Difference between revisions of "763: Workaround"

Explain xkcd: It's 'cause you're dumb.
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In the comic a 'relative' of [[Cueball]] is depicted, who explains to him how he downloaded a certain video of YouTube. The relative is one of the 'non-computer people', probably to think of as the dad or granddad of Cueball. He explains how he saved a web page and opened it in (Microsoft) Word, to then send this .doc (.docx) file to a service that extracts YouTube Videos who then emailed it back to him. Probably this service just saw which movie he wanted to download, and did it the normal way and just emailed the result to him.
 
In the comic a 'relative' of [[Cueball]] is depicted, who explains to him how he downloaded a certain video of YouTube. The relative is one of the 'non-computer people', probably to think of as the dad or granddad of Cueball. He explains how he saved a web page and opened it in (Microsoft) Word, to then send this .doc (.docx) file to a service that extracts YouTube Videos who then emailed it back to him. Probably this service just saw which movie he wanted to download, and did it the normal way and just emailed the result to him.
  
The bottom text says that though Randall encourages his relatives to solve their computer problems on their own, by trial and error, he has to resist the urge of asking them how they really did it. Because most of the time this results in a very clumsy, elaborate way of working, involving typically obscure functions of programs elderly like to use for whatever problem on their computer (like Microsoft Word, Outlook,...)
+
The caption says that though Randall encourages his relatives to solve their computer problems on their own, by trial and error, he has to resist the urge of asking them how they really did it. Because most of the time this results in a very clumsy, elaborate way of working, involving typically obscure functions of programs the elderly like to use for whatever problem on their computer, like Microsoft Word or Outlook.
  
 
The title text just explains another example of this complex and elaborate way of working that people who don't understand computers can create.
 
The title text just explains another example of this complex and elaborate way of working that people who don't understand computers can create.

Revision as of 21:25, 25 November 2013

Workaround
I once worked on a friend's dad's computer. He had the hard drive divided into six partitions, C: through J:, with a 'Documents' directory tree on each one. Each new file appeared to be saved to a partition at random. I knew enough not to ask.
Title text: I once worked on a friend's dad's computer. He had the hard drive divided into six partitions, C: through J:, with a 'Documents' directory tree on each one. Each new file appeared to be saved to a partition at random. I knew enough not to ask.

Explanation

In the comic a 'relative' of Cueball is depicted, who explains to him how he downloaded a certain video of YouTube. The relative is one of the 'non-computer people', probably to think of as the dad or granddad of Cueball. He explains how he saved a web page and opened it in (Microsoft) Word, to then send this .doc (.docx) file to a service that extracts YouTube Videos who then emailed it back to him. Probably this service just saw which movie he wanted to download, and did it the normal way and just emailed the result to him.

The caption says that though Randall encourages his relatives to solve their computer problems on their own, by trial and error, he has to resist the urge of asking them how they really did it. Because most of the time this results in a very clumsy, elaborate way of working, involving typically obscure functions of programs the elderly like to use for whatever problem on their computer, like Microsoft Word or Outlook.

The title text just explains another example of this complex and elaborate way of working that people who don't understand computers can create.

Transcript

[A relative stands at a computer terminal, while Cueball behind him stands with his head in his hands.]
Relative: See, I've got a really good system: if I want to send a YouTube video to someone, I go to File -> Save, then import the saved page into Word. Then I go to "Share This Document" and under "recipient" I put the email of this video extraction service...
I'll often encourage relatives to try to solve computer problems themselves by trial and error. However, I've learned an important lesson: if they say they've solved their problem, never ask how.


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Discussion

This comic is broken:

{#if:|| --> 

surrounding the comic should not happen. Some experiments???--Dgbrt (talk) 23:04, 18 February 2014 (UTC)

Six partitions, C through J... Which two letters are missing? Mumiemonstret (talk) 14:23, 3 November 2014 (UTC)

Well I assume D: is the DVD Burner and E: the BluRay drive? Just guessing, who still has optical drives these days, Fuck optical drives :0 --108.162.254.66 09:54, 9 November 2014 (UTC)

I found that, starting with XP, and particularly now with 7, the drive letters Windows automatically assigns to new devices started to not make much sense... The main system partition is C, the manufacturer recovery partition is D (really must get round to "hiding" that) and after that it's a free for all. The DVD drive (which I still have semi regular use of for various reasons), a gaggle of USB hard disks, memory sticks and card readers, any fresh ones I might end up creating on the internal HDD, and even the built-in SD card slot, all fight for whatever letters they can get, though once a drive is assigned one it tends to stick with it... for an arbitrary length of time, which may be a matter of hours, or maybe a decade-plus, at which point some other new (or occasionally, another existing) drive will co-opt that letter and bump the original down the list. Optical drive seems to get priority, then the external HDDs, then the memory sticks and card readers, but it's not an absolute.

So if he's ever used a USB drive at any point, especially before adding a new internal HDD for extra storage, there could well be a gap...

I'm also no stranger to the "squillions of partitions" issue, at least back in the Win98 era. One family machine ended up with no fewer than three different HDDs in it all at once, each with at least two partitions for various reasons (not least partition size limits / sector size efficiency, and improved ease of backing up using a utility that imaged the partitions separately onto CDRW without any compression), including one each for the various family members, the system drive, programs, games, and shared documents. On top of which there was the floppy, two optical drives (DVDROM, CDRW) and an IDE Zipdisk (yes, you heard right... both built-in IDE ports plus a PCI expansion card with a third port put to full use) and at least one virtual image-drive, and a parallel port smartmedia card reader. All this at the start of the USB-drive era, under 98SE with the USB patch. Suffice to say there were a lot of letters in use.

...and this is what was done by four people who were each generally fairly competent with computers, an a couple of them rather more so, such that we were usually the ones being asked for help rather than the other way around. I would at this point say "so who knows what fresher hells might be brewed up by those who didn't know what they were doing was even more wrong than the deliberate mistakes we were forced to make", but I've seen enough of them first hand through friends, colleagues and extended family to not have to wonder o_O; 141.101.106.113 12:56, 9 October 2015 (UTC)