This is one from a previous IT person. There was this database that was built horrible (double and triple links between tables, no referential integrity, nothing really 'worked' but had the illusion it did). Trying to explain to people that it doesn't work, and never worked, and that I would have to redesign it from scratch or refuse to do any work on it, I kept getting the reply "it always does what we want it to do, so it must have been built correctly!".
What the original creator of this access database did was, because he lacked to knowledge to make it work, he decided to input empty data for each possibility in the database. For example, he made each "site" have empty data for every fiscal year from 2001/2002 until 2019/2020. There were 8000 blank records, and to the user it looked like they were entering new data, when in reality they were "finding" an empty existing record, and changing the info. I could have killed this guy.
On a funnier note when I was doing helpdesk support before being moved completely to database development, I got a call about a users speakers not working. I ran through all the normal questions, "turned on?", "plugged in?", "volume up", "control panel settings?" etc. And I decided to walk down the hall to the user. I immediately seen the power was off, so I walked into the cubical, pressed the power button, said "fixed" and walked out. The user shouted as I was leaving "you better not tell anyone about this!". I thought it was humerous
A final one was with my grandmother, and I try to give answers that the user can understandstand:
Grandmother: Great! Thanks for installing and setting up that anti-virus, now... will it still scan in the middle of the night if the computer is turned off?
*5 Second Pause*
Me: If a lamp isn't plugged in, does it still turn on?
From a family member, slight swearing happened, but they got the idea
