Software

Devops

Computer sprinkled with exotic chemicals produced super-problems, not super-powers

The machine was so dead, hospital staff treated it like a corpse


On Call The Register knows that tech support people are heroes. That's why each Friday we offer a new installment of On Call, our weekly reader-contributed column featuring your stories of dutifully and selflessly taking on the endless and thankless challenge that is tech support.

This week, meet a reader we'll Regomize as "Adam," who told us of the adventure he endured when, as a student, he was hired to do what he described as "some computer work at a local hospital."

The job involved a little light programming, but most of it was the very dull chore of coming in late at night to collect printouts and distribute them to various places around the hospital.

The hospital's machine was a Digital Equipment Corporation minicomputer of some sort, and "lived in the basement along with a half a dozen line printers." That computer and its peripherals were very loud, so the mini-monster was located behind glass doors in the bowels of the site. Adam often sat outside of that area to avoid the constant printer noise.

One night, as he sat and waited, Adam noticed that the noise of the machines has stopped altogether.

"This was not normal as there were a lot of overnight jobs to print so I entered the computer area to check." The printers were indeed not living up to their name.

"Then I noticed the rain," Adam told On Call.

Rain? In a basement?

"It turned out the computer room was beneath the hospital's chemistry lab," Adam wrote. And the drains from that lab ran directly over the top of the computer.

Liquid that Adam assumed was water dripped along a rail into the top of the minicomputer, and landed just where its exhaust fans were located.

"The water didn't drip anywhere else, just into the machine," Adam recalled.

"I killed power to the beast and called security. A guy showed up with a big piece of plastic to put over the computer," Adam recalled. That plastic, he later learned, was "a shroud taken from the hospital morgue." Which kind of made sense since it was pretty obvious the machine was dead.

"I was later shown one of the boards taken out of the computer," Adam told On Call. "It was really pretty, like a gift package. Turns out the outflow from the chem lab had all sorts of interesting metal salts in it which hit the hot boards and immediately turned into sparkly stuff."

The Register finds that profoundly disappointing. Everything we've been taught about late night institutional accidents involving unknown chemicals, big machines, and electricity suggests that this incident should not have ended with a dead computer.

Adam should have entered the room and been struck by an eldritch spark that fused his consciousness with the computer's newly sentient circuitry, raised to miraculous life by the drip of chemicals. The resulting hybrid organism would then devise miracle cures for the plucky and deserving patients of the hospital.

Or perhaps it would commit mayhem that put unfortunate patients in the hospital. Whatever it got up to, the Adam/DEC entity would endlessly struggle to reconcile its human passions and machine constraints.

On Call's screen agent is already optioning these ideas around Tinseltown. Your correspondent has suggested he’d like to be played by Travis Fimmel. A guy can dream, OK?

Back to Adam, who told us that he asked if he could have one of the sparkly boards as a souvenir. "No such luck," he was told: "They were all being held as evidence for the upcoming court case!"

Have you seen a stranger computer than the one Adam beheld? Or a weirder accidental cause of machine death? To share your story click here to send On Call an email and we may make you the hero on a future Friday. ®

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95 Comments

Stop installing that software – you may have just died

They're called role-playing games for a reason ...

Innocent techie jailed for taking hours to fix storage

Hello, hello … what have we here? One very dangerous storage admin, if I'm not mistaken

For the record: You just ordered me to cause a very expensive outage

And ordered so rudely this techie had little interest in sticking around to fix the subsequent chaos

You're wrong, I'm right, and you're hiding the data that proves it

There should be honor among techies, but it can be hard to admit error

We need a volunteer to literally crawl over broken glass to fix this network

Downside: High chance of injury. Upside: Permanent bragging rights at performance reviews

I didn't touch a thing – just some cables and a monitor – and my computer broke

Lies, damned lies, and lies told by end-users who do their own tech support

Thanks for coming to help. No, we can't say why we called – it's classified

Working under a cone of silence isn't easy if you get smart

Bad vibrations left techie shaken up during overnight database rebuild

Slow and steady wins the race, but sometimes flooring it saves the day

I told Halle Berry where to go during a programming gig in LA

Five-star techies share stories of working from the lap of luxury

I can fix this PC, boss, but I’ll need to play games for hours to do it

Loyal Wingman has fond memories of memory register exceptions

Help! My mouse climbed a wall and now it doesn't work right

Support chap learns users will try to solve problems in non-obvious ways

Your trainee just took down our business and has no idea how or why

Oh, to have been a fly on the wall in the debrief meeting