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Following the Egregious pop culture perversion of programming, what is the most outlandishly insane technobabble you have ever heard, either in fiction or real life?

Extra points to those unfortunates whose real life stories beat Hollywood.

Note: feel free to sketch out what would be necessary for such gibberish to actually work.

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47 Answers

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vote up 8 vote down

George W. Bush using the word "Internets." I always get a good laugh from that one.

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vote up 7 vote down

I saw an IT guy tell a user her computer was crashing as her bag was on the power cable and it was stopping the electricity getting though.

I laughed at his joke, but then he just walked away. It appears he wasn't telling a joke!

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vote up 35 vote down

This is actual marketing copy from MSDN

"With BizTalk® Server installed, you arrive at your office in the morning to find that a shipment of door handles that you did not even know you needed is already on your receiving dock ready to be stocked. Not only that, the shipment has already been paid for and your database has been automatically updated."

If anyone has actually worked in manufacturing company and believes that this a realistic scenario feel free to vote me down. Personally, I just giggle like a little girl everytime I read it.

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I don't know that this is technobabble so much as marketing, but imagining this kind of control of my inventory and money being controlled by MS would scare the living bejezzus out of me. "OH MY GOD! WE HAVE NO MONEY FOR OUR PAYCHECKS THIS WEEK...but that's okay, now we have door handles that I didn't realize we needed, and which are clearly of a higher priority." – Beska Aug 19 at 21:02
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In some sectors it is a realistic scenario though I doubt door sales are one them. It's an offshoot of just in time delivery. The perfect example of where this is desired is in the vending machine business - it's expensive to be holding onto extra stock that is not actually in a machine somewhere (especially if it's perishable), but when a machine does run out of something, you want the inventory to replace it yesterday. The description sounds a bit off because it's directed at upper management - to them it was ordered all by itself, but in reality BizTalk asked a clerk to confirm the order. – David Sep 11 at 18:41
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@David I don't doubt that it might work for some companies out there. Anything is possible. The real irony to me is that Biztalk itself is a giant format transformation engine with workflow/routing component. There is no built in supply-chain management intelligence in it. So to credit Biztalk for successfully delivering a product on schedule is like crediting Microsoft Word for helping you win a Pulitzer Prize. – Darrel Miller Sep 12 at 1:39
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The one that irked me the most was in an episode of X-Files (a show that is actually targeted at geeks...).

There is this room that is supposedly the heart of a big computer system or somthing like that where the three tech nerds that helpds with various things are tasked with helping out. They reach under a desk or something pulling out computer in a naked midi-tower chassi and then there is a zoomed in view of how they cut the powercord to a hard drive followed by the line "We've hacked the mainframe".

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Well... They definitely "hacked" off the main line ;) – Ace Nov 4 '08 at 10:35
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And another Lone Gunmen classic (from their spin-off series): "What's that he's typing? It's gibberish." "Wait a minute, that's not gibberish, it's Linux!" – Dave Sherohman Dec 6 '08 at 6:34
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vote up 11 vote down

My wife used to always talk about "dark side" application programs at her workplace. I always thought it was some suite of "evil" apps (a la Star Wars).

I later found out they were terminal emulation windows. TN3270 FOREVER!!!

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Oh, I though it was going to be Lotus Notes. – MiffTheFox Sep 23 at 13:45
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vote up 23 vote down

Customer: We want RSS for the news on our site.

Me: Ok, cool, we'll do that.

Few days later...

Me: The RSS is done.

Customer: Were can I find it? wait, what exactly IS rss?

Me: Rss is bla bla bla...

Customer: No, we don't need that, we need a newsletter.

:')

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OTOH as a consultant you should know better than to take requirements from a customer at face value. – John Nilsson Oct 7 '08 at 15:10
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@John Nilsson, RSS is like, e-Mail, telephone, you don't ask for clarifications when someone ask for your phone number, you don't expect then to later ask wait "what is a phone number?" Also if someone uses a word you expect they use it knowing what it means, else why would they use it? – Pop Catalin Oct 9 at 11:05
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vote up 89 vote down

An engineer at SGI told me about a customer that called in to complain that "circle mode" on her external CDROM was not working. He said "Tell me more about circle mode". She said, "Well, there's a switch on the back with a line and a circle. It works in line mode, but not in circle mode." The engineer told her "Just leave it in line mode, circle mode hasn't been implemented yet."

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vote up 1 vote down

Youtube comment: How much RAM does this program take on a CPU? (inquiring about the size of the program on the hard disk).

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myeah, in the right context this could be seen as a very advanced question referring to whether the program is so optimized that it would fit in the cache – QBziZ Oct 6 '08 at 22:33
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vote up 3 vote down

"I have this Linsky rooter here..."

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Nobody accused the english language of being consistent. :) But to me the bigger issue is that they call a LINKSYS router a LINSKY router. – Jason Baker Oct 7 '08 at 13:36
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vote up 34 vote down

I'm not sure if anything can beat Sen. Ted Stevens' "Series of Tubes"

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Actually I don't think the statement was all that horrible if taken as an analogy. – TM Oct 6 '08 at 22:24
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I agree, but the whole part about being e-mailed "an internet" is still entirely cringe-worthy. – Chris Charabaruk Oct 6 '08 at 22:49
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vote up 7 vote down

I had an aunt ask me, with complete sincerity: "How many Megs does it take to get into the Internet?"

THAT conversation went a little longer than she expected.

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I would say, "32." – Greg D Sep 23 at 13:57
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Nah...even more...42 – Scoregraphic Oct 9 at 10:58
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vote up 8 vote down

May not be on exactly the right track, but I have a PM who knows lots of computer terms... but not what they mean. So he likes to chain a bunch of those together into a request that ends up being gibberish:

"Why don't we inherit that web service from the garbage collector? I don't want to spend any resources managing memory here. That will also let us reuse this code in - insert ASP.NET component name here - later."

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What color does he like his databases? – Chris Charabaruk Oct 6 '08 at 18:46
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He's a lot like that. Nice guy, but totally inept, technologically. Problem is, he likes to put his two cents into EVERY problem, no matter how small or technical. And little interest here in solving problems. If it makes the UI symptom go away, that's good enough; time to move on to another task. – DannySmurf Oct 8 '08 at 16:16
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vote up 4 vote down

Salesperson - "The website crashed."

Me - checks site

Me - "It seems like it's up. Is Internet Explorer up?"

Salesperson - "Yeah."

Me - "Try to pull up our website again."

Salesperson - "No, it's not working."

Me - "What's not working?"

Salesperson - "I can't log-in to our e-mail! I don't know what it's called!"

-Actual conversation

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This is the point at which you cry into your shirt, right? – davr Oct 6 '08 at 22:32
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CSI New York "VB GUI Interface"

“I’ll create a GUI interface using VISUAL BASIC, see if I can track an IP address.”

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Link has gone dead! I wonder how they came up with that... Googled for some technical words and then concatenated them into something completely absurd? – alex Jul 15 at 6:23
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vote up 15 vote down

When ordering an IBM PC AT with a 20MB HDD in 1985, I asked the salesman about the access times of the HDD. He responded that the access times had been ordered, but the shipment had been delayed...

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vote up 12 vote down

I work at Best Buy in the computer department. Often times people will miss-pronounce Gigabytes, "Jigabytes." So people often ask me:

"How many jiggs does this one have?"

It takes every fiber in my body to not laugh at them.

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On the other hand, if you're talking about exactly 1.21 GB, I think you're legally required to pronounce it "jigabytes" – Electrons_Ahoy Oct 6 '08 at 18:34
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Jigga, while not my preferred pronunciation is a perfectly acceptable pronunciation, and used to be dominant in technical fields. (Used to be, being pre-1950s...) – wnoise Oct 6 '08 at 19:23
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I think that Doc's pronunciation is the correct one: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giga#Pronunciation – Myrrdyn Oct 6 '08 at 19:47
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"jigawatts" is actually the correct pronunication. – BobbyShaftoe Dec 6 '08 at 4:40
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