered across the motherboard, old hot HDD, toasted PS, and scorched NIC, I tossed the whole system. (And upgraded it to Windows 98! those were the days)
Re:Mouse Pee (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://www.danaquarium.com/)
I bought a used Mac on eBay - $10 including monitor, and I thought that was a bit lucky. It arrived, and I understood why the description was "sold as is".
It'd not only been through a flood (silt and leaves all through) but had been used as a nest for mice for a good while. there was nesting material, mouse turds and pee all through the thing as well.
Thankfully, all this had happened while it was in storage
And now, I own a pet mouse [danamania.com]. One that's just kept right out of the insides of computers
Another Story: MICE (Score:4, Interesting)
I went out of town for 3 weeks on vacation, some field mice got into our house while we were out. They found a nice warm place to set up a nest.... in my Polaroid SprintScan 4000 film scanner, which was pretty new and damn expensive at the time.
The SS4000 has a nice opening on the back where you can get in and out, and a nice warm area for building a small rodent residence... above the hole for the optical lens...
The SS4000 was thoroughly screwed up by this, and was filled with mouse poop to boot.
Re:Mouse Pee (Score:4, Funny)
(Last Journal: Friday September 24 2004, @01:13AM)
"Holy shit! I see a mouse wandering around inside the computer!"
Back in the mid 80's I had a job as a 'puter techo.
One day, I received a PC with the fault description "Dead"
It turned out that the PSU was shorting out when a mouse foolishly decided to take up shop inside.
I bagged the mouse, taped it to the top of the PC and filled out the repair sheet.
Under "Description of work" I wrote "Faulty mouse"
;-)
I bought a Dell. (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.zombo.com/)
Re:I bought a Dell. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I bought a Dell. (Score:5, Funny)
Cookies in the psu (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Cookies in the psu (Score:5, Funny)
The Worst. (Score:5, Funny)
(http://tsfraser.googlepages.com/index.html)
Re:The Worst. (Score:5, Funny)
(http://introspected.com/)
In a somewhat unrelated (and more painful) story, using my vast intellect I once attempted to replace a PCI card (of some sort) in a running computer and shocked the shit out of myself. Twice . In less than ten minutes. Apparently I didn't learn that lesson.
- Ben
Re:The Worst. (Score:5, Interesting)
During my first job as a computer tech, we had a string of AT cases come through that had bad power switches. Unfortunately, we had sold these cases for about 2 months before the problem started showing itself with the switch. This ended up causing us to do a lot of 30 second switch replacements.
Anyway, one of the computers with the switch problem had come in with some unrelated software issues. I had just turned off the computer after looking at the problem and decided to replace the power switch while thinking some. So I pull out the needle-nose pliers and grab the first of the four cables plugged into the switch.
Quick lesson for those of you that didn't experience working with the AT standard. The power switch on an AT computer is hooked directly to the power supply and works like a light switch. Which means that when the power supply is plugged into a wall socket, power is always flowing to that switch.
Now note that I didn't say I unplugged the power cable from the wall.
I yank the first connection, no problem. I grab the second connection and pull it out. As I get it off, I feel this dull buzz in my finger. That dull "I've just touched electricity but I'm not grounded" buzz (which I had felt before due to an old crappy fan power cable). I let go of the connection with the pliers and step back a second, stunned. I then proceed to pull the third connecting wire out.
*sigh*
I unplug the connecting wire and let it go. A split second later there's this big *FLASH* and the power goes out in the workroom as the wire touches the side of the grounded case.
Somehow nothing was damaged in that computer...except for the giant burn mark on the insides of the case. And SOMEHOW, even though he was just in the next room over, my boss never said anything to me about it. I still doubt that he didn't hear it...maybe he was just laughing too hard to say anything.
I wish I had that case, now...would love to keep that burned carcass around to remind me of how stupid I get when I don't pay attention.
Re:The Worst. (Score:5, Insightful)
tar czf
find
will keep 30 days of full backups. Obviously, if depends on how much space you have, but an IDE disk is cheaper than recreating your work, and unless your work is video editing, your work shouldn't require much space to back up. If you want to get fancier, use incrementals to save space, keep indexes, etc, there's plenty of software out there.
But don't wait for the perfect solution! Start automated, periodic backups now! Drop whatever you are doing and just do it. Don't finish reading this slashdot story. Don't wait until you get something to eat or go to the bathroom. Your pants are less valuable than your data. Backups are not something you can afford to do whenever you get around to it, or to put off doing until you get it perfect.
Re:The Worst. (Score:4, Funny)
Well umm (Score:5, Funny)
(http://elitemrp.net/)
Several years ago, I was running Win95 I think.. I have this friend who I wanted to scare so I wrote a little app in VB that when he ran would pretend it was erasing his hard drive. It worked good but there was no disk activity so you could tell it was fake. So I decided I'd try opening the files I was listing as being deleted. I tested my code on 1 file, it worked. So I ran the whole program (which would cycle through each directory on the drive, but not sub-directories). When it ended, I was happy because it worked, I had lots of disk activity.
Then I tried opening a program and it said it was corrupt, then I noticed lots of files were corrupt, then I noticed EVERY file on the main directories of my drive were 0 bytes.. That's when I realized my disk activity code was opening every file to have data written to it (the output function in vb i think)..
So basically every file on the root of my drive and in all the main directries (not sub-directories though) were erased.
That sucked.
Re:Well umm (Score:5, Funny)
(http://slashdot.org/)
Yup.
Re:Well umm (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.lastandroid.com/)
He was in his VB class making a program and at the end it would print it's contents. He decided it would be cool to have it ask how many copies you wanted. So he coded it.
It turns out he forgot to define the variable he used, so instead of printing 1 copy, it got stuck in a loop of printing.
As mentioned above this was during a class, which had a laser printer that printed at least 5 sheets a second.
spilling acetone on a sony vaio laptop (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:spilling acetone on a sony vaio laptop (Score:5, Informative)
Spilled a couple of drops of lemon juice on an old Microsoft Natural Keyboard once though... and it actually ate deep pits into the plastic. Hmm... maybe I should try and see what acetone does to it - it is a Microsoft keyboard, and this is Slashdot after all
never never ever (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.helagaman.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday January 17 2007, @09:54AM)
a. mIRC open to FIVE cybersex channels
b. 7 different cyber PM sessions
c. odd streaks on teh monitor
d. puke all over the keyboard that had eaten away the plastic membrane (puke is ACID)
e. roomie lying face down on the keyboard in a puddle of puke with his dick in his hand
Suchetha
chown -R root:root .* (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://blog.nertzy.com/)
I did a
on my friend's machine, in order to change permission on all of the hidden directories and files. I didn't think that ".." and all of its subdirectories would also be traversed, which coupled with the "-R" changed ownership on every file on her computer.Re:chown -R root:root .* (Score:5, Informative)
(http://wam.umd.edu/~dspeyer | Last Journal: Monday July 07 2003, @05:29PM)
Hope this Helps,
Way Back in 1970 (Score:5, Funny)
Hitting reset in the middle of a re-org is a bad idea. Department lost everything, except that it didn't really lose everything. Everything was still in files, but the files were scrambled. They printed out the contents of each file, figured out what file each fragment belonged to, and typed it all back in.
Fortunately, this hard disk was only a megabyte or so.
I did something similar.. (Score:5, Funny)
Boy that was embarassing.
A solution to almost all liquid problems (Score:3, Insightful)
The secret? Drink only water. I can do my computing without dependency on mind-altering drugs like caffeine and alcohol. And why pay for soda when water's free and doesn't expand your waistline or rot your teeth?
Re:A solution to almost all liquid problems (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.mikeash.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday August 11 2004, @12:57AM)
Because it tastes good?
Re:A solution to almost all liquid problems (Score:5, Funny)
I was going to moderate this but I couldn't find "-1, self-righteous" in the list.
2 hard drives, one power supply (Score:5, Informative)
(http://www.mikeshaw.net/)
Luckily, I had bought matching drives for use in another computer (a total of 4 HDs). By removing the controllers from the good drives and carfully placing them on the fried drives, I was able to get everything back.
Word to the wise, backup and keep off box and off site!
About two years ago... (Score:3, Funny)
(http://www.keirstead.org/)
Ended up typing "dd if=floppy.img of=/dev/hda bs=1024 count=300"
Needless to say the system continued to operate for a week or so, although here were random errors everywhere. Saved most all my data though.
After that day I always made sure
Not mine but.. (Score:5, Funny)
Then he asked if I could fix it...
Being robbed (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://aunderwood.com/)
Re:Being robbed (Score:5, Funny)
p.s. You might want to inform your friends that they should never turn your computer on or off... well your good friends at least.
Duck poop fried my keyboard... (Score:5, Funny)
(http://polishdave.blogspot.com/)
Re:Duck poop fried my keyboard... (Score:4, Funny)
(Great commercials)
Re:Duck poop fried my keyboard... (Score:5, Funny)
I was at Disneyland ( California ). There were a gaggle of ducks around the area around the boats. A young child, full of the magic of the Disney environment, excitedly chased, and caught, a duck, holding it up high for all to see. "Momma! Momma! I gotta Duck!!!!".
Well, the duck let fly with a humongous amount of poop. Didn't know that much poop could fit in a duck.
The kid was drenched. He had an audience of at least 1,000 onlookers each having cameras to capture magic moments. Everywhere I looked, the kid was at the center of hundreds of lenses. And the look on his momma's and poppa's face...
The duck was promptly released, and the kid and parents just kinda disappeared.
Re:Duck poop fried my keyboard... (Score:4, Funny)
(http://www.darryldot.org/)
</strongbad>
Rookie Linux mistake (Score:5, Funny)
(http://localgod.net/)
Debian, especially back then, was not a good newby distro. After installing it, I was left at a blank terminal thinking, "Okay, now what."
In my frustration trying to set up X, I decided "to hell with it, I'll install Slackware," and I hastily did a "rm -rf /"
As I listened to my noisy hard drive chug a long, I remembered that I had mounted my Windows partition.
"But surely Linux will know I only wanted to rm the Linux part."
Yeah, I was wrong.
My poor 486 (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.energymech.net/)
More 486 (Score:4, Funny)
I reached out for the nearest pointy thing with which to ever-so-carefully bend the prong back into shape.
It turns out a pencil was not the best thing to use - I rendered to entire motherboard useless via graphite shavings.
All the same, with a new motherboard the chip itself worked fine...
SQL "Delete" Statement, without a "Where" clause (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://www.otakubooty.com/)
"Delete From SomeTable Where SomeTable.SomeField > 500"
However, if simply you type:
"Delete From SomeTable"
What a nightmare. Obviously it was my own stupid fault, but to make matters worse, the IT dudes weren't performing nightly backups as they'd promised, compounding the problem. Recovery of the table from the transaction logs proved impossible for several reasons. It cost our company a few thousand dollars to re-conduct our client's survey and we had to endure a lot of screaming.
I consider myself lucky to have done this early in my career, on a small job that amounted to thousands of dollars instead of 5-, 6-, or 7-figure dollar amounts. I figure it's the sort of thing that everybody does once and never does again.
Re:SQL "Delete" Statement, without a "Where" claus (Score:5, Informative)
"SELECT something FROM table WHERE conditions"
then, once you're happy that it's showing you the things to delete, backup the command and remove the "SELECT something" and replace it with "DELETE". Much safer
For me it is... (Score:3, Funny)
(Last Journal: Wednesday November 10 2004, @06:46PM)
When I was in college and Linux was young... (Score:5, Funny)
The next morning, I wake up, somewhat hung over, and decide that this directoy was a /stupid/ idea. So, I execute the obvious command:
I then wander off in search of some tylenol, and come back with two term papers irretrievably lost.The obvious moral of this story is, "don't root under the influence." (From my more mature perspective, I would like to suggest that drinking less might also be a good plan.)
Re:When I was in college and Linux was young... (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://slashdot.org/)
1) don't be too hasty using rm -rf
2) you must escape special characters like $
He actually killed the rm early on, so he didn't lose too much.
He felt kind of silly doing this, but then I explained what I once did. I was testing a kickstart script so I kept reformatting this machine. I decided to do a rm -rf / just to see what would happen. I did that Friday night and came back Monday morning. When I got in, everyone in our group was complaining that their home directories were missing. Then I relized my own lesson to be learned:
3) Always unmount the NFS directories before reformatting a computer.
Don't drop the server. (Score:5, Funny)
(http://krhainos.tk/)
I did something like that once.. (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.pbp.net/)
I made it to my location and up several flights of stairs.. plugging the UPS in with very little time left.
Later that night, some drunk asshole creamed a power pole and cut out power to the entire neighborhood for 5 hours.
The UPS just didn't last...
My Top 10 List (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.devilsbsd.net/)
9. Sitting on a brand new Pentium 4 accidentally, bending all the pins
8. Not getting a UPS/surge strip/voltage regulator. Over time, the voltage irregularities caused my power supply to literally catch on fire.
7. Installing Windows.
6. Falling for the "hey, try rm -rf
5. Dropping a monitor down the stairs
4. Taking over an NT domain accidentally by running samba as a PDC
3. Leaving a P4 laptop running inside a closed, insulated laptop case. Literally everything overheated.
2. "Accidentally" adding DELTREE C:\
1. Posting this list on Slashdot.
Not really accidents, but bad experiences (Score:3, Interesting)
This same machine also suffered my wrath one time when it was acting up or something. I kicked the side of the machine (it was standing upright) and it died. Would not boot back up. When I opened the case up, the CPU had popped out of the scoket and was laying on top of the video card.
I was tring to hook two old MFM drives up in another XT box once and didn't get the terminating resistor in the drive correctly. This caused a release of the magic smoke in one of the components on the drive itself.
One other thing that comes to mind...we had just gotten in an 18GB SCSI drive (a few years ago when this was a lot). It was in the anti-static bag. I went to pick the bag up by the open end. As I did, the drive went sliding right out the other open end of the bag (shipped that way even!) Made a nice thud as it hit the thin carpet covering the concrete floor.
And there was the time we were cleaning up and my boss pitched a box that looked like it was just full of packing peanuts. Turns out there were two 128MB sticks of RAM in there. Probably about $800+ at that time.
But other than that - no major "oh craps". Why do I suddenly expect to have something to post later tonight about this
Exploding Quantum hard drive (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/JonCiesla | Last Journal: Thursday December 05 2002, @02:46PM)
I left the room to fetch lunch, and I heard a loud CRACK! I ran back in, and was confronted with the following:
The computer was off. The air smelt of ozone. There was a little stream of smoke rising from the Quantum. There was a large chunk missing from the main controller chip on the Quantum's board. 15 minutes of searching revealed that the chunk had flown 12 feet and landed behind another desk.
I was lucky enough to have a duplicate Quantum on hand whose controlled board I could use, so I swapped it out long enough to finish the transfer. Luckily, the CHS specs were the same, so nothing was lost.
Re:Exploding Quantum hard drive (Score:4, Funny)
Get Computer Insurance (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.savetz.com/)
Re:Get Computer Insurance (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.umich.edu/~bfields)
In most cases, the 10,000 loss will be worth precisely 66 and 2/3 times the 150 loss.... So the insurance is only worth it if your chances of a 10,000 loss are more than 1 in 66. (Well, actually we'd need to factor in the more likely smaller losses. But rest assured the insurance company *has* already done that.)
But you're right, we all have limited budgets, so for a sufficiently large risk it no longer becomes possible to amortize that risk in the way a large insurance company can. Weighing risks becomes more complicated as the magnitude of the risk approaches the magnitude of your savings.
If you didn't really *need* that equipment, then the hypothetical loss above probably really is only worth the $10000, and the simple cost-benefit analysis aboves says to skip the insurance.
But it could be more complicated: for example, if you lost the equipment and couldn't afford to replace it, and if your business depended on that equipment, then the actual impact of the loss would be more than the simple $1000 figure represents.
I'd certainly at least consider a smaller or less expensive car. But if the car is required, for example, to get to work, and if you can't afford to self-insure, then this is a case where insurance would make sense.
Sure. For a few big-ticket items (houses, medical care, in some cases cars), insurance makes sense even though you know it's likely to be a loss.
What I'm arguing is that insurance is a mistake for stuff like cameras; for all but a few professional photographers, it's just not going to make financial sense to spend so much on your camera that you couldn't afford to self-insure.
--Bruce Fields
Ahh young grasshopper (Score:4, Informative)
Insurance is a for profit bussiness, at least in the US. The make more money than they pay out. That means, on average, insurance will NOT pay for itself. You will pay them more than they give you back. They set their premiums as such, otherwise, it just could not work.
So why have insurance? Well you have it for things you can't afford to replace, or those required by law. Like health insurance. I pay in $25, and my employer $260, to give me comprehensive health insurance. It covers everything that might go wrong with me, at almost no additonal cost.
Well, if you do the math, that's $3400 per year paid for it. I have never, not even when I got in a car accident and went to the hospital, spent that much on healthcare in a year. I would be much better off financially if I took that money and put it in an intrest bearing account, and used it only for health care needs.
So why don't I do that (pretending for this example that my employer would give me their portion of the payin)? Well because my health is important to me, and repairs to my body could easily exceed my financial means. If I got seriously hurt, or a chronic disease or something, the cost could shoot above $100,000, well over anything I could pay even if I saved the $3400/year for a number fo years.
In all likelyhood, the insurance company will make money on me. However I am willing to allow them to do that for the promise that, if something should go severly wrong, they will loose money on me to try and keep me alive and healthy.
Well, my computer isn't the same. Supposing the whole thing blew up, I'd need to spend about $2000 to replace it. A financial difficulty for sure, but something I could afford. What's more, it's not critical like my health. If I were without a computer for some time I'd be sad (and end up hanging out in my office to play on the Internet at night) but it wouldn't harm me at all.
Insurance like this is only worth it if:
1) The hardware is critical to you for some reason. If, for example, your bussiness relies on it then yes, you want to be covered since the money you loose due to it being gone could be ruinous.
2) It would be financially extremely difficult or impossible to replace the hardware yourself.
If you don't meet those two conditions, you should probably not waste your money on insurance. Instead put that $120/year away, and you'll find that you probably can pay for any failures AND have enough left over to get better hardware.
My first Trojan Horse (Score:5, Funny)
(http://slashdot.org/)
The problem was, while we were helping other students, some people would steal disks because they were expensive and we had all the coolest games.
One day after my entire box disappearing, I sat in the lab pissed. I wrote an INIT program for the Apple DOS that would ask for a password, two wrong guesses and it would trash the disk and erase itself from RAM. My first attempt was pretty much done, but I had no disks because they were recently stolen. So I saved it on the classroom disk everyone stores their work on. I named it "DO NOT RUN THIS PROGRAM" and left for the day.
The following day, I arrived and the instructor grabbed be by the shirt and shoved me up against the wall and shouted:
"Did you save a program the the class disk called 'do not run this program'? Because some little asshole decided to run it and we lost all the assignments and all of my grades for the semester!"
I did what anyone would do in that situation. I lied my ass off.
Another example:
Flash forward 12 years or so. In the lab at my company. We are trying out control software for relay control on an electrical switches about the size of filing cabinets. There are about 128 relays in each, and the suckers were hooked up on 120VAC. This was our only time to run test software before they got shipped out to the customer the next day.
Started up the software and all seemed ok. An odd smell started and I noticed the room's ambient light was changing... sorta orangish. I turned around and they were glowing hot and smoke was billowing out. I killed power, but it was way too late. 2-3" holes were burned in the PC boards. Later I found out the tech who hooked up the power didn't know what to hook the relays up to, so he wired them straight to ground. That didn't stop me from crapping bricks for the next few hours as the entire company showed up at the lab doors to see what the horrible smell was coming from.
Electric Dreams (Score:3, Informative)
(Last Journal: Wednesday March 27 2002, @09:26PM)
Did the computer fall in love with the girl upstairs? (the one you had your eyes on)? It's been known to happen [imdb.com].
Milk (Score:3, Informative)
(http://www.sophiafieldphotography.com/)
Anyways, an errant elbow movement sends the glass of milk careening into the disk organizer and just about every disk is saturated. I may have actually cried.
But then was the cool part: I could not accept that my life was over, so I decided to fix the disks. Over the course of a week I cut open every disk jacket, took out the actual magnetic diskette, and washed them gently by hand. I then put them back into a clean, freshly cut jacket and tried them out.
All but one disk survived this process. (A commercial copy of Ultima III).
Try that with today's floppies!
Cheers.
Duron crushed core (Score:5, Funny)
(Last Journal: Wednesday August 04 2004, @03:27PM)
Holy Sparking Power Supply, Batman! (Score:4, Funny)
Anyhow, I picked it up, noting that for a 486 in storage, the case was relatively clean. I then took it down to our workbench, and after spending half an hour trying to scrounge up an old DOS disk to boot it and reformat it with(we were a Mac shop, this was no easy task), I finally got ready to service it.
So, I plugged a cord in to a power strip, then move to plug the other end in to the power supply, when all of a sudden you hear that familiar zap sound. Sparks started flying from the power supply, and I did the whole "life flashes before my eyes" thing before I managed to pull the cable away, to quite a gruesome sight.
The total list of causalities included the power supply, who's prongs were all charred black, the power cord, the prongs on the cord(also charred black), and a totally fried power strip. Thankfully, my hand came out unscathed, although I don't know why.
Later examination of the now dead 486 showed that it had a power supply from 1982(this ordeal took place in 2002, BTW), so the fact that it was 20 years old probably had something to do with it. How such an old power supply ended up in a machine that couldn't be more than 13 years old I'll never figure out, but there it was.
I then proceeded to rip the hard drive out, and take a hammer to it. It was unorthodox, but I sure felt better afterwords.
Flaming Death (Score:5, Funny)
(http://sharpy.xox.pl/ | Last Journal: Wednesday September 14 2005, @02:12PM)
I had 2 4M SIMMs (same), 2 8M SIMMs (different) and 1 16M SIMM. I was placing them in random order in a PC, trying to achieve maximum RAM capacity. Conclusions? 4M+4M=1M, 8M+4M+4M=12M, 8M+8M=8M, 8M+16M=20M, 16M+4M+4M=a violent burst of flame from the motherboard.
I can't believe he said this (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.geofffox.com/)
Re:I can't believe he said this (Score:4, Funny)
PowerBook + SUV = not so good (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://ryo.iloha.net/)
So I kept using it.
Then this Spring, I fell down the stairs with it, and that gave me a bunch of funky colors on the screen, rendering the LCD useless (I'm guessing it's just a pinched cable). But I'm still using it, to type this post actually, with an external monitor and keyboard.
Girlfriend's Computer (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://www.tildastudios.com/)
I backed up all her files onto a cd, and just to be sure I burned 2 extra copies of the cd. I reformat the computer and reinstall windows. I install the programs she needs, and I get one of the cd's to copy her work back on.
Nothing. I freak out. The system does not recognize the cd in the drive. I try another one. Same thing. Another. Same. I get really f'in worried, so I start searching online for data recovery. Meanwhile she doesn't know yet.
I put the cd into my linux box, thinking maybe that'll help. Nothing. Something had to have gone wrong during the burn process, and I stupidly didn't check to make sure they burned correctly.
After finding a program I could buy right there on the spot, I ordered it (you don't want to know the price) and started getting as much as I could, which wasn't much.
I ended up telling her, and she was very upset. Pretty much all her work that she didn't have on Zip disks was gone, which included 3d Work she'd done that took her months. I felt really horrible.
To this day she still jokes about it and I still feel bad. She had some awesome work that took her a whole lot of time. She's made a lot back up, and frankly the new stuff is even better.
I still felt like shit though. Now I make sure that all her files are backed up onto my desktop and my server. On top of that, I make a new cd for each quarter of both our work.
And yes, I check and make sure it burns correctly.
Embedded WLAN (Score:4, Funny)
(http://www.barwap.co.uk/)
The laptop landed on the PCMCIA WLAN card, this became a embedded wireless card.
The good news is the home insurance paid out.
A word of advice... (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://itsbeenconfirmed.com/ | Last Journal: Sunday May 04 2003, @02:33AM)
While typing "rm -rf
If you're in the habit of typing the flags at the end (i.e. "rm
Re:Cheap power supply (Score:5, Informative)
(http://iambitter.org/)
Antec is considered to be the top end for reliability and performance. They contain seperate transformers for the different voltage rails. I have 3 Antec powersupplies in my computers. All have worked great.
Enermax is another maker of very beefy powersupplies. I've got one and haven't had a problem with it.
There's bad news, though. 50% premium? No. Try 200%, if you're used to those shitty $30 powersupplies. A 380W Antec will set you back somewhere in the region of $90. It's worth it, though. Cooler powersupply, cooler system, increased stability due to lower temperature and solid voltage.
Some reviews at Tech-report [tech-report.com] and AnandTech [anandtech.com] should give you some baselines to look at.
Knocked over an Entire Rack (Score:5, Funny)
One of the servers on the rack had a CD drive that was somewhat broken, it didn't open when you pushed the button. So, doing what I always did, I sat at the workstation a few feet away and logged in remotely. I gave the command for to eject the CD, and as it did, I watched a very full server rack teeter forward from the weight of the CD tray, and then crash to the floor.
I was very lucky my boss had taken his Zoloft that day.
Two disasters (Score:3, Interesting)
(http://www.mooman.com/brianb)
Second was a few years later. I was working on my home machine after having a couple of beers. I bumped the desk accidently and the rather large (22 oz) but empty bottle on the top of the hutch slowly wobbled and tipped over, did one very pretty twirl in slow motion, and bounced off the top of the computer case. The harddrive immediately began to emit an awful whining noise and the machine refused to reboot after this, courtesy of a classical head crash.
So that was my personal realization about the hazards of drinking around computers.
ninja iguana (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://spacerat100.deviantart.com/)
Where to Begin... (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://www.misterorange.com/)
Having worked in the financial industry for a long time, I recall not-so-fondly some of my mistakes. The largest and most painful was probably the million dollar mistake. This occurred around the first year or so of working at a bank.
One of my tasks was to check out 'federal funds' balance at the federal reserve. We have to transfer money into the federal reserve account to keep it at a certain figure.
Well, reading the figures I thought it said we had over a million dollars of excess. This isn't unbelievable depending on the day or time of month, and I was told that since this balance was so high to transfer it to another institution. Off the money went.
Around 4:30PM or so we got a call from the Federal Reserve. "Do you know what your balance is?" They asked the CFO. Then they told him. Over 1.5 million in the negative. If we didn't have the money there by 5PM, we'd get charged $25,000.
This is about the time I get that oh-shit-I'm-gonna-be-sick feeling that happens each time I make a huge mistake.
We had to call another bank and beg them to reopen their wire transfer department so we could get the funds in there. I think they arrived at the fed somewhere in the 4:55PM range. Free screaming/chewing out for me that day!
The Car Accident
Not exactly computer related, but I did wreck the company car once. Ouch.
Oh, and did I mention I was probably the worst courier ever? I would burn through a set of tires, brand new Michelins, in about two months. They stopped asking me to courier after that.
Not after some more free screaming/chewing however.
The Video Card Zap
I once bought a Riva TNT 16MB back when they first came out. Around $300+ dollars so I could run Unreal with all the goodies on. And it was hot stuff. I was so proud of that damn video card.
So when I transferred it to a different PC just a few days after showing off, I bent over to pick it up...
And I saw the small blue spark jumt from my finger just as I was a half inch away. "Zzzt!" came the popping noise.
Can you say "Fuh-ried?" I know I could. Oh, the tears I wept for that one.
Permissions? What Permissions?
I once tried to implement a group-based permissions scheme on a little Win2k Server box. So when I right clicked on the C: drive, telling it to remove all permissions (as I thought I would simply assign them later), I thought it was odd to see the little pop-up box showing me each file as it removed all the permissions before it.
This is about the time that oh-so-sick feeling came over me. This was a box that the company relied on for big transactions and loans.
I tried to stop it, but it disappeared just as I realized what I had done. The permissions were gone for every user, and I mean everyone. I couldn't even SEE the permissions any longer. I didn't have permission to open any programs. IE. Explorer. I couldn't even see anything on the Start Button but "Shut Down".
Then the calls started coming in from users.
The boss said I looked like Casper.
Thank god for backups.
Hot, very hot (Score:3, Funny)
(http://www.digitalhermit.com/)
I had an old AMD K6-2 that was having some stability issues. During troubleshooting I had removed the CPU fan for a few seconds as I was swapping in a known good CPU. At some point I had the fan off but had the machine powered on for about a minute because I got distracted. When I realized my error I immediately pulled the plug. A few minutes passed as I did something else. Then I needed to put back in the original CPU. So I shifted the lever, popped the CPU then put it face down into my palm. It took about 1/2 second before I realized how hot the thing still was but it was too late. A square patch of skin was burned away right at the base of my thumb.
And here's one that didn't happen to me...
One of the employees I'd trained had gone solo, covering three medium sized buildings. Everything went well for close to a year. Then he gave me a call: "Help, the fileservers are down and I've never had to rebuild from scratch." You have backups? "Of course." Whew, no problem then. I make the 100 mile drive and meet him in the server room. Disk is hosed so we rebuild. It takes a while but everything is going smoothly. The OS is in place so I ask him for the data backups. He hands me the tapes. Pop them in but can't retrieve any data. Eh? Don't panic. Check the logs. Backups went successful for the better part of a year. We decide it's probably the tape drive since he mentioned that he'd seen some errors "once or twice". We drive 30 miles to another facility to retrieve a drive and maybe shoot the data across the net. But the same problem at the other facility. OK, keep calm. Backups are showing successful for close to a year. It warns if the tape is bad. It warns if for some reason it can't complete a backup. Crap. Check what's being backed up... Three log files. That's it. For a year he's been backing up three log files, maybe 20K worth in each of them. Data? Nope, not listed in the things that get backed up. But the backup was successful because it was never instructed to do anything else but those three log files...
I proved Dell's advertising is legit (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://baptiste.us/ | Last Journal: Monday April 01 2002, @11:27AM)
We got a brand new Dell 1750 Dual Xeon 1U server which was going to be our Novell R/W Replica & Login box. I put the versa rails in the rack, about 5ft off the ground. Now anybody who works with Dell's knows the new servers have these nubs on the sides which sit into slots on the extended rails - in other words instead of sliding the server INTO the rails like most servers, you have the rails already extended and set the server down ONTO the rails, into those slots. Then you slide everything into place.
Well, it was late - everybody was gone. But it was a 1U box - not TOO heavy (but heavy enough) So I hoisted it up and gently set the nubs into the slots - or so I thought. The right rear nub was not seated and it slipped out. The unit pivoted and our brand new 1750 went crashing into the floor below corner first!!!!! I can still picture it in slow motion as it hit the ground corner first, banged off the rack, and then slammed onto the floor.
Man talk about getting a sinking feeling in your stomach. The right rear corner was totally crumpled. In a panick I opened the case expecting to see a motherboard is a shattered corner.
Nope - the motherboard was fine. The power supplies had come out of their connectors - and slid right back in. The drives had come unseated due to the shock and had to be reseated. A couple hours later with pliers, ballpeen hammer, and other assorted tools, I managed to get the case corner bent back into what was close to normal. All the internals looked ok.
I booted up the system - nada. The 'Processor mismatch' LED was lit on the board. Ugh. Figured I'd cracked a CPU or worse. Then I noticed one of the heatsinks was ever so slightly higher than the other. I unhooked the retainers and found one of the processors had come OUT of the ZIF socket and was being held on top of the socket by the retaining clip. I could only imagine what the CPU had done to itself with its pins making intermittent contact with the socket below while power was on.
Well, after gently getting the CPU off the heatsink without cracking it (it was stuck to it by the heat paste), I reinserted the CPU, applied new paste, and reinstalled the heatsink.
Damn thing booted right up and has run without issue ever since - going on 6 months now. All diags, hard drives included, passed with flying colors.
Talk about dodging a bullet! Built Dell Tough!
Dropping bigger computers (Score:5, Funny)
(Last Journal: Wednesday March 02 2005, @11:08PM)
A friend of mine had a more dramatic but overall better experience with an IBM mainframe. There were two devices (I forget if these were washing-machine size or refrigerator size), and the machines arrived on a Saturday so she went in to have it delivered and signed for. They opened the truck ramp onto the loading dock, and she escorted one of the drivers to the lab with one of the computers. They got back and found that the other driver had moved the truck, in spite of the fact that the ramp had had the other computer sitting on it, so it had fallen three feet down onto concrete. Needless to say, she was concerned, and when the truckers wanted her to sign for the equipment, she refused, and she ended up talking to a sales VP at IBM, which is not a bad trick for a Saturday. He told her to accept it and mark it as damaged, and they'd take care of it (which, being IBM, they did.) The driver indicated "damaged in shipment" on the forms - she crossed it out and wrote "Dropped off loading dock".
Unison File Synchronizer (Score:3, Informative)
(http://www.cs.rice.edu/ | Last Journal: Sunday October 24 2004, @03:45AM)
I use this (open source) program [upenn.edu] to bidirectionally sync/replicate my laptop and my desktop machines. As long as I modify different parts of both replicas, it'll move changes bidirectionally. If I modify the same part of both replicas, I can use the GUI to examine the conflicts and resolve it manually. The GUI also shows a summary of the changes the program wishes to make. It even runs under windows and can sync windows directories with unix directories!
It makes my desktop and laptop machines virtually indistinguishable from each other. This means I can and do interchangably use as many as 4 different machines. At the next sync, whatever I was working on gets moved to the other machines. (Unison only supports pairwise syncs, so I sync pairs A&B, A&C, A&D.) One of these machines is in a seperate building.
Since I sync machines with each other regularily, as a byproduct, each is an hours to days old backup of the others. A great freebie offered by a valuable program. I don't worry about dataloss nearly as much as I used to.
Anyone who uses more than one machine regularily should look into this program.
Keyboard port (Score:3, Interesting)
(http://www.nwinfo.net/~mcantrell/)
It was a small jump (486 to 486DX, back when Intel had just announced the Pentium 3) but for me, that sucked.
I had a Cat astrophe (Score:4, Funny)
I formatted the company server (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, before I go any further, you should know that our Corporate IT folks had not yet acquired a backup tape system. In fact, it had arrived the day before, but had not yet been installed on the network. Also, the old Novell system chose which drive to boot on based on the name of the volume. If the name was "SYSTEM", it was the boot drive.
Well, our VAR had *already* formatted our drive and installed Novell on it. No particular reason, just thinking he would help out.
So, when we started the format, it formatted our old drive. The one with 6 months of development source on it.
It took us 3 months to recover. I thought I should have been fired.
The Moral: When working on a server, step 1 is *always* do a backup.
It's always worst when it's your father's. . . (Score:5, Funny)
Oops. oooh. Oh yeah. . . That.
Whew. I'd actually blocked that one from memory. .
Okay. .
So way back when a 486 was something special, I was young and didn't have a cool computer of my own. Upstairs where the adults lived, (I slept in the basement, would you believe?), my father had just such a gleaming-cool 486 with many bells and whistles, the most significant being a sweeeeet laser printer he'd just wrangled out of his job.
We're talking a top-of-the-line Hewlet Packard beast. This was back in the day when HP made good printers rather than the cruddy consumer-level, guaranteed to break within three years junk boxes they sell today. It was a very nice machine and my father was pink with pride about it.
I was working on an art-project at the time, which involved animation cell-painting onto clear sheets of acetate. I'd been running heat-resistant acetate sheets through printers and photo-copiers for a while, outputting line-work for painting on later, so I was all knowledgeable about this. Cocky, even.
But that evening, I'd just used up my last sheet of acetate right in the middle of a job I was really enthusiastic about. I didn't want to wait a whole night just to go out and buy more, so I dug around and actually found a stray sheet. Only problem was, I didn't know where I'd gotten it from, and I didn't know if it was treated for high temperatures or not. .
Can you see where this is going?
Erg. My palms are sweating at the memory. .
So there I was, with this rogue sheet of clear plastic poised over the paper intake of that HP thinking, "Come on! I'm sure it's heat treated. Why would it not be? And anyway, even if it isn't, how bad could things get? Probably at worst, it'd just go a bit warped, right? Just put it through and quit worrying so much, you dork!" So I put it in.
It didn't come out again.
In its place issued a series of interesting sounds and smells. Panic.
My father was in the next room half an hour into watching some hour-long television drama. I remember, clearly, because I can still see in my mind the clock dial telling me that I had exactly 32 minutes to smuggle tools up from the basement, casually walk past the television and into the back room where I was silently, desperately dis-assembling a damned printer.
Have you ever tried to take apart a thirty pound computer appliance on a hardwood floor in total silence as fast as you can? It's difficult! I mean, you drop a single screw and it will bounce off that hardwood with the loudest, "TACK!" you ever heard. And my dad is the suspicious sort who perks his ears up to any unexpected noise. --He spent most of my childhood convinced that his son was a dangerous klutz who could burn down the backyard fence playing with fireworks if given half the chance. (That was a LONG time ago!)
Anyway, my point is that nothing, nothing adds stress to a situation in quite the same way a father does.
While in the process of cutting free a mess of baked-on crusty plastic from the innards of that HP beast, I managed to gouge out big wads of pink rubber stuff from one of the rollers which was certainly not designed to be gouged. That's what you get for rushing. Take the job slowly; you'll only regret it later if you don't. It doesn't matter that you're going to DIE in. . . 14 minutes and counting.
"How's it going in there, Son?"
"Hmm. . ?" Panic. Fear. Adrenaline. Please, please, please, don't come in! Just keep your gnarly head turned toward that flickering TV screen, old man, because I have your fucking printer in pieces all over the floor and crumbs of pink rubber stuff on my guilty fingers. "Oh, just doing some work in Corel Draw, Dad."
"Oh, Corel Draw? Do you need a hand with that? I upgraded to
melting plastic (Score:4, Funny)
(http://www.helagaman.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday January 17 2007, @09:54AM)
turned out that someone had decided to print some plastic bags in it..
plastic.
bags.
Suchetha
Problem at Telewest (QWESTS UK arm) (Score:3, Interesting)
Cell Phone/Beer/Laptop/Vacuum Cleaner (Score:5, Funny)
Worst Computer Accident. (Score:3, Interesting)
(http://jason-pollock.blogspot.com/)
A Friend's truck had a bug in the ABS controller. There was a possibility for a sensor to get dirty. If the sensor got dirty, the controller would assume that, at low speeds, the truck was in a skid (or stopped?), and turn on the ABS - disabling the brakes! Yep, you heard me, the breaks failed OFF!
Of course, this caused him to have a low speed accident with some minor hood damage. He wasn't amused.
How's that for a "computer accident"?
Jason Pollock
I'm an OLD techie.... (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://www.apnic.net/ | Last Journal: Thursday June 13 2002, @11:02AM)
===
TI 990. Installing a new drive, the old got wiped. No problem, we had a backup. Tape broke. Now I always make two. (the old backup was scotch taped back together, used a special hacked up program to skip the bad block on the tape. After 40 continuous hours due to the poor performance of the hack, all data restored, only skipped some system files easily restored from distribution media.)
===
Installing a new process controler for an assembly line, the driver dropped it off the back of the truck when it got away from him on the four wheeled dolly. Completely trashed, as it dropped into the loading dock well, which was 3' deep in rainwater at the time...
===
Working in the oil patch, a new computer was sent to an off shore drilling rig. The crane operator thought it would be funny to drop the pansy a$$ed techie types into the ocean. Loss of 1 techie type (quit), a $150,000 computer system, and one crane operator (fired). I think they were more upset about the guy quitting than the ruined computer.
===
Put in new UPSs. Site was told to change the wiring for power to them, but they had not done so. No one checked. End result was 105 volts floating on the 5 volt buss. No major damage, since the 100 volts was floating, but it did act rather strange.... (The computer was a redundant hand built system in 5 7' relay racks.) It did cause a production hour outage, which made the customer really, really mad...
===
AIX has a volume manager for the disks. When you add a bit of space here, and a bit there, after a while you can get an improvement in performance if you do a sysback, blow away all the disks, and do a restore - booting from tape. During a weekend of doing that, a tape got all balled up in the drive and broke. After obtaining a replacement tape drive (all hail 24x7 4 hour response hardware support contracts!) used the second tape (always made because of the first story from 23 years ago) to complete the process.
My poor Commodore 64 (Score:3, Interesting)
(http://www.consultantjournal.com/)
The mishap meant that I could no longer access my term papers, let alone the programs I'd developed. No one had a C64 anymore, so I was out of luck. For the rest of grades 11 and 12, I had to write papers by hand. BY HAND! And I stopped programming, since I had no outlet for my computer interests. Programming gave way to history, English, drama and other arts courses. At the end of grade 12, I convinced my parents that my graduation gift should be a contribution toward a Smith-Corona wordprocessor. The wordprocessor would at least allow me to save papers, and it was about 1/3 the price of an IBM. That Smith-Corona served me through 3rd year university, when I took 2 terms off and worked, so I could save enough for school, accommodation, and, thank goodness, a Packard Hell. But I'll never forget my Commodore and the infamous Paperclip wordprocessing program...or how losing the C64 led me to major in English, not comp sci. :)
Stupid as a youth... (Score:3, Interesting)
So I was 19, with my first higher-powered desktop. Brand-spanking-new, only about a month old. It had been crashing a lot (courtesy of Windows ME - Thanks, Gateway!), so I was exploring options on how I could fix it on my own. I had already sent the tower back to Gateway multiple times and was just sick of them not actually getting it fixed. So, I thought maybe I'd buy some more memory and see if that helped.
Well, to this day I don't know what exactly went wrong. It might have been that I purchased the wrong size/shape/brand of memory, or it might be that I put it into the slot incorrectly. But as I booted up my system and saw the Windows ME splash screen come up, I heard a loud, thin whining sound. Then I smelled smoke. In a panic I whipped off the outer door of my casing only to see that the memory cards were smoking.
What's more, the pentium III chip was white hot. It was literally too bright to look at. The only reason it soon became okay to look at was because it caught fire. Yes, my motherboard caught fire. Then, as further evidence of my dumbass-ity, I realized that the system was still plugged in and making things worse. So I yanked the cord and watched as my memory and processor simmered down like a dead match.
Needless to say, the delusion I had held about myself being a computer genius was thoroughly shot. If there's ever a way to knock down a techie's ego, it's to have something catch fire and it be his fault entirely.
It would be a toss up between a few (Score:3, Funny)
- While trouble-shooting a Hewlett Packard 386, I unplugged the keyboard and plugged it back in while the thing was powered up. This apparently fried the motherboard.
- Accidentally nuked the
Ok, stop posting. (Score:3, Interesting)
Classic naivete (Score:3, Funny)
Live (or be allowed to continue to live) and learn, I guess.
Sending 120 volts through the ground pin... (Score:4, Funny)
(http://slashdot.org/)
Back at my parent's house, we were juste done painting so the plastic plaques over the electric outlets were removed. Wanting to print something, I realized that the printer was unplugged. Not really looking at what I was doing, I aimed the printer's plug in the general direction of the outlet... and touched both little screws with the ground pin.
The end result was an inch-wide hole in the printer board, paper that caught fire, a sound very much like pop-corn coming from the computer case, and a completely ruined 486. When I opened it, There weren't many chips still welded to the motherboard. The CPU was stuck somewhere between the hard drive and the floppy, RAM was loose, some cards were welded in place. The last thing to blow was the power supply's fuse, though I can't say I would expect designers to think some wacko would send 120 volts through the parallel port
Cybersex Can Be Dangerous (Score:3, Funny)
(http://www.oligarch.com/)
I found out the hard way when I -- *ahem* -- managed to jerk off on the keyboard of my newest laptop. The keyboard died instantly (although fortunately, no other components were damaged). I even blogged about it [sopef.org] at the time (with some other blogs [herdesires.net] adding to the discussion).
I still haven't gotten it repaired. I'm currently typing on an external keyboard.
Electrocution Story: Learning that Monitors Kill (Score:3, Funny)
So, one day, this guy asks us to make a touch screen kiosk kind of thing that he had seen at the mall. We did all the scripting, he loved it - and then we needed a touch screen. At the time, they were crazy, crazy expensive. But, you could just buy a kit that fit on a standard Amiga monitor for a whole lot less. It did, however, involve opening up your Amiga 1084 monitor and installing a secondary power supply.
So, never having worked on such a thing before, I disassembled my monitor, unplugged it, got to work. When it was installed, I absolutely had to hook up an Amiga and try it out, while guts of the monitor where still exposed.
It tested well, but I was tired. So tired that as I reached for a screwdriver, my bare arm made contact with two hefty capicitors sticking out of the monitor guts.
It was then that I learned about high volts. My arm, involuntarily, swung back so violently that it lifted me out of my chair backwards. I ended up on the floor, on my back, seeing a purple and orange haze, and having no feeling at all in my arm.
The haze went away. My arm stopped tingling about an hour later. The client never paid for his touch screen kiosk.
Jonathan
Shut down a powerplant? (Score:3, Funny)
That shutdown an applicance in a powerplant, and suddently loosing this connection, everything triggered the way it was supposed to: The plant was shutdown with the emergency signal.
It takes serveral hours to bring a powerplant back online.
A short time later, the shutdown command was re-fitted to ask for the password - which throughout the site was changed to contain the name of the server.
I let the wife read my Email (Score:5, Funny)
(http://slashdot.org/)
I tried destroying a computer... (Score:3, Interesting)
(http://www.appiant.com/ | Last Journal: Sunday September 21 2003, @02:10PM)
The short answer is nothing. Well, it didn't break anything.
We'd pull the ram with the power on and it would throw the system into a safe-mode where the screen would go black and the motherboard would cut power to everything. I looked into it and discovered that on a 72 pin SIMM, pin 1 connects to pin 72 to indicate that it has a good connection. Pull the SIMM and it will essentially switch off the power supply to protect all the system components. Same thing with the processor and any PCI/AGP/ISA cards.
It was kinda disappointing, actually.
Low tech accident (Score:3, Funny)
(Last Journal: Monday December 22 2003, @01:52PM)
It was cheap and the type where you punch out the 5/14 plastic drive bay cover from behind, but before you do that you have to remove a metal plate that needs to be removed by bending it back and forth until the metal fatigues. and snaps.
I decided that the best way to do this at the time was to insert my arm inside the case and wiggle the metal plate until it broke, from which position I could then punch out the plastic cover from the inside. The plastic cover was pretty flush with the case meaning I couldnt just jam a screwdriver in there from the front.
I underestimated just how sharp the interiors of cheap cases can be, and after pushing the metal plate at the bottom forward so it bent, my fingers slipped through the gap as the metal bent back, which then sprung back cutting into my fingers. My left arm was stuck in the case, (and naturally I am the type of guy who screws in the little screws on cables). There was no way I could get my arm out of the damn thing without removing the metal plate, and I couldn't get any leverage on it form inside without seriously cutting my fingers open. To make it worse I could feel the thing slicing deeping into my fingers which was starting to really hurt.
I had the thing stuck on my arm for about 10 minutes before the pain got so bad that I *had* to do something to get the thing off - I couldnt move very far due to the cables all being connected and routed through my desk, and the only thing I had to hand was a large screw driver. I started bashing the plastic front with the screw driver but couldnt get the damn thing off or get any purchase on it to prise it off. By this point blood is starting to drip from the bottom of the case and I'm thinking there is *no way* I'm going to be found having bled to death like this, and if I could get the cables off, I could picture myself embarrassed as hell in the emergency room with a computer stuck to my arm.
In the end I had to grit my teeth and force my hand further through to punch out the plastic meaning I could get my other hand in there to bend the metal away. Cut myself more in the process but it was wotth it.
Lessons learned from this are: 1. never screw in cables 2. push from the *top* as your fingers bend down not up 3. cheap cases can also cost you an arm or a leg, just not figuratively speaking.
A few bloopers I had (Score:3, Interesting)
(Last Journal: Friday September 02 2005, @12:57AM)
Another time, I was changing a CMOS battery on a computer and pulled the metal clip that held the battery up a little too far. I put a new battery in and the piece broke off. CMOS couldn't be saved. Oops.
The most recent thing that happened was at school earlier this year. As part of our Capstone project we had several OS's including Windows 2000 with domain controllers. One of the disks containing a DC wouldn't work. Like the other hard drives, it was in a drive bay. I decided to take it out and hook it up directly to the IDE controller on a motherboard. Other machines in the room were having problems, so I took the disk to another room. A member of my group went with me. I hooked it up and spark! The disk caught on fire! He said,"Shit we got a fire!". I held the power button in and the system shut down and the fire was contained. Needless to say, I had lost part of the project. The workstation wasn't damaged, fortunately. But I'll never use a Seagates hard drive again. And to add insult to injury, someone stole our hard drive that had Linux on it and I already had Windows 2000 Server DC's, IIS, Novell 6, Windows 2000 workstations, and Linux with Samba already talking to each other! Doh! The icing on the cake was the instructor saying we had the smoothest OS install he's seen. Everything worked first time around!
Kool-Aid + Tower don't mix (Score:3, Interesting)
Later on, the computer seemed to work, but after about an hour, the monitor went black. My mom figured that the monitor got burnt out, since "the kool-aid landed on the monitor cords." I opened the tower to find Kool-Aid all over the motherboard. With a razor blade and some patience, I was able to remove the Kool-Aid from between the motherboard traces. Apparently, dried Kool-Aid is a decent conductor! I powered it back up and viola! The computer works.
Repairman shut down the whole callcenter (Score:3, Funny)
On the way out after his service call the repairman hit the large red button on the wall next to the door thinking that it would open the door.
It wouldn't.
It would, however, instantly cut all power to the computer room in case of an emergency. That's probably why it was labeled in large red letters "EMERGENCY ELECTRICAL CUTOFF"
This one time.... (Score:3, Funny)
(Last Journal: Thursday October 17 2002, @10:28AM)
I stuck slashdot into my bookmark list...
My son's off too an early start... (Score:3, Funny)
RAID failure AND backup problem + electrical outag (Score:3, Interesting)
(http://lorenzo.lacasadeifili.net/ | Last Journal: Tuesday November 26 2002, @02:42AM)
One of them was completely gone, the other had a lot of damaged sectors and fsck'ed inodes. The PCI IDE RAID card was giving errors at kernel level, and a reboot was requird every time I tried to access the damaged sectors.
But the worst "luck" was that in the last week the backups weren't working correctly. Let me explain that backup policy:
- a DVD+/-RW writer with 4 DVD-RAMs
one for monday + wednesday
one for tuesday + thursday
one for friday
one for the last friday of the month
so, the accident happened on the last weekend of the month; and the backup was failing because I was just making a plain
Now, the backup failure was due to a file with a VERY long name, more than ISO+Joliet could handle.
It failed for the last week (I wasn't paid to check it every day.. not even to give them assistance) so it spoiled the
- "last friday" backup
- "tue + thu" backup
- "mon + wed" backup
- "friday" backup
basically we had NO backup, and a damaged raid.
Solution? This software helped us a lot:
http://www.stellarinfo.com/download.htm#anchor3
we mounted the less-damaged HD on a windows PC, and ran that software. It recovered everything smoothly.
I tried dd'ing the disk and fsck'ing but I got only a lot of sparse chunks (one per inode) of the recovered files.. and Word could not recover sparse files divided in chunks.
Lessons learned:
1) no matter if you're not paid, check your servers daily or at least set up a quick-and-dirty e-mail alert system
2) tar is your friend
3) a low-cost UPS is a bad choice
4) IDE PCI RAID adaptors don't convince me too much