home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- THE POWER USER'S GUIDE TO POWER USERS
- -------------------------------------
-
- Power Users never read their software manuals; instead they get
- petty cash from their secretaries and use it to buy books which
- contain the phrase "Power User" on the cover. They then keep the
- receipt, to claim against tax.
-
- Software manufacturers write their manuals badly, and in computerese,
- in order to con Power Users into buying the manual ("XYZ for the
- Power User!") a second time. This extra revenue compensates the
- manufacturers somewhat for all the people who pirate their software
- and then buy Power User Guides to replace the manuals they never
- had...
-
- Power Users never read their "Power User's Guide to ..." books,
- for the same reason they didn't read the software manuals in the
- first place. They do however skim the first two chapters, in which
- they make copious annotations (e.g. underlining phrases like "to get
- a directory listing, type 'DIR C: <enter>'. Note do not type the
- word '<enter>', or the quotes.")
-
- Power Users get their companies to buy them 130MHz 80586 PS/4s with
- 100MB RAM and 5-gigabyte optical drives, which they bring home:
-
- - to run Lotus 1-2-3G spreadsheets, producing PostScript graphs
- of their mortgage repayments;
-
- - to DTP stern memos forbidding their Real Programmers from using
- unregistered shareware and PD utilities at work. For this task,
- they get their computer upgraded with a 4096x4096, 12 billion colour
- hyper-VGA video display, and the memo employs a minimum of seventy
- different fonts, plus bolding and italics, with at least five
- revisions to correct spelling errors, and to order the Cc: list
- in the most politically acceptable manner), and
-
- - to play pirate copies of Tetris and PC-Golf which they haven't
- realised are infected with a virus.
-
- Power Users scold their children for referring to their machines as
- personal computers. "It's NOT a PC, Jimmy, it's my Professional
- Workstation, No Intergalactic Space Zombies for you tonight! Now, go
- to your room!"
-
- Power Users get an identically equipped PC at work, so they can do
- the work they would do at home, if only ten-year-old Jimmy would stop
- playing Intergalactic Space Zombies for five consecutive minutes. The
- money for this PC comes out of the Real Programmers' software tools
- budget for the next three years.
-
- Having worked out their mortagage repayments for the next 100 years,
- and having failed consistently to beat ten-year old Jimmy at
- Intergalactic Space Zombies, Power Users never touch their computers
- again; at work, they keep themselves occupied in meetings, so nobody
- will see them staring blankly at their PC screen. Meanwhile, the Real
- Programmers who work for them struggle by with aging IBM PCs (the
- originals ones, with a grudgingly-added Tallgrass disk drives -
- yuck!)
-
- Rather than read their "Real Users Guide to..." books, Power Users
- turn to their ten-year-old kids for technical advice ("yes, Jimmy,
- I understand that, but how do I get the directory on the _D_ drive?")
-
- Power Users get frustrated when they press the 'Print Screen' key and
- nothing happens: they thump it a dozen times before realising they've
- left the printer off-line.
-
- Power Users sneak their children in outside office hours to work out
- why their spreadsheet figures don't add up and the Chairman's end-of-
- quarter report is due tomorrow.
-
- In a strange twist of human psychology, the ten-year-old children of
- Power Users think that when they grow up, they'll become Real
- Programmers and make loads of money writing a game better than
- Intergalactic Space Zombies. (Sadly, they end up chugging out
- accounting software for Power Users.)
-
- Power Users could master any PC application, if only they could figure
- out how to start it ("Uhhhm, it must be on this menu somewhere..".)
-
- Power Users attend innumerable Power User courses, where they get a
- set of loose-leaf binders of notes they never read (but whose titles
- in genuine imitation gold leaf look impressive beside the "Power
- User's Guide to..." books which now accumulate a thick layer of dust
- on the shelf). They also drink a lot, and commiserate with each other
- how their Real Programmer subordinates are a bunch of overpaid,
- long-haired layabouts who can't be coerced into wearing shirts and
- ties, never mind a suit; and of course to swap Power Techniques like
- how to format a 360k disk in a 1.2MB drive and thus get more than 360k
- of data onto it ("I'll have my secretary call IBM Technical Support
- about all the bad sector things I'm getting on this disk.")
-
- Power Users carry a pocket calculator for working out the cell values
- in their Lotus spreadsheets ("Um, I guess I didn't get to the section
- on formulas yet in my 'Power Users Guide to Lotus 1-2-3'".)
-
- Power Users think "Your computer is stoned" is part of the DOS copyright
- banner.
-
- The ten-year-old children of Power Users mischievously stick pieces of
- cheese into every crevice of their parent's mouse, not realising that
- this causes testicular problems later in life (for the MOUSE, twit!).
-
- Power Users don't think that last joke was funny.
-
- Power Users get their secretaries to call IBM Technical Support to fix
- their defective mouse, because they're too embarassed to asked any of
- their Real Programmer subordinates how to open it to remove the cheese.
-
- When nobody is looking, Power Users pretend their mouse is a toy car,
- and race it around the desk.
-
- Power Users keep a large box of tissues on their desk to wipe the
- saliva off the screen after playing Test Drive (BRRRRRM! BRRRRRM!)
-
- Power Users can't figure out how to make their modems stop auto-answering,
- so they alway lunge on their phone when it rings in an effort to beat it.
- They're never fast enough, and spend the first 30 seconds of the
- conversation apologising, while the modem auto-ranges, and they
- earnestly promise that they'll have their secretary call IBM Technical
- Support to have the problem rectified.
-
- Power Users panic when they lose those dumb keyboard templates that
- come with programs like Turd Perfect (which are too brain-dead to have
- a decent user interface). They invariably mix up the templates when
- switching between programs.
-
- Power Users have problems with Windows, when they have two or more
- applications running, but room for only one keyboard template.
-
- Power Users buy those dumb mice that have a nearly full ASCII keyboard
- built-in to them ("Swiss Army Mouse (tm)").
-
- Power Users believe computer salesmen.
-
- Power Users will buy ANY program that makes wild promises on the box
- about increasing productivity. These boxes always look impressive on
- the bookshelf, beside the "Power User" books and course notes.
-
- Power Users use MicroJerk ProjectMeister to schedule their wife's
- pregnancy, and get confused when they can't work out how to assign
- tasks and set milestones. They try to persuade the obstetrician to
- induce labour when it says she's late.
-
- Power Users unreservedly believe their MicroJerk ProjectMeister when
- it says the project will be complete at 5pm on the last Friday in
- September next year, but eighteen months later, they won't believe the
- Real Programmer who says it'll be done "Real Soon Now (tm)".
-
- Power Users believe the ads for 4GLs and Application Generator
- packages, and think that in two weeks they'll be able to fire all
- their Real Programmers.
-
- *** EOF
-