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comment by Foveaux
Foveaux  ·  612 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: WSJ's Monday Morning #nottheonion 2fer

NotTheOnion aside, I thankfully don't have to deal with any coffee orders, simple or otherwise. I can't handle coffee at all. I had a mocha in 2021 to appease my team, because they wanted to see how agitated I'd get. Once I got the, apparently mandatory and immediate, toilet stop out of the way, I was bouncing around the office. I hated it. I'm already high energy, the extra boost just made me vibrate anxiously.

On the printing.. I have no fucking idea how to parse that article. Is it an article? Have I been coaxed into reading an AI tale? Are my millenial brethren just this fuckin' weird?

    The list of printers to choose from, some in offices hours away, were named by nonsensical strings of letters and numbers. After guessing wrong, she clicked cancel, only to be confronted with “this spinning wheel of death,” she says. “You’re starting to sweat and your heart is palpitating.”

... You don't actually work in that office, do you Terri?





kleinbl00  ·  612 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    ... You don't actually work in that office, do you Terri?

LOL

Most of Hitchhiker's Guide struck me as trite and not particularly insightful. It was fun, yeah, but it's typical snarky British nonsense. The Golgafrinchans, though...

The whole idea of gathering leaves and then setting fire to the forests rung true for me at the ripe old age of ten. That was the first glimpse of economics I ever had. Fast forward 30 years and I learned that "telephone sanitizers" were the maids you called in to clean your new water closet, since you could brag about having a telephone in british society but an indoor toilet was an unmentionable but desirable luxury.

    A notation in the Guide about Golgafrincham after the departure of the B Ark states that the entire remaining population subsequently died from a virulent disease contracted from a dirty telephone.

I guess I've lived most of my life thinking of Golgafrincham Ark B, the "waste people" who don't do anything but are nonetheless generally nice folx that we need to nerf out society so that they don't die of an over-microwaved McDonald's hand pie. They're the people who you wave to as they walk their dogs every morning but can't for the life of them print a PDF or make a cup of coffee.

I've got an employee. She's got a doctorate. She's smarter than me. She works impossibly fast. And she has been unable to print to one of our printers for a year and a half because I can't get her to sit still enough to actually make her computer recognize an IP printer on the network. She's got her workarounds and she's not impacting anyone else so I let it roll?

But I will say that "learned helplessness" is definitely going up with age. Not everyone - DEFINITELY not everyone - but there are otherwise intelligent people who are absolutely gobsmacked by really weird shit. The phrase we use around the office is "tyrannosaurus arms". We have a chat emoji for it and everything. We have any number of clients who get t-rex arms about the dumbest shit. Yet I have an office full of masters' degrees and doctorates and not a one of them could figure out how to plunge a toilet. They stood there stupid, staring at the betraying idol, until my wife did a demo.

A meme-before-the-meme joke of the '80s was everyone's constantly-blinking VCR clock. It was assumed that nobody knew how to set the clock on their VCR, so comedians joked about it, it was in shows, the Simpsons ran with it, etc. If you were actually capable of doing a timed recording of a TV show you were some kind of sexual deviant. Never mind that you set VCR clocks the same way you set alarm clocks, never mind that alarm clocks haven't changed since the late '70s, never mind that if you can't set an alarm clock you are considered an abject moron. Same process on a VCR was only ever executed by deviants, so say we all, this is our plight, and before VCRs died they all had "tune your fucking VCR to PBS and give it a day and shut the fuck up" in the instructions and everyone's VCR still flashed midnight because it was custom.

Printers are things cool people don't know how to work and have been since 2008.

Foveaux  ·  612 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    The phrase we use around the office is "tyrannosaurus arms"

I'm stealing that. I can picture it, it's perfect and I'm stealing it. Actually, we've traded words before. Literally. I do use 'shitcamel' when the need arises.

I really have to agree with what you're describing. I can make the printers work in the office. I can make the printers work in other offices. Converting to pdf, yep. Formatting a pdf.. Actually anything with fucking Adobe seems to be wizardry to a lot of my colleagues. My very smart, medically qualified colleagues. I showed someone how to use a pivot table in excel and I think she sees me as some basement dwelling, DnD playing ubernerd. Which is only half true.

There was one moment that will always stand out. I had just helped shift an entire department from one area on campus to another. Took me like 2 weeks of overtime, because I was doing my usual job, on top of getting them from A to B (it was my office too, but they're academics and are honestly just too busy to help). So during this time, I had arranged the moving company, received and created the several hundred boxes that the academics would use to shift their items, arranged for phone and internet ports to be shifted/activated/deactivated as needed, setup the dreaded printers in the new area, and altered the signage and website so people knew where the fuck we were now.. This is just to paint a picture of my mental state at the time of this specific memory.

I had turned up early, to help cart everything into each respective office. I had a map of the new digs, so I knew who was going where, and I had labelled the boxes so myself and the moving company knew what rooms needed which items. All going smoothly. About four hours into this, I'm a sweaty but accomplished mess. Cue, our academic and palliative care specialist. A practicing Dr when she isn't teaching or researching. Very bright, very driven. I hear her rootling around in her office, and her voice echoes down the hallway. She's a rare American on our staff, so her voice is distinct. She also shortens my name from five letters to three, so it's even more distinct. She calls out. I trudge into her office, probably trailing an extension cord and an errant HMDI cable:

Her: "Hey my computer won't turn on. I thought you set everything up before we got in?"

Me: "I sure did. Might have forgotten something though, I've done this office and the other 20."

Her: "Oh man that's some work. Can you have a look for me?"

She stands from her computer and offers me her seat. I don't take it. I know what the problem is. I press the power button on her desktop. It whirrs to life and her screens light up. She hasn't noticed what I've done, only that things are working.

Her: "Oh amazing! Thank you!"

Me (already halfway out the door): "No worries!"

Again, she's super bright. Has a wealth of life and professional experience to call on. But she didn't think to try turning the fucking thing on before calling for me. I'm 100% enabling them, I know it. But being the 'IT guy' without being in IT does have its perks. IT love me because I keep tickets from being logged in my areas, fixing the problem before it reaches their overwhelming task list. As a result, when I have a genuine IT problem and raise a ticket, I get priority. Same day response when 3 days is the norm.

Still, tyrannosaurus arms indeed.

kleinbl00  ·  611 days ago  ·  link  ·  

This is me, rediscovering the word "munter".

You clearly have a lot of respect for your workgroup. You clearly recognize them as bright. And I think you know cold that if you were sick that day, Dr. American would stare at her computer for a minute, put on her analytical IT cap, turn the fucker on, roll her eyes at herself and save the anecdote for when you got back because you'd appreciate it.

A lot of how we get along in life is doing the stuff we're better at so our friends can do the stuff they're better at. I don't want to know what my staff's toilet plunging adventures would look like if my wife wasn't there. There would probably have been some internet searches. There would probably have been some clean-up. I don't think there would have been a plumber, and I'm happy to not know for certain.

I have a friend. She's married to a contractor. Her daughter is a sophomore in student housing. And she told me of eight college-aged girls who were pooping and peeing down the street at the gym because one of them clogged the toilet on a Wednesday and student services couldn't get to it before Tuesday. Eight of 'em. Didn't even think to look it up. At least one of them is the daughter of an electrical contractor, who works with his hands all day, who was a phone call away. They found out about this because they were visiting. "Dad, how do I not have to pee down the street" simply didn't occur to their daughter for whatever reason.

I think there's a big difference between "leaning on someone else's expertise" and being fucking helpless. I mean, my wife is intimidated by the procedure to turn on the television. My daughter is not. My wife successfully installed and configured a 5.1 system before I met her so if she's got instructions she can do anything while my daughter knows what to pantomime to accomplish her goals and has the curiosity to solve problems impeding her progress.

It's that curiosity that counts. The people who have it will run things and the people who don't will be vaguely afraid and frustrated by 90% of the things in their life. I think it's always been that way but I think the level of complexity we encounter these days blunts parents from fostering the curiosity.

My daughter is in "cooking class" at school. We paid $350 for ten hour-long lessons. Yesterday? Nachos. The day before that? She selected, made a shopping list for, assembled all equipment necessary to and cooked, under supervision, a gluten-free white chocolate confetti cake with buttercream frosting for her mom's birthday.

I am glad that my daughter is growing up with people who will at least be able to make fucking nachos, and extremely glad that she's just as irritated by this class as I am.