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Shark tank

Wanna bet?

Networking pilot fish needs to restart the primary domain controller, so he notifies users and then sends an all-clear message when the work is done. “I send out the all-clear e-mail and ask any users still having difficulty to contact the help desk,” fish says. “I then receive an e-mail response: ‘Yes, I’m still having trouble. I can’t respond to e-mails.’”

Impossible

This IT pilot fish is consolidating two branch locations , and on moving day he gets a call on his cell. It’s a sales guy asking permission to get a file off the server. “No, that’s not possible because the server is disconnected.” Well, can you reconnect it? “No, that’s not possible.” Why not? “Because the server is in the back seat of the rental car that I am driving to the new location.”

No, that’s not it

User’s PC makes an annoying noise, and this pilot fish tracks it down: The fan on the video card is about to die. “I informed the user that it would be quicker to replace the video card than the fan,” says fish. “He asked if the card could be removed or disabled, since the noise was so distracting. After I explained that it was an important part of his PC and couldn’t be removed or disabled, he responded that he assumed that it was only for watching videos, and he didn’t do that on this computer.”

Anything else?

Pilot fish gets a message via voice mail from a user he helped the previous day with a problem that had nothing to do with e-mail: “Listen, I don’t know what you did yesterday, but today I can’t get to any of my e-mails. I’m not sure what you did, but could you come and…Oh, never mind. I found my mail. Sorry about that.”

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