What Kind of Computer Species Are you?

  • Get the NEW AquariaCentral iOS app --> http://itunes.apple.com/app/id1227181058 // Android version will be out soon!

Whats your Species?

  • "The Just-Testing User": Userus gustulata

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • "The Pig Pen": Userus perfumia

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • "The I-Don't-Want-To-Hear-That! User": Userus headinsandia

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • "The I-Don't-Believe-You User": Userus suspictica

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    25
  • Poll closed .

Reefscape

I shoot people with a Canon
Staff member
Nov 8, 2006
18,481
6
89
Staffordshire, UK
seethroughmylens.co.uk
Real Name
Blinky
When people ring up an IT Support helpdesk, they seem to have this hidden personality which only becomes apparent when the IT support person answers the phone..

So, what kind of species do you turn into?


1."The Expert": Userus expertia
"The Expert" user is the curse of most IT support establishments. Experts try out something they heard about from "the bloke in the pub," an unqualified expert on everything who offers advice to anyone who will listen. Experts usually make a complete mess of their systems when they follow the bloke's advice. Then they compound the problem by trying to fix it themselves, often destroying their machines. As a last resort, they call the help desk and demand that their machines be replaced or mended immediately, as they have urgent work that can't wait. There has been an Expert at every place I have worked. I leave it to you to decide who your resident Expert is.

2."The Fiddler": Userus manipulata
The motto of "The Fiddler" is: "I wonder what happens if...." I've placed these callers next because they are the most closely related to the Expert. These callers don't realize that some files actually make their computers work. If they don't recognize a file as one of their own, they delete it and are surprised when something then stops working. Unlike the Expert, they don't say anything about the problem; you only discover it months later from a casual remark, such as, "Oh no, that hasn't worked for ages. I meant to call you." Fiddlers are usually very pleasant people—who will drive you mad.

3."The Mouse": Userus rodentia
"The Mouse" is more common than the previous two and fortunately less harmful. For this species of caller, the big gray box is a source of blind terror. I can remember talking on the phone to a Mouse at a UK communications company. She had worked in a telephone exchange for years and was suddenly given a PC to help her. She had not asked for it and didn't want it. The screen was making strange noises, and she was concerned.
"I don't want it to explode or anything," she wailed.
"No," I said patronizingly, "they don't explode. There's no explosive in them."
Then I heard a loud "BANG!" through the phone.
"What was that?" I asked.
"My screen has just exploded," she replied.

4."The Train Spotter": Userus geekissimus
"The Train Spotter" is most often the offspring of an Expert and a Fiddler. These callers are usually harmless and don't have many computer problems. What they do have is an IT magazine, which they have read from cover to cover. The Train Spotters will invariably corner an unsuspecting help desk tech and proceed to bore the tech rigid by sharing their knowledge. The main difference between Train Spotters and other callers is that Train Spotters do not usually phone the help desk; they visit in person.

I'm not quite sure what they want from the help desk, but they take up a lot of time asking various questions about new innovations, about which I usually know nothing. I have found no explanation for the existence of this user other than that the Expert and Fiddler conceived the Train Spotter on a trip to a computer trade fair.

5."The Paranoid User": Userus newbigata
"Paranoid Users" are convinced that the computer has an intelligence of its own and is out to get them. The machine is constantly doing something that causes a problem. The computer will maliciously alter their documents, obliterate all references to their passwords, and lose work they have saved. If a machine is ever going to break down, it will be while being used by a Paranoid. This species' one saving grace is determination. They never give up, as much as you wish they would.

6."The I'm-Building-A-Case User": Userus fabricatum
"The I'm-building-a-case User" is grinding an axe to get some new gadget brought in to his department or have an old one taken away. They report hundreds of trivial problems, hoping upper management will buy them the latest all-singing and all-dancing machine. The real problem with this species of caller is the fact that they are usually not trying to replace computer equipment. This user doesn't see the difference between computers and any other piece of office equipment. I have often been required to pass opinions on all kinds of electrical equipment even after pointing out my lack of knowledge on the subject. I do not evaluate coffee makers. I do not drink coffee, and I know nothing about the black arts involved in its production.

7."The Just-Testing User": Userus gustulata
"The Just-Testing User" is not even using a computer but wants to test your knowledge and, if possible, trip you up. The best technique for dealing with this species is by answering questions with "I don't know." They cannot deal with this straight capitulation. Most Just-Testing Users would love the chance to show your boss how useless you are or how little you know. They are thrilled when you give a wrong answer and will crow about it incessantly.

8."The Pig Pen": Userus perfumia
Based on the Charles M. Schulz Peanuts character, "The Pig Pen" has the messiest, most unhygienic work area in the company. The Pig Pen's personal hygiene is fine; it is only the workspace that is a hazard. It is a graveyard for old coffee cups, half-eaten green sandwiches, used Kleenex, and moldy sock collections. The Pig Pens are some of the nicest and most technically able people you know. They usually give the help desk very little trouble except when their keyboard needs replacing, which is often. The Pig Pen is a mainstay of most companies, the backbone of whatever department he or she works for. If that were not the case, the company would have let him or her go years ago.

9."The I-Don't-Want-To-Hear-That! User": Userus headinsandia
This is a rather curious species. They call, ask a question, and if they don't hear what they want, they take it personally. I always wonder why they ask if they don't want to know the answer. It does not seem to matter that what they want is not possible. All they want is to hear the answer they're looking for.

10."The End-Of-My-Tether User": Userus adlimitus
This is the angriest but, perversely, often the easiest to deal with. After spending weeks attempting to resolve their own queries, they finally swallow their pride and call the help desk. Calls from this type of user usually end in one of three ways:
  • The problem's solution can be found simply by reading page 1 of his instruction manual, which, of course, the caller has not done.
  • The caller is informed that the operation she is trying to perform cannot be performed with the equipment or software that she has.
  • The caller has already found a solution but phoned the help desk to let you know how frustrated, mad, or unsatisfied he is.
11."The Nice User": Userus pleasantia
Userus pleasantia was long thought extinct but has recently been observed by TechRepublic member Dennis R. in the forests near Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. This user is mostly harmless and can be recognized by its familiar cries of "Please" and "Thank you."

"The Nice User" listens carefully, explains his or her problem clearly, and follows suggested procedures. Because of their tendency to think before they act, calls from these users are rare. I have personally encountered this species of help desk caller several times during my career, and each time, they help restore my faith in the end user.

12. "The I-Don't-Believe-You User": Userus suspictica
This user will ring for assistance, ask a question, listen carefully to your answer, and promptly refuse to accept any information that does not exactly match his or her own preconception. This user is closely related to the "The I-Don't-Want-To-Hear-That! User": Userus headinsandia​

Niko​
 

clown-lover

AC Members
May 26, 2007
2,448
0
36
Fargo, ND
I'm the first in your definition list but not your definition.. I'm an expert in many ways but if I can't figure it out myself (which is seldom) and actually call a help desk I'll try it there way..

My problem is that when I call a help desk 80% of the time I know more than the guy on the other side of the phone..

Or better yet, you call tell them everything you did, and then while they are using their "knowledge tools" ask you those questions that you just told them you performed.. Genius.

BTW I have never demanded a machine be replaced.. I always build my own. And parts break.
 

Fungi

Knock-Out Stuff
May 6, 2007
314
0
0
34
Melbourne, Australia
Neither, I don't call tech support but I'm a hybrid mouse/pig-pen... from where I'm seated right now, on the desk I can see two cups of tea, one of hot chocolate (later refilled with iced coffee), two packs of gum, three text books, about 100 loose sheets, my iPod and two packets of chewing gum
 

jtburf

I want to hunt these.
Jul 18, 2007
637
0
0
Houston TX
I'm neither, if my coputer does anything unusual a good smack fixes it, or I just take it to my friend in IT for hp.

But i guese i am a mix of nice and fiddler, I ocasionally want to take appart things to see if I can put them back together. lol
 
zoomed.com
hikariusa.com
aqaimports.com
Store