(no title)
rented_mule | 1 month ago
Suddenly one winter morning, the PC wouldn't boot. I had to run to a meeting. When I got back, I turned the PC off and on again and everything was fine. The next morning, the same thing happened. The third day, I didn't have a meeting. I turned it off and back on, still no boot. I'd gotten in late, so I just turned it off and took an early lunch. When I got back, it still wouldn't boot. But I had a meeting, so I ran to that, leaving the computer on. When I got back, it booted fine.
The next morning, same thing. I decided to look inside, not having any idea what might cause such symptoms. As I took the shell off, a tiny mouse came out, jump off my desk, and ran across my lap before jumping on the floor and scurrying out of sight. From inside the computer came the smell of mouse urine. Apparently he'd been crawling in through the open drive bay to keep warm every night, and urinating while he was in there. Once the computer had been on for a while, the heat and airflow would dry it out enough to eliminate whatever electrical short was keeping it from booting. I went to the store and bought an empty drive sled to put in the drive bay whenever I took my drive out, and the problem never came back. I felt lucky that the liquid didn't cause permanent damage.
ljf|1 month ago
rhplus|1 month ago
PunchyHamster|1 month ago
wish modern stores optimized for customer convenience instead of seeing most shelves along the way to the usual
jacquesm|1 month ago
adornKey|1 month ago
Another classic is the "Frog on Keyboard error". Software developers have to be prepared for everything...
https://thedailywtf.com/articles/Classic-WTF-Cursed-and-ReCu...
WaitWaitWha|1 month ago
Primary purpose was to lock the keyboard so when the cat walked all over it, it would not disconnect.
Dban1|1 month ago
mbac32768|1 month ago
jaapz|1 month ago
If this would have caught on we might have called bugs mice
moomin|1 month ago
rkomorn|1 month ago
The history section of the Wikipedia entry for "bug" [1] suggests it predates computers by decades.
1- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bug_(engineering)
nakedneuron|1 month ago
dfxm12|1 month ago