Login or Sign Up to become a member!
LessThanDot Sit Logo

LessThanDot

IT Professionals

Less Than Dot is a community of passionate IT professionals and enthusiasts dedicated to sharing technical knowledge, experience, and assistance. Inside you will find reference materials, interesting technical discussions, and expert tips and commentary. Once you register for an account you will have immediate access to the forums and all past articles and commentaries.

LTD Social Sitings

Lessthandot twitter Lessthandot Linkedin Lessthandot friendfeed Lessthandot facebook Lessthandot rss

Note: Watch for social icons on posts by your favorite authors to follow their postings on these and other social sites.

Your profile

    Search

    XML Feeds

    Google Ads

    « An Invisible Project is a Failed ProjectCollection Of Puzzles For Programmers »
    comments

    The help desk manager I often work with on high level issues were talking the other day about a problem she had with a user. The problem the user was having had been her laptop was turning on briefly and then shutting down for no apparent reason. The reason the topic even came up was due to the user throwing a childish tantrum at the help desk manager’s desk about how IT had purposely done something to her laptop. Of course the second it happened everyone was IM'd and we all walked over to hide and listen to the display of unprofessionalism. I have to add the user was another manager. This is how we handle things like that. Basically laugh about it collectively or we all know the stress would be overwhelming. So the problem turned out to be the user had been plugging a space heater into a power strip under her desk. This is the same power strip she plugged her laptop power supply into. The space heater literally fried the power strip thus causing the laptop to not charge. *sigh* Luckily my "in case of complete disaster" planning didn't have to go into affect due to this moron burning down the building.

    Imagine what could have happened if she plugged the heater into the wall.

    Of course no face-to-face apologies were done by the user. I think the story we have now was more than enough thanks though.

    Warning!!! There is a reason they don't allow space heaters in most office spaces. Listen to the warnings!!!

    About the Author

    Ted Krueger is a SQL Server MVP and has been working in development and database administration for 13+ years. Specialties range from High Availability and Disaster / Recovery setup and testing methods down to custom assembly development for SQL Server Reporting Services. Ted blogs and is also one of the founders of LessThanDot.com technology community. Some of the articles focused on are Backup / Recovery, Security, SSIS and working on SQL Server and using all of the SQL Server features available to create stable and scalable database services. @onpnt Personal Blog over at http://onpnt.wordpress.com/
    Social SitingsTwitterLinkedInLTD RSS Feed
    2177 views
    InstapaperVote on HN

    3 comments

    Comment from: pmch22 [Member] Email
    pmch22 Space heaters should be banned at work. May be an extra jacket or sweater would help to stay warm!
    03/25/09 @ 10:02
    Comment from: SQLDenis [Member] Email
    *****
    SQLDenis I have 3 workstations under my desk, they provide plenty of heat thank you very much :-)

    Yeah people never apologize when they are wrong like that because they are too embarrassed or just plain oblivious

    03/25/09 @ 10:42
    Comment from: Christiaan Baes (chrissie1) [Member]
    Christiaan Baes (chrissie1) we had to install airconditioning because of the 2 servers and 7 computers that are in there.

    ANd let's not forget myself.
    03/25/09 @ 13:30

    Leave a comment


    Your email address will not be revealed on this site.

    To mislead the spambots.

    Your URL will be displayed.
    (Line breaks become <br />)
    (Name, email & website)
    (Allow users to contact you through a message form (your email will not be revealed.)