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Computer Voodoo?

jbeaupre asks: "A corollary to 'Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic' is that sometimes users have to resort to what I call 'computer voodoo.' You don't know why it works, you barely care how it works, but you find yourself doing the strangest things because it just seems to work. I'm talking about things like: smacking a PC every 5 seconds for an hour to keep it from stalling on a hard drive reformat (with nary a problem after the reformat); or figuring out the only way to get a PC partially fried by lightning to recognize an ethernet card, after booting into Windows, is to start the computer by yanking the card out and shoving it back in (thereby starting the boot processes). What wacky stuff have you done that makes no obvious sense, but just works?"

32 of 686 comments (clear)

  1. For most problems... by QuantumFTL · · Score: 5, Funny

    For most problems, I find smacking the user is more effective than smacking the computer.

    1. Re:For most problems... by freakmn · · Score: 5, Funny

      That has to be about the most insightful thing I've ever seen here on Slashdot. And, of course, you got modded funny.

      --
      warning: This post is likely to contain gobs of dripping sarcasm. Consume at your own risk.
    2. Re:For most problems... by east+coast · · Score: 4, Funny

      I actually use that line at work, well kinda. I use: hitting the machine won't make it work better but hitting people makes them work better.

      --
      Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
    3. Re:For most problems... by Duhavid · · Score: 4, Funny

      This is your boss.

      I quite agree.

      See you Monday. Bright and early!

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    4. Re:For most problems... by east+coast · · Score: 4, Funny

      I know this isn't my boss. Early isn't in his vocabulary.

      --
      Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
    5. Re:For most problems... by kfg · · Score: 3, Funny

      I find smacking the user is more effective than smacking the computer.

      Ditto. If only I were a masochist that would work out just fine.

      KFG

    6. Re:For most problems... by MobileTatsu-NJG · · Score: 3, Funny
      by Duhavid (677874) on Fri Aug 18, '06 05:59 PM (#15938281)
      This is your boss.


      Mr. Duvalid, this is YOUR boss. I see that you posted on Slashdot one minute before you clocked out. Come see me Monday morning, bright and early.
      --

      "I like to lick butts!" by MobileTatsu-NJG (#32700246) (Score:5, Informative)

    7. Re:For most problems... by Duhavid · · Score: 4, Funny

      Deer Boss,

      You forget that I wrote the timeclocking system.

      You better see *your* boss bright and early
      Monday morning. Remember, I read BOFH nearly
      religiously. Dont make this too hard on yourself.

      Duhavid

      PS: What is this "clocking out" thing you talk of?

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    8. Re:For most problems... by stfvon007 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Apparently you didn't read my post's manual. (Also known as my signature)

      All misspellings and grammatical errors in the above post are intentional and part of my artistic expression.

      Not reading manuals is a pebkac error. To fix this problem I recommend replacing the user.

      --
      All misspellings and grammatical errors in the above post are intentional and part of my artistic expression.
  2. one time at computer camp... by drfrog · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...i had to code a html page without dreamweaver

    now thats voodoo

    --
    back in the day we didnt have no old school
    1. Re:one time at computer camp... by Telvin_3d · · Score: 5, Funny

      I had to code a standards compliant page with Dreamweaver ... now THAT'S voodoo

    2. Re:one time at computer camp... by drfrog · · Score: 5, Funny

      real nerds dont code html by hand, they write a script to code the html for them

      --
      back in the day we didnt have no old school
  3. I've got the touch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    When somebody has a problem that they want me to fix, my mere presence and their attempt to repeat the problem makes it go away.

  4. Walk into the room by Blastrogath · · Score: 3, Funny

    No, seriously. For some reason my presence is enough to get some computer problems to go away.

    (until I leave...)

    --
    "The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men." -Plato
    1. Re:Walk into the room by mashade · · Score: 5, Funny
      We refer to this as 'techie karma' or the 'magic touch'. For some reason, it doesn't work as well with females.

      -- Shade

      --
      Technology tips and tricks.
    2. Re:Walk into the room by SlartibartfastJunior · · Score: 5, Funny

      I knew a guy who could only log into the network while sitting down. If he was standing up when he tried to log in, no dice.

      Turns out he touch typed while sitting, but had to look at the keyboard while standing - and since he "cleaned" his keyboard and put a few key tops back in the wrong places, he was mis-typing has password if he was standing up.

  5. feeling better, thank you by gnarlin · · Score: 4, Funny
    I always have the feeling the gentoo runs more smoothly if I recompile the kernel again, even if it's the same version that is currently running.

    I gotta stop using gentoo.

    --
    A bad analogy is like a leaky screwdriver.
  6. Random Cursing and Hitting by Couchmanx · · Score: 5, Funny

    On the first pc I built one of the best ways to keep it in line in its last few weeks with me was to randomly yell and smack the pc, it didnt know when it would happen so it didnt risk crapping out on me :P Nah, Ive never had to rely on any voodoo to keep my pc running .. but to eliminate some annoying buzzing sounds from fans nothing beats a swift smack on the top left corner of the case. I had a roommate that smacked his pc cause it wasnt working the way he wanted it to .. but it was working perfectly fine (no hardware or software issues - all user issues) .. I told him I'd have to start a support group for his electronics (he hit everything) if he kept it up. Electronic Victims of **** still lives to this day (name censored so he doesnt come after me :P)

    --
    If it takes effort to do, let someone else do it.
  7. Re:My analysis? by FLEB · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why in God's holy name does Windows fail to boot one time, and then boot successfully the second time?

    Hardware problems.

    --
    Information wants to be free.
    Entertainment wants to be paid.
    You just want to be cheap.
  8. This works every time by texaport · · Score: 4, Funny
    Flip a CAT5 cable end-to-end gets a connection back (when assisting over the phone and you know its a loose cable).

    Tell the enduser their network cable "got reversed" and somebody will have to go over there and turn it around for them.

    First, if you ask someone to put the phone down to check for link light, they'll answer back in 3 seconds without checking.

    Second, even if they actually wouldn't lie about it, they'd never get under a desk to fix it in the first place.

    Even guys in suits do it every time, if you say someone will be over "later" to reverse their (known loose) network cable.

    End result -- works every time if you do it right, and no credibility lost since everybody understands what happened.

  9. RE: Entrails by 00Sovereign · · Score: 4, Funny

    I keep various old expansion cards, motherboards, and processors hanging on the wall in plain sight of my beige box. The threat of disembowelment seems to keep it inline.

    --
    "Me fail English, that's unpossible." --Ralphie
  10. Dowsing for bad RAM chips. by sakusha · · Score: 4, Funny

    True story: I used to identify bad RAM chips in old Apple II units with a dowsing rod. Finding one bad RAM chip out of 24 was a horrible pain in the ass, the normal procedure was to remove half of them, replace those with known-good RAM chips, see if the mem diagnostic passed, ok, it wasn't in the half I removed, put those back. Take out half of the chips that weren't removed before, replace with known good chips, repeat, etc. in a binary search pattern. This was horribly unproductive, particularly if the memory fault was intermittent. And even worse, once in a while, due to all the handling and insertion/extraction, or maybe just from static discharges, you'd ruin a chip in the known-good set, which really screwed things up, you could go back and forth for HOURS.

    I remember when I was a little kid, I used to watch the old Tom Snyder Tomorrow show on late night TV, and some weird guy demonstrated how to dowse using a couple of bent wires made from coat hangers. I was skeptical, but eventually I became known for some rather startling dowsing stunts, I used to challenge people to hide my keys in a location I was unfamiliar with, in houses or buildings I'd never been to, and could find them 4 times out of 5. So when I became a computer tech, I figured, what the hell, it couldn't hurt, it couldn't possibly take MORE time to try dowsing than to do the elaborate binary search method. And to my astonishment, it was a LOT faster. Sometimes it took me a couple of tries, but pulling just a couple of individual chips was a lot faster than pulling 12 chips at a time, and my results were way above the expected average of just pulling a chip at random. BUT.. I made absolutely sure that nobody ever saw me dowsing on their machines. This is Computer SCIENCE, after all, it isn't computer VOODOO. Ha!

  11. Re:Not sure how it works... by bcrowell · · Score: 3, Funny

    Hey, I tried what you said, but it didn't make my computer work better, it broke it! How come?

  12. Machine Empathy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Didn't you ever play the role playing game "Paranoia?"

    Machine Empathy is a mutant power that makes all things electronic (be they computers, appliances, or killbots) into your best friends.

    I submit that people who program computers, and like computers, naturally develop this mutant power. :)

    (Incidentally, the best part of the game was that computer programmers were called "high programmers" and were worshipped (and feared) by the rest of society. That is how it should be.)

  13. ....Obvious Answer by trainsnpep · · Score: 4, Funny

    What wacky stuff have you done that makes no obvious sense, but just works?

    Ask Slashdot.

    (...though I'm not quite sure it works...)

    --
    --<Mike>--
  14. Homemade "Apple" Intel by RESPAWN · · Score: 4, Funny

    I had (still have, actually) this old Compaq Presario computer with a Pentium 200 MMX processor. The thing was never the most stable computer out there and was a pain in the but to work on, having non-standard screws and proprietay memory, as most Compaqs of that era did. One day I realized that I had a bunch of old hard drives lying around, so I decide to make this Compaq into a makeshift file server by adding the two larger drives in to the machine and brought it to school with my at the start of my Senior year. The machine's sole purpose was to act as a file server AND as a second internet/instant messaging terminal that I could use when my primary desktop was otherwise engaged. The machine didn't do this well as it seemed to suffer a 25% random reboot rate while using it. (Windows 98, couldn't even get Linux to come close to running on it.) This wasn't really any different from the sort of behavior it had shown since the day we purchased it, shortly after the MMX processors were released, so I just put up with it until...

    One day I'm playing Serious Sam over the LAN with some friends. There's a brief lull in the action and so I reach over for the 1 gallon bottle of apple juice I was drinking from. Well, instead of picking up the apple juice, I tip it over and the entire contents spill out ON TOP OF the Compaq. I of course, immediately jump in to disaster recovery mode and race to the kitchen to grab the paper towels. I start cleaning up the mess, expecting the wrost for the Compaq in the process. I could see where there was apple juice in all of the little crevices and I'm darn sure some of it actually got into the computer. Some had spilled on to some school papers lying next to the machine and I wanted to make sure I didn't lose any notes so I took plenty of time to salvage those papers.

    After I finished cleaning up the mess, I check the computer. Mouse and keyboard input seem OK. I start up Winamp and it seems to work OK. I run scandisk on all of the drives and they all report being OK. I can't find a single thing wrong with this computer. And I'll be damned if that computer didn't have a single random reboot after I spilled apple juice on it. It became the object of admiration and jokes amongst my friends, and one friend even managed to find one of those fruity, rainbow colored Apple Computer stickers that he wanted me to put on the case. I never even bothered to open up the computer to asses the damages (partly becuase I was lazy and didn't have a torx screw driver at school). Truth be told, I was afraid to even move the comptuer or otherwise disturb it since it seemed to be working OK.

    A quick addendum to this story... right before graduation I purchased another hard drive for my primary desktop machine that was about 4 times the total capacity of the drives in the apple computer. I copied all of my data off the apple computer on to this drive and pretty much relegated the apple solely to web surfing detail. About a year and a half later, I need another hard drive for a client machine and so I decide to finally open the apple computer to raid one of the hard drives in it. I was even more amazed then that the computer still worked. There was brown, sticky apple juice residue on everything in the computer. There was even a puddle of this gooey gel that had pooled at the bottom of the case. It was all over the cables, the drives, everything. I was even more surprised and even a little bit proud that the computer still worked after that ordeal.

    I guess that just goes to show: if you want a stable computer, get an Apple. ;)

    --

    If Murphy's Law can go wrong, it will.

  15. Those poor interns... by Chabil+Ha' · · Score: 4, Funny

    We wrote a script once that would gradually slow down the mouse pointer. We installed it on the interns computers and watched them get frustrated when their mouse pointer wouldn't move. We explained to them that they had to unplug the mouse, swing the plug end rapidly around their heads, and then plug it back in, and it would be fixed.

    We would conspiciously watch from quite a few cubes away and watch this mice get whipped around in the air! It was the most hilarous thing we've ever seen! You'd think that they wouldn't buy it, but when push came to shove they did it and it worked for them after looking like fools!

    --
    We're all hypocrites. We all have hidden parts, it's the contrast between them that make us more a hypocrite than others
  16. these darn web-savvy ghosts, nowadays by amrust · · Score: 3, Funny

    I have a friend. Her and her husband's computer works completely normal. To him, anyway, when he only "checks email occasionally". But for some reason, when the wife uses it, she says their antispy software shows the husband's profile/browsing history is mysteriously always infected cookies from a bunch of porno sites that they never visited! Seems like it's worse when she gets back from being out of town. Like the ghostly hackers know when she's been gone, or something.

    There's some spooky voodoo for ya, right there. They should probably call Ghostbusters, or something.

    --
    VOTE!
  17. Re:My analysis? by mkcmkc · · Score: 5, Funny
    Hardware problems.

    Do you mean the first time or the second time?

    --
    "Not an actor, but he plays one on TV."
  18. Threat of Violence by udoschuermann · · Score: 3, Funny

    Back in the day when I was a network admin (think 286 and the powerhouse 386 with a whooping 8mb RAM), we had occasional issues with one networked PC or another. Most of the time I'd carry a fairly large hammer with me and would place it on top of the computer case while I had it open to investigate the problem and work on the machine. The sight of the hammer freaked out more than one person in the office because they thought I intended to really use the thing. Apparently it had a similar effect on the computer because I never had a problem getting the thing to work again in short order. They also behaved just fine after that implicit threat (the computers, not the people).

    --
    --Udo.
  19. Re:hitting it by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 3, Funny
    Once in the bad old Pathworks days, I had a user who used to slam the table with his fist because the screen went black, and that's how he got it up again.

    Nobody wanted to tell him that moving the mouse by hand would have the same effect...

    --
    Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
  20. Re:Hard Drive Massage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    That was the /. equivalent of "So I put my finger over the hole in his heart and gave him mouth-to-mouth until the surgeon arrived."