You open a program for work… and suddenly it doesn’t work.

So you tell your supervisor.

They tell you to call the help desk.

You call the help desk… they can’t help.

They tell you to submit a ticket.

You go to submit a ticket… but first you have to create an account.

To create the account, you have to link your work ID.

To link your work ID, you need your phone for a code.

Then it makes you create a new password (not your usual one, obviously).

Then you have to verify your email.

You wait… finally get it… click the link…

…and it makes you log in again.

And grab your phone again. Another code.

Finally—you’re in.

Now you fill out the ticket, using that random username you were given on day one and told never to lose.

You submit it.

It says: “Pending supervisor approval.”

Your supervisor calls:

“Why did you submit this?”

So now you explain everything…

and walk them through it… step by step… because they don’t understand any of it.

They approve it.

You get an email:

“This will take up to 4 days.”

You need it done tomorrow.

So now you ask who to escalate to.

Your supervisor asks their boss.

Their boss asks someone else.

Eventually, a VP gets involved.

They tell you to contact a guy—Mr. Patel.

You call Mr. Patel.

He asks a million questions.

Eventually he realizes:

“This broke after a Windows update.”

So now he has to talk to his boss.

Meanwhile, your boss keeps asking:

“What’s taking so long?”

You explain… again.

You go to lunch.

Come back—Mr. Patel messaged you 5 minutes after you left:

“Call me.”

You call him. Voicemail.

He calls you back an hour later (because he was “in a meeting”).

He says:

“You need a new computer. That’ll take 5 days.”

Your boss’s boss is now on your case because only you can do this one task.

You ask if there’s another way.

“No.”

Now your supervisor tells their boss, who tells their boss…

and suddenly the VP calls you directly.

You explain everything again (for the 4th time).

He makes one phone call.

Suddenly—you have admin access.

You fix the issue in 5 minutes.

It’s now 6 PM.

You spent all day waiting, escalating, and explaining…

…and the thing you fixed?

Didn’t even matter—because the other team never showed up anyway.

  • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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    16 minutes ago

    Wow.

    I’m usually more in the know on IT than most IT people at companies ive been at. Ive always wanted to do it as a job but dont have the “paper qualifications” necessary. I basically do IT at home in my spare time anyway xD

  • 👍Maximum Derek👍@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 hours ago

    I’m the VP who actually knows how the things work. So after I solve your problem I:

    Write the instructions in an email for the 4th time and send it to everyone involved (your name was probably in CC list, sorry about that)

    Double check the internal documentation and add a bit about windows update going rogue

    Notice the logs say I’m the only person to ever look at this doc

    Send a second email about reading our documentation (now you’re also in the BCC list too somehow, sorry about that)

    Get a text from my wife to see if I’ve left work yet

    Email our Microsoft rep and CC IT to chastise them about the update but also to see if this violates our SLA so we can get some credits

    Check on the status of the SSO epic, since none of this would have happened if that had gotten finished in Q1 '22 like it was supposed to

    See no one has been assigned to any tickets in that epic since the last time something like this happened 15 months ago

    Spend 10 minutes daydreaming about opening a bike rental shop in Amsterdam

    Email the DoE about making sure the SSO epic ends up as an OKR in Q3

  • B0rax@feddit.org
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    2 hours ago

    You guys can get a new computer in 5 days?? At our company that takes at least 5 weeks and that only if it has been escalated.

    I am honestly impressed that this all happened in one day.

  • Anarki_@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 hours ago

    Nope. But I had the issue of my password being so long and complex (password manager) that something got fucked up in my work’s IT system.

    Switching to a simpler password solved it.

    I was specifically told not to use special characters :)

    How cooked is my work’s IT system?

    • Riskable@programming.dev
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      2 hours ago

      This just means (usually) that your system synchronizes with something that doesn’t support special characters (e.g. mainframes).

      Remember kids: Mainframes suck. They’re awful legacy garbage that holds back adoption of superior, actually secure technologies. Soooo many things that make you go, “WTF?” in IT can be traced back to having to support legacy systems (like mainframes).

      • Björn@swg-empire.de
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        13 minutes ago

        At our place it was email clients using whatever is the default encoding of Windows to encode passwords. Usually not UTF-8, like every other piece of software using that password.

    • Armok_the_bunny@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      Are the passwords being stored in plaintext!? That’s the only reason I can think of why special characters wouldn’t be able to be handled.

      • Björn@swg-empire.de
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        5 minutes ago

        We had that issue at work with email account passwords that could be entered into a browser in UTF-8 but would be sent by email clients on Windows in whatever the default encoding there was, usually not UTF-8.

        The server just blindly pushed the bytes it received into the hashing algorithm. It didn’t have any means of identifying the encoding used either way. We “solved” it by showing a warning about the bug when people logged in and entered a password with non-ASCII characters. Many people used a web-based email client anyways so it wasn’t such a huge issue anyways. We didn’t want to force customers to only use ASCII symbols.

    • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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      3 hours ago

      Yeesh, I’d be willing to bet they’re storing passwords in plain text…

      Not that you should be anyway; but don’t use any password you’ve used anywhere else.

  • CmdrShepard49@sh.itjust.works
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    2 hours ago

    Corporate life in a nutshell. Remember this every time some smooth brain defends corporations or “the private sector” for “being efficient and cutting red tape”

  • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    2 hours ago

    There aremany benefits to a siloed operation that all relate to preventing overwork and scope creep.

    This example is part of the cost.

    We use copy and paste a lot.

  • Magister@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Yes, this is why I am always admin on my Windows laptop from work, it’s a requisite for me.