What are your worst computing mistakes?


Recommended Posts

I once deleted a companies' highly customised Amazon AWS instant! :(

I was helping out a friend finalise the various apps in the instance, we made duplicates of the instance to help narrow down problems and avoid mistakes. Once everything was done, I stopped and deleted the duplicate instances. Thing is, I also ended up deleting the primary instance! They had to again call in the developers, and redo everything, which took weeks.

Although, it was partly their fault as well, because they did not backup the data on S3 or anywhere else. Needless to say, they now take backups very seriously! :)

Well, the only really hardware related thing i've done was ruining a perfectly good 2600+ (brand new at the time) with a really risky overclock. It still works to this day, it just runs nearly 20c warmer than it should, and is prone to heat related BSoDs.

But i've fragged an install or two of XP by resource hacking and modifying system files and trying to make them prettier.

Using MS-DOS 6.2 DriveSpace! It borked my entire computer!

Ah yes, I too made that mistake. Fun times. Other mistakes:

Built an (at the time) top of the line Athlon PC from parts with a friend. Managed to hit the die while mounting the CPU cooler. 600 Deutsche Mark down the drain.

Formatted the media storage drive while re-installing Windows.

Relied on an IBM DeskStar as storage drive.

Well, When I was 3 years old(In 2003-2004, I believe) I was playing with Dad's IBM Windows 97 computer(laptop), then I was playing with MS Word, long-pressing the letter "a" creating this:

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.......

Over 5 pages of it, Then in late 2004, the computer was officially broken.

I used to build computers for a etailer called Aria Technology, a suppose a lot of people in the UK would recognise the name. Anyway, one day I built about 10 or so budget PC's - the components were all the cheapest they had. I built them all, put them all in a line, and switched them all on.

All was well. Well, for a little while. One of the PSU's went with a massive flash and a bang, and it took out the power to the floor I was on, and probably every other floor too. I still blame the cheapness of the components for the fault, but they wanted me to build so many systems in such a short space of time I wouldn't be surprised if I missed something along the line.

That's about the worst mistake I've made. .. Working for Aria. *laughs*

I used to build computers for a etailer called Aria Technology, a suppose a lot of people in the UK would recognise the name. Anyway, one day I built about 10 or so budget PC's - the components were all the cheapest they had. I built them all, put them all in a line, and switched them all on.

All was well. Well, for a little while. One of the PSU's went with a massive flash and a bang, and it took out the power to the floor I was on, and probably every other floor too. I still blame the cheapness of the components for the fault, but they wanted me to build so many systems in such a short space of time I wouldn't be surprised if I missed something along the line.

That's about the worst mistake I've made. .. Working for Aria. *laughs*

I made the mistake of buying RAM from them then had to RMA it when it was faulty.

I Think I could write a book of the excuses they made for not replacing it,

It varied from Yes we've received it but our systems were being upgraded so we can't test, to Oh the replacement got lost in the post, to Oh we sent a 2nd replacement you're lying now.

Needless to say i've never bought anything from them since and that was probably well over 5 years ago now.

I can think of a few other mistakes

run the command rm -rfv * then relised I wasn't in the directory I thought I was in....

Also deleted a folder of what I thought were symlinks and actually hardlinks to various system binaries.

Formatted the wrong drive on my home pc (Compounded by I had 2 the same and had previsouly been cleaning the dust out of the pc, must have swapped the sata cables when doing so)

Just yesterday I Misset the maximum Post size in php.ini to be in MB when the correct syntax is M if you want it in megabytes, that broke a few peoples websites as php ingored the MB and set it in bytes instead.

I made the mistake of buying RAM from them then had to RMA it when it was faulty.

I Think I could write a book of the excuses they made for not replacing it,

It varied from Yes we've received it but our systems were being upgraded so we can't test, to Oh the replacement got lost in the post, to Oh we sent a 2nd replacement you're lying now.

Needless to say i've never bought anything from them since and that was probably well over 5 years ago now.

I can think of a few other mistakes

run the command rm -rfv * then relised I wasn't in the directory I thought I was in....

Also deleted a folder of what I thought were symlinks and actually hardlinks to various system binaries.

Formatted the wrong drive on my home pc (Compounded by I had 2 the same and had previsouly been cleaning the dust out of the pc, must have swapped the sata cables when doing so)

Just yesterday I Misset the maximum Post size in php.ini to be in MB when the correct syntax is M if you want it in megabytes, that broke a few peoples websites as php ingored the MB and set it in bytes instead.

Maybe you should try your hand at something other than computers :p

Attempting to install OSX on a very temperamental MSI motherboard, messed up MBR on one of my hard drives. During the recovery process with some data recovery software, accidently set source and output as the same drive. Killed about 10gig of photos that day much to my everlasting regret

I used to build computers for a etailer called Aria Technology, a suppose a lot of people in the UK would recognise the name. Anyway, one day I built about 10 or so budget PC's - the components were all the cheapest they had. I built them all, put them all in a line, and switched them all on.

All was well. Well, for a little while. One of the PSU's went with a massive flash and a bang, and it took out the power to the floor I was on, and probably every other floor too. I still blame the cheapness of the components for the fault, but they wanted me to build so many systems in such a short space of time I wouldn't be surprised if I missed something along the line.

That's about the worst mistake I've made. .. Working for Aria. *laughs*

Used to buy from Aria a lot back in the days we ran a small computer store. Primarily just to talk to the ridiculously flirty account manager girl we had. How foolish we were when young :(

Back in the AOL days, I probably ruined 7 computers due to inexperience and downloading "progz" which ended up being viruses or going to infected websites. I remember going to one for a fake new "prog" version which was audio assault 2.0, went to the .tk website and next thing I knew, had the BSOD for good.

Still looking for my favorite program which was Millennium 5.0 by Bofen, believe it was for AOL 3-4.

great thread.

my previous PC was making a clicking sounds, figured it must be the fan i open the case up and powered up the PC and tried to figure out

where the noise was coming from... however i was look at the main CPU fan and it just didnt look like it was spinning, so i stuck my finger in...

yes you guess it.. got a good cut on my finger, broke one of the fins on the fan.. now the PC was making a very loud whaling sound.

Another time ages ages ago, loggin in to a customer site (as ROOT) and thinking i was in a temp directory issued RM -R, sadly i was

in the main Database folder and it wipe the whole lot... Customer had to restore from backup and took 2 days... i have since learned the errors

of Root!!

June 2002 - Not having a product key for Win 98 SE after reformatting/reinstalling - ended up having to use the TTY and relay system to call MS and explaining that I lost the key and they gave me a new key at no cost.

Dec 2004 - Used a regcleaning utility "RegScrubXP" and accidentally deleted the entire registry in Windows XP which borked up the AHCI in the BIOS. Ended up changing it to RAID and then reformatting/reinstalling.

Made various mistakes here and there. Not work-related, thank God.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Tor Browser 15.0.15 by Razvan Serea Protect your privacy. Defend yourself against network surveillance and traffic analysis. Tor is a network of virtual tunnels that allows people and groups to improve their privacy and security on the Internet. The Tor software protects you by bouncing your communications around a distributed network of relays run by volunteers all around the world: it prevents somebody from watching your Internet connection and learning what sites you visit, it prevents the sites you visit from learning your physical location, and it lets you access sites which are blocked. The Tor Browser Bundle lets you use Tor on Windows, Mac OS X, or Linux without needing to install any software. It can run off a USB flash drive, comes with a pre-configured web browser to protect your anonymity, and is self-contained. Tor Browser 15.0.15 changelog: All Platforms Updated NoScript to 13.6.20.1984 Updated Tor to 0.4.9.9 Bug tor-browser#42436: Allow for multiple configured (front, reflector) domain fronting pairs in Moat module Windows + macOS + Linux Bug tor-browser#44997: Captcha doesn't work in TB desktop Linux Bug tor-browser#44886: Backport tor-browser#44361: Notify Linux i686 users that they won't receive updates anymore Download: Tor Browser (64-bit) | Tor Browser (32-bit) | 109.0 MB (Open Source) View: Tor Browser Website | Other Operating Systems Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Less disk space means less bandwidth demands which means lower operating costs for service providers... that's where money talks. ... cuz it's not about improving video quality!... that's just marketing spin.
    • And thereby lies the rub. AV1 support is not as wide as paid analysts would have the industry believe. With AV2 around the corner, it's going cause more time backlog in adoption (how many recent purchasers will upgrade yet-again within the next 6-12 months? most would rather stay pat for another 1+ years before even thinking about upgrading their setups).
    • Microsoft OneDrive is getting a simple yet much needed feature by Sayan Sen Microsoft has been steadily expanding OneDrive’s file management capabilities over the years, including for shared content and shortcuts, although it has had its flaws, too. The cloud storage platform introduced support for folder shortcuts several years ago, allowing users to pin frequently accessed shared folders from OneDrive, SharePoint, and Teams. Now, Microsoft is refining that experience further with a new way to organize those shortcuts as revealed in a recent Microsoft 365 roadmap addition. Previously, shortcuts added through the “Add shortcut to My files” option would appear alongside all other files and folders in the root of a user's OneDrive. And although it's meant to be useful, this approach could also create clutter along the way, especially for heavy users who may have to work with large numbers of shared folders across multiple projects and teams on their systems. This is where Microsoft’s latest feature comes in, as it is looking to address this inconvenience by giving users the option to place new shortcuts inside a dedicated “Shortcuts” folder instead. The feature is designed to keep shortcut links organized into a single location instead of scattering throughout the main OneDrive directory. Hence, the idea is to make navigation and usability easier and simpler. The first time a user chooses this option, OneDrive will automatically create the folder, and to help make it stand out from the other folders, the Shortcuts folder will have a distinct visual identity featuring a unique color and a building-style icon. That being said, the new Shortcuts will behave just like any other folder in OneDrive, and as such, users will be able to move it to a different location, rename it, share it with others, or remove it entirely if they prefer a different structure. You can view the entry on the Microsoft 365 roadmap website here. Currently, the feature is in the "in development" phase, but the tech giant expects the rollout to start next month (July 2026). Do keep in mind, though, that new feature rollouts often get delayed.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      B2Proxy earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      MadMung0 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      jefred earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Apprentice
      JoeyNeo went up a rank
      Apprentice
    • Week One Done
      oliviaexpo earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      482
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      227
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      71
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      60
    5. 5
      Nick H.
      54
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!