Tech support Memes

Posts tagged with Tech support

It's Called "Planned Obsolescence"

It's Called "Planned Obsolescence"
You know that sinking feeling when a customer wants to return a device because it "mysteriously" stopped working right after the warranty expired? And you're sitting there like "yeah buddy, that's not a bug, that's a feature." Hardware prices have gone absolutely bonkers lately—GPUs cost more than a used car, RAM sticks are priced like fine jewelry, and don't even get me started on SSDs during the shortage years. So when customers start asking for RMAs on their "unexpectedly" broken hardware that conveniently failed right when they'd need to upgrade anyway, you can't help but wonder if the universe is just really into capitalism. The manufacturers engineered these things to last juuuust long enough to make you think they're reliable, but not long enough that you won't need to buy the next generation. It's the circle of tech life, and it's beautifully cynical.

Saw This Gem Scrolling Through My Feed

Saw This Gem Scrolling Through My Feed
Customer calls tech support because their computer is literally on fire. Smoke, flames, the whole nine yards. Instead of calling 911 themselves, they dial up their ISP to ask if the servers are on fire. Because clearly when your house is burning down, the priority is whether your dial-up connection is experiencing server-side issues. The tech support guy had to write a note saying "Not a joke" because he knew nobody would believe this level of user logic without proof. And honestly? Fair. The 1990s were a different time—people were still figuring out that computers weren't magic boxes, but apparently nobody told them that ISPs don't host your hardware in your living room. The real kicker is the deadpan delivery. "No kidding." Yeah, we believe you. We've all been in tech support. We've seen things.

Chair Escalation

Chair Escalation
The universal body language of debugging someone else's code: hunched over like a shrimp, arms stretched to maximum extension, refusing to commit to sitting down because surely this will only take 30 seconds. But then you spot it. The nested ternary operators. The 800-line function with no comments. The variable named "temp2_final_ACTUAL_USE_THIS". That's when the chair gets pulled up, the knuckles crack, and you mentally prepare for the next 3 hours of your life to vanish into the void. The chair pull is basically the physical manifestation of realizing you've just inherited a legacy codebase where the original developer apparently learned programming from a fever dream.

He Said "Any"

He Said "Any"
You know that moment when someone gives you technically correct instructions but you still manage to find the one interpretation that breaks everything? Yeah, that's this. The IT guy says "any button" and naturally, the user goes straight for the nuclear option—the power button. Because why press Enter or Space like a normal person when you can just shut down the entire machine mid-process? This is why we can't have nice things. This is also why every instruction manual now reads like you're explaining rocket science to a toddler. "Press any key except the power button, reset button, or anything that might cause irreversible damage to your work or soul." The IT guy's horrified face says it all—he's seen this movie before, and it never ends well. Probably followed by a ticket that says "computer won't turn on" and a lengthy explanation about unsaved work.

Watercolor Binary Code Roots Illustration Art Print for Computer Science Office Decor, Tech Lover Wall Accent, Programmer Home Wall Art, Young Coder Surprises, IT Specialist Scientist Presents, Birthday Bit Gifts - 8x10 Unframed Print

Watercolor Binary Code Roots Illustration Art Print for Computer Science Office Decor, Tech Lover Wall Accent, Programmer Home Wall Art, Young Coder Surprises, IT Specialist Scientist Presents, Birthday Bit Gifts - 8x10 Unframed Print
UNRAVEL THE DIGITAL ROOTS OF INNOVATION: This mesmerizing Binary Code Watercolor Print, an 8x10 inch unframed artwork forming binary roots like a tree of knowledge, weaves the essence of technology i…

Could Be True ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Could Be True ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
You know what? This theory is surprisingly solid. The band "Rage Against the Machine" dropped their debut album in 1992, right when printers were becoming office staples. Coincidence? Probably. But have you ever tried to print something important 5 minutes before a meeting? The rage is real, my friend. Printers have been the arch-nemesis of IT departments and developers alike for decades. They're the only piece of hardware that can simultaneously be out of cyan, jammed, offline, AND on fire. PC LOAD LETTER? More like PC LOAD FURY. The lyrics suddenly make so much more sense: "Killing in the name of" (killing trees with unnecessary print jobs), "Bulls on Parade" (the parade of error messages), and "Sleep Now in the Fire" (what the printer does after you send a 500-page document).

Please I'm Begging

Please I'm Begging
Three identical drives. Same capacity, same temperature, same everything. Yet two decided to embrace chaos and mark themselves as "Bad" while one smugly sits there with "Good" status. The desperation is real—staring at a $495 replacement cost while praying to the tech gods that maybe, just maybe, those drives are having a bad day and will magically recover. Spoiler: they won't. But hey, denial is cheaper than a new WD Red Pro, so might as well refresh that status page a few hundred more times. The "400+ bought in past month" is particularly haunting—like a reminder that hundreds of other people are also experiencing this exact nightmare. Welcome to the hard drive lottery, where your data's fate is determined by microscopic mechanical failures you can't see or fix.

This Unironically Happened To Me So Many Times

This Unironically Happened To Me So Many Times
Steam's absolutely galaxy-brain solution to missing game files is just "download them again lol." No troubleshooting, no helpful error messages, no attempt to locate them—just nuke it from orbit and start over. It's like calling IT support and their only response is "have you tried reinstalling Windows?" The best part? Half the time you moved the files to another drive to save space, or they're sitting right there in a backup folder, but Steam's like "can't see 'em, guess you gotta re-download this 150GB game on your potato internet." Peak user experience right there.

The IT Guy Curse Is Real

The IT Guy Curse Is Real
You know you've made it in tech when your family treats you like a walking tech support hotline. Relatives casually asking "Aren't you a programmer?" gets a polite "Yes." But the moment someone needs their printer fixed or wants to break into Mark Zuckerberg's account, suddenly you're Usain Bolt at the Olympics. The best part? They think programming = hacking Facebook = fixing their virus-riddled laptop from 2009. Meanwhile, you're a backend developer who hasn't touched Windows in 5 years and wouldn't know how to "hack Facebook" if your life depended on it. But try explaining that at Thanksgiving dinner. Pro tip: Next time just tell them you only code in Haskell and watch their eyes glaze over. Problem solved.

Update And Coin Flip

Update And Coin Flip
Windows updates are basically a game of Russian roulette. You click that update button and pray to the tech gods that your machine will actually come back from the dead. "Update and shut down" vs "Update and restart"? Corporate thinks there's a difference, but let's be real—they're the exact same gamble wrapped in different packaging. Both options will leave you staring at a loading screen for 45 minutes, wondering if you should've just bought a Mac. Spoiler alert: you'll still be troubleshooting driver issues either way. The best part? You never know if you're getting a smooth update or if Windows will decide today's the day to brick your bootloader, reset your audio drivers, or just casually forget what a network adapter is. Fun times.

Lenovo Laptop V15 Gen 4 for Business (15.6" FHD Anti-glare, AMD Ryzen 7 7730U (Beat i7-1355U), 16GB RAM, 1TB SSD), Numeric Keypad, Webcam w/Shutter, Ethernet, Win 11 Pro w/AI Copilot, Black

Lenovo Laptop V15 Gen 4 for Business (15.6" FHD Anti-glare, AMD Ryzen 7 7730U (Beat i7-1355U), 16GB RAM, 1TB SSD), Numeric Keypad, Webcam w/Shutter, Ethernet, Win 11 Pro w/AI Copilot, Black
INTRODUCING THE LAPTOP V15 - the perfect commercial laptop that is both budget-friendly and Military Grade MIL-SPEC tested to 810H requirements for sturdy built and business security. With its sleek …

Talk About Low Yield Rates

Talk About Low Yield Rates
Customer buys CPU, complains it doesn't work. Seller explains they wanted the execution to be "out of order" - a fundamental CPU optimization technique. Guy got ROB-bed. Return on Benevolence: 0%. For the uninitiated: Out-of-order execution is when a CPU rearranges instructions to maximize efficiency instead of running them sequentially. The ROB (ReOrder Buffer) is the actual hardware component that makes this magic happen. So technically, the seller delivered exactly what was promised - a CPU with a functioning ROB that executes out of order. It's just... not functioning at all. This is what happens when hardware engineers moonlight as used electronics salespeople. Customer service rating: segmentation fault.

Reboot

Reboot
The universal truth of IT support: "Have you tried turning it off and on again?" works on everyone. The difference? Tech-illiterate folks think you're a wizard performing digital sorcery. Tech-savvy users? They know you're just pressing the universal "make it work" button and feel personally attacked that their complex problem has such a pedestrian solution. Both get the same fix, but one leaves thinking you're a genius while the other questions their entire existence.

As Someone Who Works In IT, I Approve

As Someone Who Works In IT, I Approve
Nothing says "I prioritize your emergency" quite like showing up three days after the ticket was filed. The stance really sells it—hands on hips, radiating the energy of someone who definitely didn't stop for coffee twice on the way over. You called it a P1 incident, they heard "eventually." The "as quickly as I wanted to" is doing some heavy lifting here, carrying the weight of seventeen other tickets, a lunch break, and that one user who keeps asking if they need to download more RAM.