back to article The price of freedom turned out to be an afternoon of tech panic

Welcome once again, dear reader, to the sanctuary we call Who, Me? in which Register readers can safely share their burdens and tell the tales of technical not-quite-expertise. Take this week's story, for instance, in which a reader we'll call "Jeff" made a very simple error – the kind of error any one of us could have made. …

  1. b0llchit Silver badge
    Facepalm

    D'oh

    Evidently the notion of A/B testing had not been taught...

    Well, neither did they teach elementary change management principles...

    1. Korev Silver badge
      Coat

      Re: D'oh

      Well, neither did they teach elementary change management principles...

      He didn't need them to Excel at this job...

      1. aerogems Silver badge
        Coat

        Re: D'oh

        Add another row to the "Groan" column.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: D'oh

        At least he didn't have Access to anything that could do more damage.

    2. Groo The Wanderer Silver badge

      Re: D'oh

      Or the simple rule that: "Excel is NOT a database!"

      1. aerogems Silver badge
        Pint

        Re: D'oh

        It's closer to a database than it is a desktop publisher.

        I think anyone who's ever done any length stint in IT probably needs a pint or several to again repress all the memories of the myriad of tortured use cases Excel has been forced to serve. -------->

        1. Doctor Evil

          Re: D'oh

          I think anyone who's ever done any length stint in IT probably needs a pint or several to again repress all the memories of the myriad of tortured use cases Excel has been forced to serve.

          Compositional petroleum reservoir simulation (using several linked spreadsheets plus custom add-ins). Yikes!

          1. aerogems Silver badge

            Re: D'oh

            Yikes is an understatement of pretty epic proportions. Given your name, I would have thought maybe you were the one responsible.

            1. Doctor Evil

              Re: D'oh

              Well, yes ... [sheepishly]

        2. parlei

          Re: D'oh

          Excel is the proof that if all you have is a hammer, then everything is a nail. Even if it is spherical and made from glass.

        3. jdiebdhidbsusbvwbsidnsoskebid Silver badge

          Re: D'oh

          "myriad of tortured use cases Excel has been forced to serve. -------->"

          Many years ago, I had a job to build something called a beamformer. Lots of transmitters (could be radio, sound, any waveform really) arranged in irregular 3 dimensional space. When they all transmit, the superposition of the waves creates beams in certain directions. Control the phasing of the individual waves and within certain constraints, you can form any beam shape in any direction you like. If anyone reading this cares, the beampattern is the Fourier transform of the array and vice versa, in as many dimensions as you are working in.

          New in my role, I was waiting for the new software development environment to arrive, so I was twiddling my thumbs wanting to make a start. The only software I had to start creating the model was ... Excel! So before long I had a fully functional 3 dimensional beamformer running in Excel! Admittedly out was only narrowband but the process of squeezing it into Excel taught me a lot about the maths behind it and what shortcuts and optimisations you could make. The final version (written in C++) was a lot better (more efficient) than it would have been had I not done all that early Excel tinkering.

          1. johnfbw

            Re: D'oh

            Excel and Access get a lot of shit from the IT world because they don't understand that quick prototyping is often the only way forwards (often because IT can't do it). Good job you realised that Excel was just a step, not the destination

            1. xeroks

              Re: D'oh

              " Excel was just a step, not the destination"

              Sometimes there's a LOT of stopping on that step. It may be halfway down the stairs, but that's where people like to sit if they think the shonky workaround is good enough for customers.

              1. Groo The Wanderer Silver badge

                Re: D'oh

                Which is where the "tortured" comes into play.

                On a related note, I was once on a project that was tasked with developing a mock-up of a new system for demonstration. They did such a good job the customer expected them to finish the remaining 3+ years of development in 2 months because "well, you've almost finished!"

            2. Handlebars

              Re: D'oh

              Which is fine, if you know what you're doing.

              Reminds me I once had a job in a university where some students had noticed their transcripts and final degree class didn't align, and I got asked to figure out why. Turns out someone had been truncating instead of rounding, in an Excel/Access mashup.

            3. aerogems Silver badge

              Re: D'oh

              Exactly. Playing around with an idea is all fine and well, the problem comes when that quick and dirty prototype someone bashed out ends up becoming the official solution.

              1. jdiebdhidbsusbvwbsidnsoskebid Silver badge

                Re: D'oh

                "Exactly. Playing around with an idea is all fine and well, the problem comes when that quick and dirty prototype someone bashed out ends up becoming the official solution."

                Seen that as well. Came across a spreadsheet that someone once put together as a quick and dirty prototype. Before long it was full of complex cross references and a set of instructions telling you how to select the data you wanted in the graph that was then copied in a regular customer report every quarter (it was so complex it was no longer obvious or intuitive). This spreadsheet had become THE definitive reference for the quarterly customer report. Only problem was that it had become so complicated that it was hard to trust that the data you got was the data you wanted and of course there was zero test documentation to support it.

          2. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            Re: D'oh

            Tortured uses for Excel?

            Allow me.

            I had to input several database points, several times per day, with repeated entries. Like the guy that made it could have a drop-down choice menu for me. No.

            Well, the machine had a barcode reader gun. The whole math to generate barcodes is throughly described on wikipedia. There is a font for windows that generates barcodes out of strings as well.

            Bob's your uncle a spreadsheet later, I got an Excel spreadsheet that makes and prints barcodes, of any size, including what they mean, labeled underneath.

            Never had to type a boring long ling of strings repeatedly, again. Any new entry got added to the A4 paper sheet I got on my desk.

        4. Andy A

          Re: D'oh

          I remember with horror the beancounters at a hospital who did EVERYTHING in Excel - including "word processing", when they had a full MS Office installed.

  2. wolfetone Silver badge

    "Thankfully when it was all done the owner was very forgiving, though it had cost an afternoon's online sales. And he did dock Jeff's pay for the cost of relisting everything."

    That should focus Jeff's mind.

    "A while later he moved to a larger concern in the manufacturing industry, where he was able to make more industrial scale errors."

    Guess it didn't.

  3. Fursty Ferret

    Thankfully when it was all done the owner was very forgiving, though it had cost an afternoon's online sales. And he did dock Jeff's pay for the cost of relisting everything.

    Riiiiiiight.

    Are all these stories made up now, or just part of them? You can't dock the pay of an employee for an innocent mistake.

    1. Innominate Chicken

      A small business too small to have a legal department vs a fresh new graduate who might not have the experience to know better? You absolutely can if nobody's going to report you for it.

      1. John Brown (no body) Silver badge

        On the other hand, you really should not be blaming someone for a mistake when a freshly minted grad is dropped in to not only do everything IT related but still do the shelf stacking and order fulfilment he was originally hired for. That's just asking for trouble. But, small business and a boss who probably thinks "IT" is a job title and of course a new grad will "know it all" :-)

    2. Edwin

      I'll assume this was America

      Because only there would an employee even consider calling an employer "very forgiving" when they've just docked your pay for an innocent mistake (especially if you're fresh out of school and thus presumably cheap)

      (I suspect btw it's pretty easy to dock the pay - especially for an hourly wage employee - just tell them not to book the hours or they're fired.)

      1. Roopee Silver badge

        Re: I'll assume this was America

        Also I’m pretty sure that in the UK this would be illegal (not to say it doesn’t happen of course).

        1. This post has been deleted by its author

      2. Korev Silver badge
        Thumb Down

        Re: I'll assume this was America

        Many moons ago, I used to work in a restaurant in England that would (illegally) dock the pay of the waiter/resses for things like broken glasses or customers doing a runner.

        In the end one of the waitresses had a dad who owned a company, pointed out to her that it was illegal and he also kicked up a fuss...

      3. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: I'll assume this was America

        Pretty easy to dock pay.....

        You adjust the relevant columns on the payroll spreadsheet.

        1. The Oncoming Scorn Silver badge
          Pint

          Re: I'll assume this was America

          "the pay of the waiter/resses for things like broken glasses or customers doing a runner."

          I'm not sure about the broken glasses things, but the server at your table does have to pick up the tab for runners", theres also (to me) a complex system of cross tipping between the staff in North America.

          A friend of mine in the US, owns & runs a family restaurant, last year they had a group of teens come in & skip the bill, leaving the waitress having to cover them & finished her shift "In the hole" for the tab.

          Fortunately one of the departing teens had left behind her nice new shiny iphone 12, the local cops who ate at this restaurant had turned up for lunch promptly took interest & the owner was able to get into it to make a emergency call explain the situation to a extremely embarrassed parent. Who promised to send the teen concerned only to be told that was a no dice situation & that the whole party had to turn up.

          The party duly turned up embarrassed & shamefaced, the consequences of their actions & the impact for the single mother server hammered into them before:

          They settled the bill with a hefty 35% tip.

          They had to give their names, vehicle registrations & addresses, then barred from returning to the restaurant.

          Informed that said details would be circulated to every restaurant in the area, who would also likely refuse them entry in future.

          1. wolfetone Silver badge
            Pint

            Re: I'll assume this was America

            Good.

          2. Jason Bloomberg Silver badge
            WTF?

            Re: I'll assume this was America

            a group of teens come in & skip the bill, leaving the waitress having to cover them & finished her shift "In the hole" for the tab.

            It's outrageous and ridiculous that any waitress should have to make up the shortfall. Same too for anyone who is punished for things they aren't responsible for, shouldn't be expected to be responsible for.

            America could learn a lot from how civilised countries do things.

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: I'll assume this was America

              'Murrica is the land of the free.

              You're free to starve, work for negative pay, be exploited, rely on the generosity of your employer's clients to make up your wages with tips and many other such 3rd world practices designed to feed greed.

              And never forget, you can't be living the American dream if you're not grinding the faces of those less fortunate into the dirt because anything else would be socialism.

              It's also helpful to realise nightmares are dreams too.

            2. usbac

              Re: I'll assume this was America

              I can assure you that in most (all ?) states, docking someone's pay like this is illegal. The problem is whether you will have a job after you raise a fuss.

              Many years ago I had a situation where an employer tried to dock my pay, and I ended up filing a complaint with the state labor commission. They actually acted fairly quickly, and I got a phone call from my employer saying that the would be sending me a check right away.

              Granted, I was already leaving the company anyway. Would I have files the complaint if I intended to keep working there, maybe? That is how companies get away with this kind of stuff, regardless of what the law says.

              1. Robert Carnegie Silver badge
                Trollface

                Re: I'll assume this was America

                So file a complaint when the employer steals from a colleague. The employer learns that they did a bad thing, and it's the colleague who is fired. :-)

          3. David Nash
            WTF?

            Re: I'll assume this was America

            How can it make any sense that the waiter/ess would be responsible? Are they buying the food and selling it on to the customers? That's the business stealing from the employee, irrespective of whether a customer stole from the business.

            1. BartyFartsLast Silver badge

              Re: I'll assume this was America

              @davidnash

              "How can it make any sense that the waiter/ess would be responsible? Are they buying the food and selling it on to the customers? That's the business stealing from the employee, irrespective of whether a customer stole from the business"

              They apply a twisted logic, that the serving staff should have kept an eye on the table and been on top of the situation.

              It's not right, it's not fair and it's illegal in civilised countries (but it doesn't stop it happening, have a chat with the staff at your local petrol station and ask what happens if they get a drive off if you're in the UK)

              1. Jason Bloomberg Silver badge

                Re: I'll assume this was America

                It's not right, it's not fair and it's illegal in civilised countries (but it doesn't stop it happening, have a chat with the staff at your local petrol station and ask what happens if they get a drive off if you're in the UK)

                It seems some cunts will want cashiers to cover the loss but decent people would consider those cunts as the cunts they are.

                If it's a case of the driver coming in to pay, buying something else, and the cashier charging for that and forgetting about charging for fuel, it is more of a grey area, but even so, I would say a driver taking advantage of that is as guilty of a crime as deliberately driving off without attempting to pay.

                Fundamentally no employee should be responsible for compensating employers for crimes committed by third-parties.

              2. Richard 12 Silver badge

                Re: I'll assume this was America

                Erm, they get an address from the DVLA and sell the debt to a collection agency.

                Who then spend the next few months harrassing some poor sod whose numberplate had been cloned.

          4. Calum Morrison

            Re: I'll assume this was America

            If you think this sort of thing only happens in restaurants in the US and not the UK then you've lead a sheltered life. Some of our "favourite" chains shaft their staff for all sorts of things like this as a matter of course - it's endemic.

            1. Spanners
              Linux

              Re: I'll assume this was America

              These "favourite" chains would be originally from the US as well would they? Whilst they will probably get away in the UK as our current government looks across the pond in admiration of everything from consumer rights (much less than us) to healthcare (which they don't have), they wouldn't in more civilised places like France or Germany!. The fact that our employees are supposed to have rights is an error that they have spent the last 13 years trying to fix.

              1. Calum Morrison

                Re: I'll assume this was America

                I know of at least one with an Eastern theme that has no ties to the US, and famously a Brazilian-styled chain was in the news a few years ago for sharp practices. Not every baddie is American - we have plenty of homegrown crooks.

          5. jdiebdhidbsusbvwbsidnsoskebid Silver badge

            Re: I'll assume this was America

            "complex system of cross tipping between the staff in North America."

            I didn't realise that on one of my early visits to the US. We didn't leave a tip on the bill for our waiter, intending to just leave cash when we left. Waiter got all concerned and wondered what was wrong for us to leave no tip. We explained how we wanted our tip to go to him and him only rather than going through the till (where we assumed some if it would get creamed off by the business). The waiter explained how it works and all was well, we all parted happy, a bit wiser and still thinking that the other's system was just weird - just how foreign travel should be.

          6. johnfbw

            Re: I'll assume this was America

            So basically they were blackmailed into a bribe over and above the bill to keep them out of prison, then their personal details were collected and circulated to many unrelated companies. This would be highly illegal in a lot of the civilized world (not to say they wouldn't do it)

    3. chivo243 Silver badge
      WTF?

      Never had my pay docked, but I know one of my managers used to fudge our time cards... When I called him on it, he said "There's no way you worked all 12 of those hours!"

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        At a large energy supplier

        At a large energy supplier in the south of the UK, we often had overnight software deployments that would encompass 3 or more disparate teams. Some team's managers would allow their members who were involved overnight to book the entire change window off as OT even if their tasks were two brief periods of 15-20 minutes, one at the start, and one afterwards.

        Other team's managers would only allow the staff to book OT for the periods that they worked, so in some cases 4 seperate periods, consisting of an hour or 2 during the night, would be rounded down into 3 - 4 hours.

        Yeah, guess which team I was in... :-(

        1. DS999 Silver badge

          Re: At a large energy supplier

          I would have complained. LOUDLY.

          If you are required to be "ready to work" during an 8 hour window, but you only actually work 2 hours of that time with the rest of it waiting on others to complete their tasks, you have worked 8 hours. No one would question this if you are sitting at your desk in an office for 8 hours twiddling your thumbs waiting on others, but somehow if you are home (which I assume was the case for an overnight deployment) some think they can get away with crap like this.

          Now if there was a good 5-6 hour gap between because you had the first and the last task maybe that's kind of reasonable because you could (hopefully) sleep and have them call you when you're next task is ready. But for four separate tasks it won't be possible to sleep - at least not for people like me who have trouble falling asleep and definitely could not sleep three separate short periods between tasks. Plus I'm guessing they want everyone on some big conference call or IM session so they're ready to go instantly, not having to call people who have elected to sleep and waiting 10-15 minutes for those who live on coffee (fortunately not me!) to get it in their veins.

          I've always billed this way for my consulting gigs and I've never once had anyone question my hours. There were times I would be called into some big conference call about an outage and I was not involved in the call at all because it had already been determined to be about something I had nothing to do with like a Windows issue. But unless they said I could go I would stay on the call in case it was one of those one problem hiding another problem type of situations. And I would bill them for sitting silently for six hours, listening to people talk about stuff I didn't care about while I surfed the web or whatever to pass the timel

        2. David Hicklin Bronze badge

          Re: At a large energy supplier

          At a previous job I if you worked beyond 11pm (might have been midnight, its a long time ago) you got paid a "Black 'un" right through the night even if you finished a short while after.

          Was appreciated on some of the 2am stints

          1. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

            Re: At a large energy supplier

            At a previous job I if you worked beyond 11pm

            One of my contracts (deploying new OS/2 [1] machines) had to be done overnight so as to not disturb the busy department where we were doing it. Rather than have a permie have to associate themselves with us contract scum for 10 hours a night, they decided to pay us for 10 hours, regardless of how long things took.

            As it was, we developed a smooth workflow between us that usually let us finish by 11pm (starting at 5pm) - at which point we would adjourn to one of the many fine curry houses in the locale.

            Good contract that one - unfortunately, they went seriously over budget [2] and drastically reduced the contractor headcount. Including me :-(

            [1] Remember that? I still have my OS/2 Warp t-shirt, blagged off the IBM stand at one of the computer fairs where they were doing release events (if you bought a copy, you got a free SB16 sound card - and I managed to get them to throw in a t-shirt as well). T-shirt is looking a bit tatty but it's in better condition than the OS/2 market nowadays.

            [2] For a finance company their project management accounting style was distinctly slapdash.

    4. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Depends which bit of the world you're in, if you're in the land of the free then you absolutely can.

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    A while later he moved to a larger concern in the manufacturing industry, where he was able to make more industrial scale errors.

    LOL. Nice one :).

    1. Boris the Cockroach Silver badge
      Mushroom

      I wondered why one customer's CAD models came in looking like they were done in crayon.......

      Or maybe he was the guy who wired up a HP pump backwards, then 'adjusted' the wiring in the cabinet to cope.

      Worked really well until we happened to have a HP pump go down and we swapped it with that one.

      Icon gives some idea of what happened>>>>>

      1. Zarno

        UVW=RST or GTFO

        If someone wires the building wrong, then fix it at the main breaker, don't hide it in my equipmen panels...

  5. Ol'Peculier

    Many years ago I managed to mess up the logic in processing discount codes on our site that for one bank holiday weekend* anybody using a one that had being promoted through social media etc. ended up paying 20% more, rather than less, for their order.

    It was surprising how many people didn't notice...

    1. Giles C Silver badge

      Did it affect the number of sales?

      If it didn’t and nobody noticed it was a nice way of increasing revenue…

      1. Anonymous Anti-ANC South African Coward Silver badge
        Coat

        LOL, that's hilarious!

        Off to do some hunting for bargains --->

      2. Ol'Peculier

        Not if I remember correctly, and if sales were down, the extra 20% will have covered any shortfall...

    2. Doctor Syntax Silver badge

      I thought increasing the prices was standard practice for Bank Holiday promotions & the like.

      1. Fred Flintstone Gold badge

        That's probably why nobody noticed something was amiss.

  6. Howard Sway Silver badge

    he did dock Jeff's pay for the cost of relisting everything

    At this point Jeff should have sent the boss a large invoice for consultancy fees, having taught the boss so many valuable lessons about how dangerous it is to do things in a slapdash way when your entire business depends on IT.

    1. Anonymous Coward Silver badge
      Holmes

      Re: he did dock Jeff's pay for the cost of relisting everything

      He was employed as a shelf stacker, so definitely shouldn't be held responsible for a cockup in another "department". Lawyers would have a field day on that one.

  7. Captain Scarlet
    Coat

    Spreadsheet imports

    Crap in crap out, the amount of time I have wasted because people don't check spreadsheets that they believe are correct.

    Always double check spreadsheets and check random rows.

    1. aerogems Silver badge
      Joke

      Re: Spreadsheet imports

      That's it, turn in your man card for immediate incineration! Real men don't check their work, ask for directions, or read instruction manuals! That's like the stuff they cover on Day 1 of Being A Man 101!

      1. Anonymous Coward Silver badge
        Facepalm

        Re: Spreadsheet imports

        What gives you the impression that Capt Scarlet identifies as a man?

        1. aerogems Silver badge

          Re: Spreadsheet imports

          Granted the Mysterions killed and reconstructed him, so he may be beyond gender in terms of physiology, but still seems to identify as a man.

          1. John Brown (no body) Silver badge

            Re: Spreadsheet imports

            As a Supermarionation puppet, under the clothing, I suspect they are as gender-free as Ken and Barbie :-)

            1. Captain Scarlet
              Alien

              Re: Spreadsheet imports

              Sadly so, its easier to identify as a tree or an alien.

      2. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

        Re: Spreadsheet imports

        cover on Day 1 of Being A Man 101!

        I think I must have been too busy reading a book to attend that class. Or sleeping..

    2. DS999 Silver badge

      Re: Spreadsheet imports

      It might not be a matter of checking the spreadsheet, if you aren't clear about the format. He might have triple checked it and thought it was correct when it wasn't. If for example there were x columns expected for the upload but he had x-1 columns. The software on the other end could give a helpful error message telling him that a column was missing, or an unhelpful one like "invalid format" or it could accept the input anyway substituting 0 for the missing column. And if the last column was price....oops!

      What he could have done with almost no additional effort was submit a handful of price changes, then login to the site to verify the prices had been reset as desired before sending the rest.

      1. doublelayer Silver badge

        Re: Spreadsheet imports

        This kind of thing wouldn't surprise me, especially as a lot of software that accepts spreadsheets as input have lots of available columns. If they were importing something structured, like XML, JSON, or SQL of some sort, then those fields would have names they could check against. I've seen spreadsheets that looked like this:

        <itemname>, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 29.99

        With all the zero columns being for fields that you weren't using. When there are already columns like that, one more doesn't stand out too much. This is one of the things that caused me as a child to stop using spreadsheets to store information when it got too big and use a format that wasn't as prone to user error, although that also taught me a long-lasting fear of nulls which don't always mean the same thing.

        1. John Brown (no body) Silver badge

          Re: Spreadsheet imports

          I remember dealing with one client who insisted on just uploading the Excel spreadsheet to the website and expected customers to download it and read the price list. He could not be convinced that not all of his business customers would have Excel, let alone the very latest version he was using and private customers at home even less likely to have Excel at all. This was back in the days when importing data into a non-native spreadsheet was unlikely to succeed unless you'd already made that assumption and designed for that eventuality. We didn't get the job to re-build his website, thankfully.

    3. I could be a dog really Silver badge

      Re: Spreadsheet imports

      And of course, lets remember the ways that Excel will mangle your data - even if you are really careful.

      Maany years ago, and several work hats, one of my jobs involved generating files of product information from our main system so that customers could upload them into their systems. Sometimes they "requested" specific formats, but if not I would default to creating a flat text file as that's the simplest and most reliable file to handle - for the many customers who weren't pulling it into Excel. A few customers would complain about the data being corrupted - which it wasn't. But you try explaining to people that no, Excel does not have sensible defaults to import most files if you just click "do it" without telling it what any of the fields are (some of our barcodes were UPC12 expressed as EAN13, i.e. with a leading zero which Excel would helpfully automatically strip for you).

      1. J.G.Harston Silver badge

        Re: Spreadsheet imports

        Gawd, the hoops I've had to jump through to code CSV exporters that protect the data against Excel mangling it. Protect in quotes. Nope, if the thing specified as a string looks like a number, it will be treated as a number. Specify it as a *formula* that specifies the data is a string. That's caught everything so far. But in order to prevent the exported file being humungous, the protection was only applied for known "Excel is a bastard" cases. Which worked fine until a serial number advanced from 1D999 to 1E000 and suddenly everything was numbers, 1*10^0, 1*10^1, 1*10^2, 1*10^3, etc.

      2. swm

        Re: Spreadsheet imports

        I remember at the college where I taught, one of the professors moved a column vertically in a spread sheet and excel helpfully tracked all of the cell bindings to their new location.

        When I did grading with a spread sheet I always added a perfect student. If this student didn't get 100% after all of the formula crunching I knew something was wrong.

        1. G.Y.

          flunk Re: Spreadsheet imports

          Did you also add a pure-flunk student?

    4. David Hicklin Bronze badge

      Re: Spreadsheet imports

      > Crap in crap out

      One boss had that as a saying but added "plus 10 %" after it

  8. DS999 Silver badge

    I thought this was going another way for a moment

    With all the alerts happening because the prices of items had been drastically lowered!

    He's lucky that prices set to 0 were interpreted as deleting the item, rather than having some overly clever software on the other end knowing that prices can't be zero thus having everything listed for 0.01 dollars for a few hours!

  9. J.G.Harston Silver badge

    Let me guess. Jeff now works for the NIPS.

  10. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    pinging

    "And all the time the boss's phone was pinging constantly."

    Sounds like most fellas in my open space ...

  11. Stuart Castle Silver badge

    Not a spreadsheet, but I worked for Blockbuster when I was a student.

    After the shop closed, we had to take the computer through an end of day procedure, where we had to respond to various prompts, then at the end, the computer would lock any terminals attached (two, in our store), then sit there processing for about 2 or 3 hours, printing out reports showing various things, like the day's cashflow, and tapes rented/returned etc, along with any late returns..

    It printed out a *lot* a reports, which meant the printer (a dot matrix) was going for pretty much the whole time. Thankfully, we didn't have to wait around, so usually went home while it did this.

    I was covering a shift in a branch I didn't normally work in the next morning. Normally, when working the morning shift, we checked the printouts for any thing due. We would check the drop box (in case stuff was returned overnight) and cross off any items that had been returned. We'd then start to phone the people who were late returning stuff, and go through the other figures.

    My heart sank, when I saw that the cashflow report was showing the store was £2,000 down. Panicking a bit, I called my manager. It looked like the £2k had been stolen, even though the stores never had that much cash in the tills. Thankfully, he came to the store quickly, and we checked the figures again. What had happened is that someone had issued a credit for £2k on the system. The manager voided that credit and presumably had a word with the guy who had been working the previous day. Thankfully, that guy admitted he meant to enter £20.00, but missed the full stop. He had only given £20 to the customer.

  12. Elongated Muskrat Silver badge

    Got a problem you need to solve?

    Think you can fix it with a spreadsheet?

    Well done, you now have two problems.

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