screen doors of discretion
Jan. 26th, 2018 09:31 pmEarlier this week at work, someone asked me if I'd seen a form, and if I could check my pal - "My what?" My pile, as in, my pile of papers.
Today, someone told me they'd gotten a boneless burger for lunch - "Aren't most burgers boneless?" No, a bunless burger, as in, no bun.
Aside from those encounters, the only memorable thing to happen of late are the ongoing tech complaints that are becoming pretty comical. First, the computer I'd been using died. Apparently it's a hardware issue: the power button stopped working, so it won't turn on. So that's a thing that can happen. What can also happen is the replacement computer doesn't have the very specific program I need to do the job of filing medical records for a doctor's office, which nobody checked for when the computer got replaced.
This new computer doesn't even give me sufficient administrator privileges to delete a shortcut. I don't want to uninstall anything, not by any means. Just remove a desktop icon.
Today, someone told me they'd gotten a boneless burger for lunch - "Aren't most burgers boneless?" No, a bunless burger, as in, no bun.
Aside from those encounters, the only memorable thing to happen of late are the ongoing tech complaints that are becoming pretty comical. First, the computer I'd been using died. Apparently it's a hardware issue: the power button stopped working, so it won't turn on. So that's a thing that can happen. What can also happen is the replacement computer doesn't have the very specific program I need to do the job of filing medical records for a doctor's office, which nobody checked for when the computer got replaced.
This new computer doesn't even give me sufficient administrator privileges to delete a shortcut. I don't want to uninstall anything, not by any means. Just remove a desktop icon.