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Comments on: BOFH: The admin gene

The gene 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 11:29 GMT

It's true, it must be. It's the same gene that means my wife can try something electronic or mechanical 3-4 times and it won't work, but when *I* reach over and push the same button - bingo first time.

Ah, I can feel a warm smug weekend coming on...

WOAH! 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 11:48 GMT

Coat

Great story, wish I could hook up the idiots here who think filling in eight timesheets a week is good for productivity! Now what's that diy cattleprod webpage address again.

Mine's the one with the keys to the time machine!

I think I have it too 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 11:48 GMT

Thumb Up

I too have the ability to try something that anyone else has tried several times without success and instantly get it to work.

Other side effects 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 11:53 GMT

Go

The admin gene has a few other surprise side effects

1) You can see through M$ error messages and understand what is actually wrong

2) 'Magic Fingers' mean that all sorts of problems disappear in your presence

Downsides are that everyone asks you the questions that no-one else can answer

its the same gene I have 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 11:54 GMT

Happy

Yes the ... did the lights just flicker.

sense.

Fan speed changes....check

its all true........

sensing small changes in pressure to predict a thunderstorm, (also noticing cloud formations) actually I am pretty sad with that one :)

but at least I disconnect the copper lighting conductor in the back of my router.

another great BOFH blog entry :)

Oi! 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 11:56 GMT

Alert

“So what do I have instead?”

“I dunno – what’s the one that causes Asperger's?” the PFY asks unkindly.

Hey! I resent that remark!

And also, they aren't mutually exclusive - I've got both.

I have a different gene 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 11:59 GMT

Stop

Mine grants me the ability to make something new break in such an unpredictable and expensive way that the visiting technician visibly trembles and quietly mutters this exact line: "It's never done that before."

Happens every time.

lol @ Steve 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 11:59 GMT

haha know exactly what you mean, it happens every day in the office

User > My e-mails not working, it just keeps coming up with an error

Me> [click send and receive] looks like its working fine to me

User > but ... but ..... I tried that 100 times already

tit-le demanded, 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:08 GMT

aye, it's also known as "the knack".. though, I have started referring to it as "the shinning" as the inevitable dementia sets in after many years exposure to the IT industry.

thats what it is... 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:19 GMT

Go

I have always called it computer karma. The ability to have a fault spontaneously resolve itself after 10 secs of contact with the offending piece of equipment.

Admin Gene 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:21 GMT

Thumb Up

I think the gene also gives you the ability to explain exactly why there is a primed bear trap just outside the server room door, in such a way that the boss signs off the purchase order for the next batch and then goes for a server inspection... <snap>

@AB 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:28 GMT

Happy

In our house, I have the admin gene (things fix themselves in my presence) and my wife has the 'other' gene (the one that breaks things in unpredictable ways).

She gets extremely wound up after trying to get something to work for 1/2 hour before reluctantly calling for backup (she knows what's about to happen) I turn up, press the same two keys that she's been trying for 1/2 hour and it just works.

I don't help by saying "there you go, what's wrong with that?"

cue bun-fight :D

Beeps 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:30 GMT

Happy

Yea, I think I might have this gene too. My head turns at the sound of only 4 beeps rather than 5 and it takes me a couple of seconds before I even know why my head's pointing down that particular corridor.

Some people seem to have an aura too - when all they need do is appear, before the naughty computer stops acting up - anyone else noticed this? Makes me feel a bit like NeoJesus

Well it passes the time... 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:36 GMT

Thumb Up

GE-NI-US! :D Been a long time since I read such a great one-liner :-)

@Dave Walker 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:39 GMT

Happy

yea i have that happen to me quite alot i've put it down to a machine aura that just magically fixes problems without me having to touch anything

Me too... 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:41 GMT

Coat

It's almost uncanny. Problems disappear when I walk into a user's office and try the same thing they've just tried 15 times.

For additional info, also see Dilbert "The Knack"

Mine's the one with the paycheck stub showing approximately half the salary of most of the users I support...

@Anonymous Bastard 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:44 GMT

Happy

Same here- I can break things just by thinking about them and solve apparently impossible problems.

I put it more down to the incompetence of others than my brilliance.

Though clearly we're all pretty brilliant...

he heee 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:45 GMT

Happy

Anonymous Bastard are you my old supivisor she had that to?

I can relate to this story

@David Ross Smith 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:49 GMT

Thumb Up

Actually, I think there's a very fine line between the two, if there's any line at all (think about it - rather similar aren't they?). I know I've got both.

@ David Ross Smith 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:51 GMT

I do too!

i wonder many of us read the reg

True 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:56 GMT

Thumb Up

Really. There's something in this. It's not training, you just know.

and me 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 12:59 GMT

I can hear problems with fans, speakers, hard drives air con you name it and problems disappear in my presence too.

same here 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 13:13 GMT

Boffin

problems disappear like magic

Not just me then? 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 13:20 GMT

IT Angle

All of the above is true.I have met others with the gift. I think we are in tune with 50Hz mains and can resonate with the stuff.

drip, drip, click 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 13:22 GMT

I too can sense when things feel .. different. Only the other day I was able to pick up the sound of the aircon starting to drip water across a noisy room..

As for user problems magically fixing themselves just by walking into a room - I thought that was down to the user actually taking more care to read the message and click the right box when I'm watching them than when they're complaining over the phone... Once or twice I even carried a magic wand and just waved it to make problems go away :)

Steve.

Insight and Knowledge 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 13:34 GMT

This is why the question "can you tell me what you just did" has to be answered in the negative. It's not about knowing stuff, it's about understanding stuff. Instincts are rarely pure instinct - they're the distillation of knowledge and experience over many years into finely tuned behaviour.

It's not just computers 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 13:34 GMT

Thumb Up

We used to have an Amstrad VCR bought brand new back in 1991. It never worked properly from day one... I was the only person who was able to get a video tape to play on the bloody thing.

I don't know what it was exactly, it was just knowing to push the right buttons at the EXACT right time (you had to listen to the sounds the VCR was making). I tried teaching other people but they ended up with bad tracking problems (if they got the tape to play at all!)

Anyway, the thing finally went band a few years ago, by that time DVDs had already hit mainstream.

Incidentaly, the Betamax VCR that was bought before I was born (I'm 23) is still working perfectly!

BOFH: The admin gene 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 13:43 GMT

Thumb Up

Briliant and so very true!

The ammount of times I've been in a room and heard the slight change in pitch of a fan and started ripping the box open to remedy it, or tuning my hearing into a room full of racks to find the one box with a failing hdd, baffling onlooking co-workers with my 'supernatural' powers must be reaching tripple figures now.

Very Funny 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 13:45 GMT

Happy

Another great BOFH.. and so true.

Most readers here probably have the gene. I found out when I was 16 and supported and office of 50 recruitment consultants on my own. Just me being there stopped problems happening.. That and moving the mouse on the NT server to stop the 3d Pipes screensaver zapping all the server's CPU.. ;-)

Mines the one with the 3d screensaver.

@some of the above 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 13:45 GMT

Coat

Whatever we call it - those that have it, are clearly gifted and just get on with it. Those that don't know what we're talking about, are either lusers or bosses.

Case in point:

User: My laptop won't open a web page.

Me: Are you connected to the network/modem?

User: Yes, I haven't unplugged anything since yesterday and it was working then.

Me: [presses wireless 'on' button] There..... try it now.

User: [click] It's working. What did you do?

Me: I pressed that button [points at wireless on/off button] and turned the blue light back on. That's why it wasn't working.

User: Oh, I turned that off last night, it was bright and annoying. Can't it work without a blue light?

Me: [muttering x%^$%*£ under my breath, grinds teeth]

And yes, he was a very successful, well-paid manager. I'm sure we've all been there.....

[Mine's the one with the Sonic Screwdriver in the inside pocket....]

The gene... of experience 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 13:51 GMT

Happy

It's definitely true. I can detect, from some distance away and across many noises, the sound of hard drive activity ceasing (which means the three-hour procedure has finished, yay) even if it's on the quietest drive in the building. Or the sound of a fan changing its note. If my brother's with me, he'll usually detect the same thing at the same time, and we'll both KNOW that the other has sensed it... leading to conversations as bewildering to outsiders as the BOFH/PFY one here. And the more crucial the situation, the less likely that anyone will get any information out of either of us.

And the boss.... fails the test. BAHAHAHAHAHA!

@ David Ross Smith 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 14:15 GMT

Boffin

Wow, just read up on Wikipedia and it looked like I might have it. Then I realised I was just an unsocial clumsy oaf.

There is a fine line between madness and genius - I often step over the line.

Too true 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 14:25 GMT

Coat

Sometimes, things just aren't in order. Just being able to pick out a machine that feels 'different', being able to pull an instant backup off its Data-partition only to hear it go >>KLENGKLENGKLENG<< less than 5 minutes afterwards, it just feels Jedi :)

Mine's the one with the ieee1394 drive in the inside pocket.

Definitely exists... 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 14:26 GMT

There's a few side effects that haven't been listed yet...

1. The ability to annoy co-workers who doesn't have it.

(Me walking up to one of my co-workers and glancing at the screen for 2 seconds, then rattle off a two-minute speech of what is wrong and how to fix it isn't always appreciated after they've been fighting the problem for the last hour... )

2. Dowsing...

I can find water and some power lines using two metal dowsing rods.

Anyone else?

Funny but true! 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 14:28 GMT

Thumb Up

PMSL. loved it, love how it looped back when another person entered the room, classic!!

And it is also so very true and I smiled as I read the story. Many a time I've entered a room and noticed a different hum, knowing a fan on a PC needs a good clean and lube, or smelling a fried pc components smell and knowing sommething isn't right!

11/10 excellent writing!

@ Steve, Andy, Dave et al 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 15:04 GMT

That's a different talent - An aura that machines sense, and they know you're not to be messed with. Demonstrating percussive maintenance on one box can cause a whole server room to behave.

http://www.icw-net.com/howto/funstuff/maintnce.htm

The gift 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 15:18 GMT

Paris Hilton

I was beginning to think it was just me that could hear when a PSU was on it's way out, or the first tell tale signs of a failing drive, or the slight shimmer of text on a screen telling me the refresh rate or resolution is just off.

Paris because she loves the hum of a NAS.

Magic touch 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 15:35 GMT

Unhappy

Great BOFH

I have it too with regards to computers, I just wish I had the magic to chat a girl up :(

The admin gene 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 16:00 GMT

Yeah, it seems a lot of sysadmins have the admin gene. My freinds and family dubbed it "the laying of hands" with me years ago. The ability to walk into a room, stare at a computer for 2 seconds, then just "know" what's wrong.

They are getting some wierd error about the SATA controller, but every test they can run, and everything they do comes back that it should be working, yet it still crashes windows?

*pulls the soundcard*

Voila! It works!

The completely flabbergasted looks on the faces of users and otehr admins alike is priceless. I do like many of the other names for "the laying of hands" however. Seems a common enough thing amongst reg readers!

also works on non-IT stuff 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 17:09 GMT

Go

Yeah, this also works on cars/motorcycles/airplanes. It's "the touch" - all I have to do is look at it and it will run just fine, forever after.

Except lawnmowers.

(Almost) all your spark plugs are belong to us!

Tape Drive 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 17:13 GMT

Add to that instinctively knowing when to pop into the server room to change the backup tape when passing by. Love it when Iwalk in as the tape ejects...

When technology is threatened, it behaves. 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 17:54 GMT

Coat

@ Dunstan Vavasour, tfewster, all.

"This is why the question "can you tell me what you just did" has to be answered in the negative."

I also have the gene, and I have an answer.

When I get this question after I repair something, I always say to the user(s)

"The amount of difficulty anyone has with a piece of technology is inversely proportional to the proximity of a technician who owns a very large hammer."

Mine's the one hanging over the handle of the 10 lb sledgehammer, thanks.

Works for me... 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 18:12 GMT

I worked in a place where our machines were constantly breaking through overuse. Often I'd go make a huge pile of copies, thousands of sheets, not realizing that the copier was "broken" and a call had been placed. I'd go in, it would happily grind out my copies, and obstinately refuse to work for others.

No clue why that is, except I like machinery and talk nice to it, with the unspoken threat of violence hanging in the air. To paraphrase a saying attributed to Al Capone, "Kind words and a hammer will get you farther than kind words alone".

The Gene 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 18:57 GMT

Paris Hilton

I have the gene, unfortunately I'm lazy, let me explain:

Me: I think that harddrive is getting old, I think it's going to start failing anytime now.

[does nothing]

[2 days later, drive fails]

Apparently, shipping a drive off to a data recovery center is "easier" than doing a backup.

Paris: because she KNOWS she's got it... well, something at least.

Missed BOFH Episode Gene? 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 21:05 GMT

Flame

Ok so who knew about there being no episode last week and didn't tell me? :@

WHOA! 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 21:11 GMT

Boffin

Damn, the lights didn't just flicker this very moment, they went off for a split of second!

Anyway, I passed the preliminary test as I sensed that electrified doorknob a mile away, but I'll see how I'll do on my computer networks test tomorrow morning...

Reminds me of this AI Koan 

Posted Friday 4th July 2008 21:28 GMT

This uncanny ability (which I've also got..) to (to the untrained eye) do nothing, turn on a machine, and have it work, reminded me of something, which I finally found.. this is one of the "AI Koans" from the MIT AI lab from the 1980s sometime:

A novice was trying to fix a broken Lisp machine by turning the power off and on. Knight, seeing what the student was doing spoke sternly: "You can not fix a machine by just power-cycling it with no understanding of what is going wrong." Knight turned the machine off and on. The machine worked.

never mind changing the tape 

Posted Saturday 5th July 2008 01:24 GMT

Alien

who here remembers how to roll out a tape?

So true 

Posted Saturday 5th July 2008 07:15 GMT

Paris Hilton

All I have read here is so true...

Paris, because she can make things work for me.

For a long time.... 

Posted Saturday 5th July 2008 08:48 GMT

It seems that I have had some sort of thing like this. I am reminded of a time when I was having lunch with a couple of friends from work (it was around 1980 or so), and the music playing in the restaurant was interrupted by a brief spurt of the (USA) EBS tone. We both looked at each other with the look like "that shouldn't happen!". A bit later they did the standard "this is a test of the emergency broadcast system..." and we breathed a sigh of relief!

The other time was a few years earlier when my (then) boss poked a grounded soldering iron into a live AC (mains) circuit. After it vaporised the terminal (think BOFH cattle prod) and as I was walking over to supply to get another tip he indicated "when did they ground soldering iron tips?"

I got my BOFH training early (and admin gene).

It works both for good and evil.... 

Posted Saturday 5th July 2008 11:26 GMT

The abilities to detect problems before they are a problem, fix things by merely being within 10 yards, and break things in ways that noone would ever consider possible, can be a curse.

For example, when a luser calls you saying "Its not working". You walk all the way accross the building, click the same button they have (or they say they have) been pressing, and it all just works as it's supposed to. You put it down to idiocy on the part of the luser. Then they call an hour later, you do the same. Repeat untill the luser gets so pissed off he tells your boss, who insists there MUST be a problem, and you spend days looking for a fault you know is just a PEBCAK.

Discovering problems early makes work for you, when you COULD just wait for the kit to blow up and have it fixed under warranty.

And as for breaking things in unpredictable ways, well, it's fun but once again it creates more work for you.

I wish I didnt have the gene. Things would be a whole lot simpler....

Those that don't have it 

Posted Saturday 5th July 2008 14:14 GMT

Coat

And they work in Desktop Support. I have it and guess who they come to after banging there heads on the keyboard for about an hour.

Mines the one with the Clueon dispenser.

@David Ross Smith 

Posted Saturday 5th July 2008 21:55 GMT

Stop

“So what do I have instead?”

“I dunno – what’s the one that causes Asperger's?” the PFY asks unkindly.

I too resent that remark, if it was not for people with Aspergers there would be no IT industry, there would be no computers, look round the office you work in, look at the people who actually make IT work as apposed to the "management". You show me a good IT person that is NOT on the autistic spectrum…..

PFY and BOFH are both most defiantly on the spectrum.

The admin gene IS totally linked to the autistic/aspergers gene you CAN NOT have one without the other

You mean... 

Posted Sunday 6th July 2008 08:58 GMT

...I've had a freaky mutation this whole time? Here I was thinking being born in a data-center, fed nothing but Ethernet Spaghetti and Sillicon Chips plus the lifetime of training created my sixth sense...

and I thought it was normal... 

Posted Sunday 6th July 2008 17:59 GMT

Alien

To walk into a club in Rome while on assignment there and in the end of the night, instead of walking out with a girl, ending up fixing their phone system so they could call the taxi for me.

Ah well, at least I'm a member of that club now.

I have this 

Posted Sunday 6th July 2008 19:14 GMT

Yep me too, my parents refuse to touch any new equipment (TVs, videos, dvd, cameras) until i have "layed hands" on it and made it work. Things that wouldn't work for anyone else suddenly spring into life when i give them a clout across the top.

It's almost like bringing machinery to life, just call me Dr Frankenstein.

I agree most of the top tech types i know are definitely semi-autistic.

generator 

Posted Sunday 6th July 2008 21:42 GMT

Paris Hilton

It's hearing the generators kicking in outside to backup the ups' before the users see the plume of diesel...

It's seeing the lights dim one time and being called 'crazy' when you put on your tin foil hat.

PH, she also knows what to do when the lights dim. ;)

re: Admin gene 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 02:37 GMT

Boffin

I guess one of the special powers bestowed upon one by the admin gene is machine empathy. I've been known to hold long-winded conversations with my computers.

And yes, this has happened to me before too. Problems seem to go away on a few keypresses or mouse clicks, or just plain disappear when I come around. It's sorta funny actually.

Getting my priorities right? 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 05:53 GMT

Alien

My wife always finds it remarkable that I will totally sleep through the night while our two children wake up screaming from bad dreams.

Yet, I will wake up and be halfway down the stairs at 3am at the first "beep" from my UPS if there's a power outage in the middle of the night...

Does anyone else hear the electric ""buzz" from CRT screens that are actually on stand-by when everyone else thinks they are turned off?

the knack/ the gene 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 06:02 GMT

Happy

It works for me only sometimes but I like the streetlights going off (or back on) as I walk pass. I happens a lot generally (not just to me) but few people notice it.

I like to point it out when walking with someone, normally with sound effects :-)))

The "magic" aura of fix stuff 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 07:16 GMT

Of course, you don't actually need to touch the device yourself, merely being in the same vicinity and focussing on the device can often be enough. Such as somebody who cannot get their PC working, you discuss it with them and while your attention is focussed on the issue it suddenly starts working.

It's a kind of magic (cue Queen music) but there can be more than one, evidently, as quite a few people seem to have the "technogift".

Fixing Aura? 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 07:24 GMT

I have this aura too. So much so that I started to carry around a toy Sonic Screwdriver I picked up at Woolworths. I simply point the screwdriver into the corner of the monitor, press the button for a second or two and say "try it again". Most of the time it works, the rest of the time needs a second go.

ASSer Admin 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 08:35 GMT

Paris Hilton

I too possess both genes, Aspergers and Admin... Still a great post

What I love... 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 09:18 GMT

is when you fix a problem by suposibly doing what the user has been doing for the last half an hour (which I rarely believe) and the user then asks me "so what was I doing that was different?"

How the hell do I know that- I've got the admin gene not the telepathy gene.

And I have LLI- the opposite of Aspergers.

...it's not always a good thing 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 10:10 GMT

It's when you're at a casino having a good night when all their systems go down. You then just need a brief word in the ear of their "computer guy" as to why their server just went off and isn't coming back on.

The smell of a fried PSU is a special one! :)

@Jaowon 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 10:30 GMT

Like the Sonic Screwdriver idea. I wonder how many people could be fooled into believing it actually did something. Of course if it doesn't work, you could always claim the machine is deadlocked.

I have the 'magic touch', an aura or just a way with machines. I have countless examples of fixing things just by being present, or simply being on the end of a phone line. It's a less extreme ability than that possessed by like the kid in Heroes.

I think in essence it is an ability to not be phased by a machine. Where others crumble and submit to the machines greater intelligence, those with the 'admin gene' are at one with it, a bit like a horse whisperer.

6th, 7th and 8th sense. 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 10:54 GMT

Alien

I have 'The Knack'. As well as fixing things just by standing next to the user I have other abilities e.g. If I am outside I can sense rain 5-10 minutes before it starts. I can hear high pitched noises that no-one else can (and they bug me until I find the source).

It's obviously something that most technical folk have, as when the lights flicker in my office all the techies look up as they notice it while the non-techies are completely oblivious.

With a techie friend of mine I have known since we were both 7 we can have entire conversations by only speaking the first 2 or 3 words of a sentence and the other knowing what you are on about before you finish. For an outsider listening in it sounds like gibberish as the sentences go uncompleted. At our peak we know what the other is thinking so well we can establish facts with a series of 'yeahs'.

I have a motto that I pass on to my new support staff -

"Don't believe customers when they say they 'have tried that already'. They are either lying, or just don't understand what you are on about".

Apparently 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 11:12 GMT

Pirate

I am going to get mine tomorrow before 5pm

Order Details

----------------------------------------------------

consumer:CDO:NEXTDAYDELIVERY 2008-07-08 before 5pm Any Day delivery option £0.00

consumer:Bundle iPhone 3G 16Gb Black Online 35 18 month £159.00

VAT Included: £23.68

Total: £159.00

You can easily check on the progress of your order by visiting www.o2.co.uk/trackyourorder

IT sense 

Posted Monday 7th July 2008 17:58 GMT

Has anyone else here had incandesant light dimmers throw off their IT sense? (It throws me out of tune with the background 60Hz, and just generally grates on my nerves. Sometimes old CRTs do it to me as well...) As a kid, I was diagnosed with ADD, which shares many traits with Aspergers. (I might actually have Aspergers, I was diagnosed before his work was published to the English-speaking world)

(Yes, I'm in the states)

Common admin 'problems' 

Posted Tuesday 8th July 2008 01:25 GMT

Aspergers, as noted.

Attention deficit disorder - when problems arise, one needs to be able to shift gears quickly. People with ADD generally do better at this than those without. Also, it appears to me that many people with ADD notice those little things a lot more - that's part of why they're so easily distracted.

OCD - depending upon ones exact compulsions, this can either help or hurt. But if an admin has both a clean desk and an organized filesystem, chances are good she has OCD (well, possibly 'he', but the odds are against it.)

The 'beta tester' syndrome, as noted above but not named. If you're an engineer and you want to ship a nigh flawless problem, you love having a few of these on your beta test team. Pretty much everyone else wants as little to do with them as feasible. (Unfortunately, that means that many managers actually *remove* them from beta test teams, to try and make their ship dates - and so the astounding problems happen more out in the field.)

The 'admin field' effect. This is a problem in the traditional sense, despite it not appearing at first glance to be one, because when ones mere presence makes things work, it becomes incredibly difficult to diagnose why they don't. Note: in my experience, the effect is very temporal: the field goes away almost as soon as the admin goes away; the biggest reason that the user stops complaining is that they feel increasingly stupid for having the problem, the more times the admin comes and the problem goes away. At one of my earlier jobs, I was assigned to share a cube with the strongest "beta tester" at the company, in an effort to counteract her syndrome. (Did not work at all - my field is apparently specific to unix OSes; she ran Windows.)

dyslexia - not sure how this helps, but it sure seems we collectively have a lot of it. (Note: has various forms: verbal, auditory, visual...)

I'm certain I've missed at least one, possibly more.

@Chris Hart 

Posted Tuesday 8th July 2008 01:40 GMT

BTDT. Incidentally, it is entirely possible to have both ADD and Aspergers, as I understand it. (Fortunately for me, I'm a couple symptoms shy of Aspergers - plus many of the ones I have are mild enough I can compensate for them.)

The one that really grates on my nerves is just starting to fail fluorescents - when the flicker is barely noticeable, to the point that it takes me a few minutes to figure out why I have a headache. What's the most annoying is this is apparently several months before they've failed enough for an ordinary person to notice.

On the bright side, the company I'm working for has apparently showed some clues in this area: they've put all the people who complain early about the fluorescents failing in one area, and they replace our lights fairly promptly. Of course, that means I still get to dread going into luser land - but fortunately my social skills are lousy enough my management wants me to never go into luser land (and they say my social skills need work - HA!)

Living in logic space 

Posted Tuesday 8th July 2008 02:37 GMT

Linux

Like the BOFH I live aware of the logical relations between things. "No it's no good trying to load a web page, you haven't even got a link light on your network card." "Yes, the link's now on, but the page still won't load, because DHCP hasn't given you an IP number, you'll have to pirate one." And so on up through the layers of dependence. The hard thing is realizing that not everyone can look at a door-lock and know how it works. Poor things think that a key is enough to keep even an honest person honest.

For most things I'm the fixer, but I can make Windows fail every time just with the force of my contempt and skepticism.

Gene indicator 

Posted Tuesday 8th July 2008 12:31 GMT

Happy

You can also spot those with the gene by reverse symtom language (RSL). Nine times out of ten a luser will respond YES without actually thinking about the question.

User: My PC won't boot; it's saying something about NT loader

Me: Have you tried leaving a floppy disk in the drive?

User: YES!!!

Me: Ahhh... there's your problem. It must be a duff floppy. Try taking it out.

In our office, I always close the door behind me. I regularly refer to this as "The first test".

The "gift" 

Posted Wednesday 9th July 2008 00:45 GMT

Coat

This has always been known as the "gift" in our place of work, and luckily most of the helpdesk have it.

I suffer (well I say suffer, I find it fascinating) from ADD, minor Aspergers and (my biggest downfall) severe tinnitus! Despite the tinnitus I can hear the smallest problems and feel the slightest change (this makes driving a joy) in anything mechanical, electronic and even the odd person too....

After only seconds of talking to someone I can tell whether they know what the start button on their windows machine looks like.

I am however expected to have the "WiFi-Telepathy" gene, the one that ensures you can understand exactly what the user means by the phrase "Not working" and the term "It's"

Mine is the one with the 60 year old car keys in the left hand pocket.

@David Ross Smith et. al. 

Posted Wednesday 9th July 2008 02:50 GMT

Stop

I think the BOFH may have flubbed this one. I think the "admin gene" and Asperger Syndrome are pretty much the same thing or at least closely related related. According to Wikipedia, symptoms include being anti-social, unusual language usage, weakness in humor (or lusers just don't get it) and a few others.

What caught my attention was "Individuals with AS often have excellent auditory and visual perception.[19] Children with ASD often demonstrate enhanced perception of small changes in patterns such as arrangements of objects or well-known images; typically this is domain-specific and involves processing of fine-grained features... Many accounts of individuals with AS and ASD report other unusual sensory and perceptual skills and experiences." and "Speech may convey a sense of incoherence [to others]...The speaker's conclusion or point may never be made."

Well it passes the time...

@Tim Shields 

Posted Wednesday 9th July 2008 12:28 GMT

Thumb Up

Agreed. Me and a friend of mine both have it, and between us, we probably know more than the school's IT department combined.

And yes, I do agree that Simon got it wrong in his comments about AS. I am the person who does tech support for EVERYONE I know - thus, admin. When I look at a computer, I can usually hazard a guess as to what is wrong. If I don't know, I tend to Google it.

Disclaimer: I have been professionally diagnosed with AS, and would advise against self-diagnosis for any condition, mental or physical. Psychologists, doctors, et al. are trained to recognise the actual symptoms of these conditions, and most people, if their extent of their knowledge of a condition is limited to the Wikipedia page on it, are not truly able to tell what the difference is between personality and mental conditions, for example.

Bi-Symetrical talents 

Posted Thursday 10th July 2008 16:49 GMT

I have the admin gene, and the Fecal gene....

Some days, everything I touch is golden, you know, windows boots up cleanly, MS Patches do not kill the server, etc.

Other days, its the fecal touch, and everything turns to sh**. It's just better to call in sick and stay in Bed. A definite net negative day...

the datacenter sense 

Posted Saturday 12th July 2008 00:53 GMT

Stop

Simon hits this one right out of the park. I don't know so much about their being an 'admin gene' but there's been so many times where the 'datacenter sense' has tingled on a long shift in the datacenter operations center, and helped me catch a couple of pieces of bad hardware on more than one occasion.

stop sign, because the datacenter sense tells me when to stop and brace myself.

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