Wudang
BOFH
Who's got two thumbs and an interview?![]()
A yakuza enforcer being debriefed?
Who's got two thumbs and an interview?![]()
After how many years, you're still helping end users adjust to OS upgrades? Move on out, man. Move on up.
Who's got two thumbs and an interview?![]()
Then she said "can you write that down", I said just type it into Google, 'oh I can never follow that I'm not (Joe have you had your blood pressure tablet and tranquilizer..) a technical person".
Omfg.
Us: "When you send us the list of ten thousand codes could you please put it in Excel? Then we can just copy/paste into the code."
Them: "Sure thing!"
They sent an Excel spreadsheet. Inside was a single JPEG screenshot of ten thousand plus codes.
Omfg.
Us: "When you send us the list of ten thousand codes could you please put it in Excel? Then we can just copy/paste into the code."
Them: "Sure thing!"
They sent an Excel spreadsheet. Inside was a single JPEG screenshot of ten thousand plus codes.
I feel so evil for laughing so hard at this.
Had that done to us once but it was a Word doc.Omfg.
Us: "When you send us the list of ten thousand codes could you please put it in Excel? Then we can just copy/paste into the code."
Them: "Sure thing!"
They sent an Excel spreadsheet. Inside was a single JPEG screenshot of ten thousand plus codes.
Oh, it's even worse than I thought. The original data? Was in an Excel spreadsheet. She scrolled through it, taking screenshots as she went, pasting them into another Excel spreadsheet. It wasn't just one big JPEG like I thought, it's dozens. She carefully lined them up when she pasted them. For neatness.

[qimg]https://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/norm_normal_file_format.png[/qimg]
I had a few of those in my time. Screenshots in Word documents, so you couldn’t easily resize them to read the tiny text. Data that was a simple text file on the original computer that was cut and pasted into a Word document in sections, losing formatting (tabs, spaces, new lines, etc.) which was important.
Whew! All fixed. Turns out the perp wasn't as stupid as I thought, the source spreadsheet was Excel "protected" so she couldn't copy/paste. I just wish she'd mentioned that before she spent a day doing screenshots. Excel "protection" is useless. Exported as text, imported into new Excel file. Great protection, there, Microsoft.
Another method to crack protection is to export/import PDF into Adobe then export as Excel. Or change the .xlsx extension to .zip to get to the xml and edit the protection tag out. Half-ass security makes extra work but doesn't actually protect anything.