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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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I called my ISP tech support for an unreliable connection. I'd run some pretty intensive tests and discovered serious packet loss.

Me: The connection is dropping packets

Tech: What else is it dropping?

I just gave up after that.

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In a computer shop, circa 1997:

Me: Do you have internal ZIP drives?

Salesman: Yes, here it is (shows me a ZIP plus drive, which had two ports, parallel and SCSI)

Me: This is an external drive.

Salesman: Well, this one is external and internal at the same time.

Me: Eeeh... thanks...

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It's not the worst, but it's still painful.

Pretty manager lady's technical advise to an HTML guy: "We should use ASCII coding to protect the e-mails."

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I was once informed that a computer had 5 IEs of speed and then asked how to get more IEs.

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I saw this one in a bollywood movie. Our hero was busy romancing with his gf until his friend informs him about upcoming college exams. So, he decides to get examination papers by hacking into his college network. This is how he goes about it:

Enters Lab. Opens up a command prompt window. Types - Hack System

And that's it!!...A window pops up- System Hacked

He gets access to all papers and returns to his gf for a romantic song :)

Nice!! :D

(Give him +1 for at least opening up the command prompt instead of doing it in notepad) :D

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I personally like Swordfish for the visual representation (three big cubes) of a hacker putting together a virus. Particularly the point where they turned nice colours and glowed to let him know it was working.

P.S. I would love to be able to code like this. IDE writers, if you're watching, please take note...

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My wife's sister:

  • Asked me how photos can be added to The Facebo.
  • Using Mozilla Firefox on Linux she said: How strange is your internet.

Somoebody I do not remember:

  • As you know, Bill Gates invented the computer, so... (At this very moment I stopped listening)
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So, the guy of hackers-through-electrical-network fame once proposed a fantastic method to protect his intranet from hackers: the bastion host had to be a IRIX machine. After the bastion host, another computer with Linux was present. This linux computer was followed by a HP/UX machine, the HP/UX followed by a FreeBSD.

His idea is that a hacker, in order to access his intranet, had to be competent in all the operating systems at once to be able to crack all of them, meaning that he would be trapped in this deceiving tarpit of informatic despair. He called it "multilayered firewall".

I mean, not that is a bad idea, but I think that it's enough nonsense for many other reasons.

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There was a great one in 24 where they knew something had happened to a character because "she hasn't updated her cron jobs, she's meant to do that every 15 minutes but she missed the last one!" It's like they ALMOST knew what they were talking about.

In real life, my high school computer teacher told me that a multi-sync monitor was one that tipped forwards / backwards as well as swivelling. When I went to buy a PC I caused the shopdude to look at me very strangely when I said "so is this monitor multi-sync? [fx: swivel, tilt] Oh yes, good."

[Edit:] Oh, and I can't believe I forgot - I received a call from a recruitment agency trying to get me to interview a guy whose key skills included "He's very experienced in the tee-see-pip programming language".

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I can't believe nobody mention this yet, but in the movie Swordfish when the hacker is asked how he managed to break into the DoD network in only 1 minute he answers:

I dropped a logic bomb through the trapdoor.

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That movie is full of similar pain... Blech. – Erik Aug 19 at 21:32
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This isn't exactly computer babble, but stupid enough for the spirit of the thing.

My father in law works with the studios.

He had a project with Fox (I think) and told them he would need...

"Four Lifts With Outriggers.

A few days later, the lifts show up, but no outriggers.

He calls up and asks "Hey, where are the outriggers for these lifts?"

They reply: "What!? You said without riggers! Can't your crew rig them?

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I think I have most of these beat. If you want to talk crazy nonsense, I worked at a computer store when I was a teenager.

For some reason, there was this fad where everyone called the desktop, the "modem." We have all heard the "harddrive" phrase or of course "cpu" but here they always, several, several different people, uses the word "modem."

Well, for one customer, this was even more difficult to remember, so she referred to her computer as "the Imodium (as in the diarrhea medicine).

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Many years ago, in high school, my friend babbling me about his programming skills:

-- You know.. I'm quite competent at Regedit!?

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When someone ask me : What's your computer's pentium?

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We're way off technobabble here, but the responses seem to have devolved into general computer cluelessness humor...

My dad was having trouble with his PC and decided to take it into a shop for "tune-up" (he's far away, so I can't perform any laying on of hands). I gleaned from his questions that he was getting ready to take the monitor, but I gently guided him back to taking the tower!

RRS

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Saw a b-grade sci-fi movie on well sci-fi channel.. a skinny dude (obviously referred to as a hacker) whistles into a cell phone and retorts "here long distance is free on this. .forever"

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This is actually a real hack, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Draper – Jasper Bekkers Sep 23 at 14:07
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It's funny that this just came up since we've been talking about this at the office. Another guy here said his next e-mail was going to contain most of these terms:

The most baffling IT terms, part II

Here was my stab at it:

"I just wanted to let everyone know what happened with our unexpected e-mail downtime. We run a virtualized, rack mounted server farm that runs in the cloud and is hosted by a third party company. Outlook points to this via an IDN. Their WEP key was changed as part of their normal security procedures via a 3G VPN connection, which caused the ASCII bytes normally sent through to be incorrectly encrypted. This generated gigs of logs files which eventually crashed their server. They had to back up these log files onto a blue-ray drive before being able to reset and restart their servers and reset their internal IP addresses. This problem has been addressed and fixed so that it will not occur in the future."

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From the "Good Times Virus" hoax email:

If the program is not stopped, the computer's processor will be placed in an nth-complexity infinite binary loop - which can severely damage the processor if left running that way too long.

"nth-complexity infinite binary loop" makes me laugh every time.

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Why do an alarming number of computer illiterates refer to a PC tower as "the hard drive"? I always answer "Where did all the other bits go?" Blank look follows.

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I more often hear the case (tower or desktop) referred to as "the CPU". Regional variation, I guess. – Dave Sherohman Dec 6 '08 at 6:35
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At a previous job when we were demoing some 3rd party software, the lead technical guy from the other company kept ensuring us that their software was of the highest quality and they didn't use any "if" statements. I guess if statements are bad for performance.

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Every if statement creates another logic branch that requires testing. Also creates bubbles in the CPU execution stream. A program with no ifs at all would be perfectly testable and fast! Not too useful though. – Zan Lynx Oct 8 '08 at 0:23
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Using an 'if' means that you are unsure what your program should do. – RafaƂ Dowgird Jul 17 at 12:58
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I think Penny Arcade says it best:

All of our webs are down. They've penetrated our code walls. They're stealing the Internet! We'll need to hack all IPs simultaneously.

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Dilbert references are too easy, but I have to point out my favorite -

Webbish

It became such a running joke among myself and other web developer co-workers that I put WEBBISH on my license plate.

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There's a Star Trek: Voyager episode where Kim's trying to create a replacement holographic doctor, but the immense size of the medical database is overloading it. The solution?

"Computer, install a recursive algorithm!"

Problem solved.

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This database went on to become this site, and was named therefore appropriately. – David L Morris Oct 7 '08 at 23:46
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On craigslist today

On behalf of our client, XXXX Recruiting is searching for intermediate C++/Pearl Developers
you are strong in C++ with good exposure to Pearl or PHP programming.

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Well, after Larry Wall shot down the name "Gloria" for his language, he did name it "pearl" for a short time. And there actually is a Pearl language, for Process and Experiment Automation Realtime Language. Look on wiki. – pookleblinky Oct 7 '08 at 0:09
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A recruiter once asked me if I had "C" "pound" experience.

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I once worked on a computer for a guy at his house - while describing a problem he was having copying files, he indicated I should go to "the red zone" to see what he was talking about - in this case, "the red zone" was his desktop, where his wallpaper was the old Win9x "redbricks" image scaled to the size of the desktop (and thus very pixelated). It took a great deal of willpower not to let a chuckle escape...

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See Movie: Eagle Eye.

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I went to interview for a position at DoubleClick. They deal with Flash Advertising. The interviewer wanted me to know that from time to time you get odd requests. He showed me one: " ... And we would like the the widget to feel Ajaxy." ( referring to the way modern web apps are visually designed these days )

Even worse I had a 'peer' at my work who whats a big phoney. I have no idea how he was able to last so long. Just imagine a programming position where someone who didn't know how to program could hold his job!

Some of the gems this person said were: (in response to adjusting game play) "You know, I've just got to change up the classes."

"Man, I love this Boolean Package, it makes so much sense." (in reference to the boolean object)

"I don't get it, this book says the AS2 code would work in AS3" (after copying and pasting as2 code into as3 and trying to compile... the equivalent of copying C++ into C#.net or Javascript into JDE and compiling)

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Yeah, the boolean object is a bit tricky, but once you wrap your head around it you can move on to the "big boy" objects that actually require multiple bits to express. – J c Oct 15 '08 at 21:00
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Guy walked into Dick Smiths Electronics Shop with a floppy disk and asked staff if they could copy the internet on it for him.

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Digital Fortress by Dan Brown. In retrospect, it seems like a hilarious read, but while I was actually reading it, I was this close to biting my own elbows off. Not at all recommended for angry nitpickers.

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