I can completely relate to your stories. I worked at a computer shop that also sold video game consoles. A big aggressive guy came in once with a DS he bought from us saying it doesn't work anymore. We booked it in for a warranty test just like you did, after opening the back, the moisture indicator wasn't just pink, it was red. You could see small bubbles coming out of it. He clearly had dropped it in the bath or something. We told him his accidental damage wasn't cover under the warranty and he trashed the store. He pushed over the game racks and pushed all the laptops off the desks. The manager called the police and he ended up being fined for all the damage. It's incredible how some people think they can treat small businesses like crap. But that's retail I suppose. Anyway, I loved the podcast and I'd love to hear more of your stories in the future!
@ThisDoesNotCompute7 жыл бұрын
Dang, trashing the store? I remember a few tense moments and heated arguments, but thankfully they never turned violent.
@coreybabcock20232 жыл бұрын
The guy should have went to prison
@JamesSmith-sw3nk7 жыл бұрын
I had a small computer business and around the time that intel core 2 duo's were new, I had a woman come and ask for the absolutely cheapest computer I had. I had an old P3 desktop with XP on it, I said $20 for it, she said she could only afford $17, So I said lets call it an even $15. ..6 months later she comes back and says the computer stopped working and she wanted her $ back, I said when did you buy this and for how much, she said 6months ago and for $15 (My sales records confirmed it, I had also wrote a note about the haggling because it made me laugh). I was too shocked to argue and gave her the $15 and she left (She wasn't going to take no and I was busy with much bigger transactions). I took a quick look and the video card died , I changed it out and put it out on the counter with a note that said: "Works ,P3, $20, No warranty", it was sold the next day.
@wildbill23c6 жыл бұрын
Hell the video card probably cost more than you sold the computer for LOL.
@danielstorbeck4 жыл бұрын
William Sevier not, if you have lying around an old and appropriate video card for no cost.... could be for such an old system
@coreybabcock20232 жыл бұрын
Cool but glad you have a heart though wish I knew you then I needed a laptop and was homeless and would have cleaned the store for it
@jimmybrazell26457 жыл бұрын
I was a computer tech in the late 80’s and early 90’s. My most remembered story is another tech worked with a customer on the phone for almost an hour with a computer not powering up. He gave up and said I am about to get off work and I will come by and take a look at it. He comes back the next morning still laughing. She was an older lady who ran sewing machines for years. He said he got there, looked at the setup computer and asked her why the mouse was on the floor. She answered that is where you always put the foot pedal. She was trying to operate the computer like an old sewing machine. He said he spent about an hour showing her how the computer actually works and she was happy after that.
@andrewchr4 жыл бұрын
My grandmother also ran sewing machines!!! I bet she would do the same :D
@bogartgaming92834 жыл бұрын
2 Stories for you - Knew a lady, had never used a mouse before, took her 27 pages of written notes on how to use a Mouse in this "incrible NEW Operating SYstem" (Windows 7) I once sewed my thumb to my thumb on my 1st day of Home ec class
@tedse212 жыл бұрын
Youre not old. I worked in retial from 1977 to 1983. My frst IT job, officially, was as a project officer. in an IT roll out. Your stories reflect my stories.I have been in IT support since the days of Apple IIes.
@miloesteem7 жыл бұрын
We need more stories!!!!!
@pepealexandre7 жыл бұрын
I agree.
@FurEngel7 жыл бұрын
I worked at a similar store from 2005-2010. I have probably a hundred stories just like this!
@junction347 жыл бұрын
I second this!
@kingko65127 жыл бұрын
These were great stories indeed
@LancerloverLL7 жыл бұрын
I work at a car rental store and have plenty funny things to tell as well.
@brandonaaron26657 жыл бұрын
I worked as a rep for HP in the 90s and spent my week visiting CompUSA, BestBuy, Circuit City, etc. I loved the buzz in those stores with how interested and excited people were to get their first computer.
@CommodoreFan647 жыл бұрын
Yeah it was a very exciting time in the 90's for computers as they where moving so fast, now it's the next iPhone, or Samsung Galaxy for a $1,000 that's not that much better then last years model, or even some sub $200 Android phones it comes to daily task, and video card launches get botched by mining scalpers driving up prices, and some systems 3 generations old can still play the latest games, and do basic daily task with no issues, and even with AMD launching Ryzen/Threadripper it's again just not the same excitement for new products that it was in the 90's and early 00's for sure.
@miloesteem7 жыл бұрын
I work at a Walmart in their Electronics department, some people just don’t know what computers are.
@edwardbell87717 жыл бұрын
Evan schroeder I find that hard to believe but I also worked at Wal-Mart too so I can believe you
@ThisDoesNotCompute7 жыл бұрын
I remember when Walmart sold computer parts. I think we bought a Sound Blaster card and CD-ROM drive there once, maybe in 1997 or so.
@miloesteem7 жыл бұрын
Adventures in Nostalgia yes
@shanester3667 жыл бұрын
i worked at the photo center like 6 years ago and some old lady yelled at me since we didnt carry kodak brownie cameras XD
@tobytoyota69363 жыл бұрын
@@shanester366 bruh I have one now, lol
@paulcattrone31967 жыл бұрын
I worked at PC clone shop called Nordic Computers in Concord, California from summers 1988-1991. Also started while I was wrapping up my high school years. These were the years of XT (8088) and AT(x286) computers. The days of dip switches and populating memory chip by chip while trying not to bend the chip legs. MS-DOS (I always laughed when customers would call it DOSE) 3.33 was the standard. Windows and the x386 was just coming out when I left that job. I was one of the shops techs and also their GoFor driving around the SF Bay Area to pick up parts from distributors or delivering completed systems to customers. This navigating the roads of the Bay Area experience has been so valuable to this day! This podcast brought back some memories. Thanks!
@Rocking_J_Studio7 жыл бұрын
I worked with computers from 1985 until I retired in 2016, so I can relate to your stories completely, although I didn't work in computer retail. It's always interesting when you work with people who don't have any idea how computers function. I worked as a computer trainer for a number of years early on in my career and eventually managing a staff in desktop support for a major company. The stories could fill up volumes of books!!
@Bristecom4 жыл бұрын
My dad also finally bought our first computer in late '98 and to my surprise, despite him usually being cheap with everything, he got a nice Sony VAIO! It had a Pentium II 450 MHz CPU, a Matrox Mystique G200 GPU which had great image quality and could handle 3D fairly well, an Aureal Vortex 3D sound chip, and a DVD/CD player and even an AV input. It was also quite stylish. I was pretty amazed with what all you could do with it (especially the internet) and used it far more than my family did. By 2003, technology had progressed so much that our '98 VAIO was very slow and outdated so we were looking at upgrading to another VAIO. I remember seeing the cool MX series with it's built in amplifier and nice bookshelf speakers and neat info display but for the money, it had a much slower and outdated CPU and GPU than the mainline RZ series so I custom specified the RZ with a 2.6 GHz Pentium 4, an nVidia GeForce 4 Ti, and Creative Sound Blaster Audigy. After that, I always just built my computers but the 90's really were neat with all the unique designs before everything became basically standardized. I'm really interested in all the Japanese designs in particular such as the Fujitsu FM Towns, Sharp X68000, NEC PC-9800, and MSX. With the custom graphics chips and MIDI based Yamaha FM sound chips, and even custom mechanical keyboard, mouse, and controller designs, they all really had a unique character to them.
@jb-jbjb Жыл бұрын
I worked at a small pc repair local chain in the late 90s.we built white box systems and would plastic wrap them to keep them clean till someone bought them. We sold one to a guy and he calls a couple hours later saying it shut off and won’t turn on. He brought it back in and it was still plastic wrapped. He had neatly cut out ports with a craft knife to plug everything in.
@wanyman2 жыл бұрын
That was a golden age. I was in school for computer networking during this time.
@eeejokesno7 жыл бұрын
Oh man, what a great time in computer history! I'm only maybe 2 years younger than you, and when I was in high school, we got a Dell Dimension XPS-T500 with the P3-500 with a DVD drive and a CD Burner. My friend, a huge Gateway 2000 fan brought over his Neverhood OEM disk, so we copied it. Meanwhile, a bit later, someone gave me an old HP Vectra with a Pentium 133 in it, that I eventually upgraded to a Pentium 200 MMX. Pair that with 192 megs of RAM, a 20 gig hard drive, a CD burner, an external parallel Zip drive, a 15 inch Viewsonic monitor and a crap-ton of MP3s from Napster, and I was the coolest kid ever. That Vectra was the first of my machines that had the FCKGW-RHQQ2 version of Windows XP! I kind of miss those days!
@RWL20124 жыл бұрын
Oh man, the FCKGW-RHQQ2 version of Windows XP! That ran on two PCs in my family in the early to mid 2000s - my Mum and I's PII 333MHz with 512MB RAM / 40GB HDD / TNT2 Ultra 32MB / SB Live! / 36x CD-ROM, and my grandparents' Athlon XP 1600+ 1.4GHz with 256MB RAM / 40GB HDD / Trio64 2MB / onboard sound / 16x CD-ROM :P
@TheSeanUhTron4 жыл бұрын
I worked at a small smartphone store/repair shop around the time smartphones started becoming mainstream. I can totally relate to those stories about frustrating customers breaking things and then blaming it on the store. Had a customer bring in a Motorola droid phone with a broken screen. We fixed it and sent him on his way. A couple of weeks later, he brings the same phone back and wants it fixed under warranty; The screen was broken. It's not unheard of for there to be defects that can cause replacement screens to be unusually fragile (IE: Debris under the glass). So we inspect it, but this phone has clearly been heavily abused. The new screen was already scratched to hell and the phone has clearly been dropped several times since we last repaired it. So we decline the warranty request, but offer a discount on a new screen repair. He was not happy with that and after a back and forth, he storms out of the store and begins yelling at customers at other nearby businesses telling them not to go to our store. Pretty much acting the same way your angry customer did. Funny conclusion to that story is that the next day, that guys father brings the phone in and has us repair it. The customer who yelled at us, the son, he wasn't young. Probably in his mid-to-late 30's.
@anthonyterry81627 жыл бұрын
This video hits my nostalgic nerve bad. I worked at CompUSA as a floor salesman and then a computer tech in '99 as well. I have very similar stories you had like the roach motel computer and people getting pissed at something they don't know. Talking about hardware such as Intel vs AMD(was an AMD guy myself) with other co workers and buying all the parts to my first computer I built was such great memories. Good old days...
@LOTR_BTTF5 жыл бұрын
LOL your story about the tech not wanting to do the job they asked him to really takes me back. I've seen several instances of that. My favorite one was this guy who called his wife (I know this because I actually overheard him making the call) and had her call the place and say she was really sick and needed him to take her to the hospital so he could leave work to get out of doing a job he didn't want to do.
@TheGameBench7 жыл бұрын
In the late 90s I built my first computer... using a K6-2 450. Our house was air conditioned, didn't matter. That thing still ran incredibly hot and it was slower than my friend's system with a PII 400. I took the K6-2 and the mobo back and bought a PIII 550. Loved that computer. Took it to a lot of LAN parties.
@coreybabcock20232 жыл бұрын
I used to always be in the computer lab in middle school in 1997 98 I miss those years so much
@billn.13185 жыл бұрын
We need more stories like these. They sure are a gem to know what that was like. It is a weird realization how much has changed since the 90s but customer service has not. I was in my early teens in the late 90s and fell in love with computers. I envy your experience of seeing the early progress of what it was like to work in such field to what it is now.
@Okla_Soft3 жыл бұрын
I love hearing you talk about tech tales....
@northof-623 жыл бұрын
Nice to hear what it was like to run one of these stores. Many of the smaller and midsized ones disappeared quickly once the boom peetered out. Some were run by people who had no tech knowledge. A few are still around, catering for business users mostly. (Norway) Thx for your talk.
@megapetproductions65637 жыл бұрын
Colin has awesome stories about his time working at a computer shop. I was born in 1980 and I remember the same time period and I enjoyed the late 1990's in personal computers. I hope Colin shares many more of his stories at the computer store. Back in 2012 I had the idea to make short films about what it's like to interact with the public because of the bizarre aspects of human nature. So in April of 2015 I finally made my first video about it but in the spring of 2017 I converted my upstairs of my house to be a 1990's mom and pop computer shop to function as a set for making episodes of an educational skit comedy drama show for KZbin. I am thrilled to hear Colin's stories about these customers. I already shot the principle photography of the pilot episode of my show. Now I got to finish editing and we got a very dysfunctional customer in the pilot episode.
@T3hderk876 жыл бұрын
This is quite entertaining to me as well. A good story from a TOTALLY different market. One day many years ago, when I worked for a major grocer in the meat dept as a seafood clerk I had a very irate customer come in. Now, the date was July 5th, mind you. He comes in all fire and fury, and I ask him what the problem was. He said, "Your auto wrapping machine isn't working right! It poured lighter fluid all over my steaks!". I tell him that is impossible, there is no lubricating fluid in that machine, let alone lighter fluid. He reiterates again that he had received these steaks from the store doused completely in lighter fluid. Finally, after about 30 minutes with my manager, store manager and myself all explaining to him the implications of having a lighter fluid lubricated machine and the improbability of that ever passing FDA inspection, he finally left empty handed. I had figured that he had over bought, and wanted to recoup the money, because not all the guests had shown up to his bbq. Quite humorous indeed.
@MichaelButlerC7 жыл бұрын
GREAT story telling here Collin. I'm 33 so this is right up my alley... I even remember going in to an independent computer store around the age of 17 much like the one you described when I was building my first custom PC. From what I remember I bought my parts online (can't remember which website but this was around 2000) and when I finally got everything put together it would shut off early in the boot phase. I never did figure out exactly why but I ended up buying a new motherboard from that local computer store and then never had a problem.
@pepealexandre7 жыл бұрын
My favorite podcast so far, Colin. Hilarious stories and well told. Thumbs up.
@AxiomofDiscord4 жыл бұрын
97-03 is my favorite period of computing. As a gamer felt like the biggest rush of change. Never felt the same before or since.
@Warlonging2 жыл бұрын
Your initial job at the beginning was basically the same experience I had when I began working at Staples as a Tech Support rep. I was still in high school and very much considered myself an introvert. I can thank that job for giving me the opportunity to practice people skills and learn how to talk to folks while also simultaneously being able to engage in my passion. But, yeah people constantly thought that I made commission and I'm like "yeah would be nice, but no I make 9.50 an hour here" lol. But Staples (or our store manager at least) placed a huge focus on customer service and instructed as not to oversell to customers
@maxwillson4 жыл бұрын
I still remember when my family bought our first computer at CompUSA in the mid 90s, it was a Macintosh Performa and I still have it lol. The last computer I bought from CompUSA was a Mac Mini in 2006, I think that was the last year they were in business.
@deaflat11196 жыл бұрын
I did this from about 1993 till around 2000. Interesting times. I enjoyed it.
@genericgreensquid66697 жыл бұрын
00:00 Thanks collin, I'm doing great!
@Auxodium3 жыл бұрын
lol he never gives you time to answer ;)
@JKNProductions2 жыл бұрын
Great video. I love these kinds of stories
@bunznammo5 жыл бұрын
I just watched this whole thing and definitely a nostalgic topic of the early days of computer sales. I was In my teens In the late 90s and I still remember being in awe of going to CompuUSA and Circuit City seeing all of these computers. I work as an Enterpise IT director now and once i. Awhile I come across very old computers (especially in town halls) and once I see a gateway pc I get really nostalgic. I envy your stories and experience in computer sales and working with different people in different environments and situations. Not many have that luxury to have experienced that. You are right, most bestbuy techs don’t invest enough time to talk computers - mainly because it’s not like that anymore and it’s not relevant in 2019. Maybe in 1999, I’d be standing for hours talking if this can run sim city 2000 lol
@jeffreyphipps15077 жыл бұрын
Keyboards... 1. I was working with a distributor who sold Packard Bell computers in the MS-DOS era (late 80's). A customer kept bringing in his computer because it kept rebooting and reformatting the HDD. Normally, when a machine came back we just asked for the box first because often the problem was there. So we checked that first - no problem. So we asked for the power cables and keyboard. Problem. Swapped the power cord. Problem. Swapped the keyboard -no problem. So we placed a call to PB service to find out why a keyboard would cause this problem. Turns out the system was designed to do a self test and part of that test was a reboot and format of the HDD. The keyboard in question turned out to be intermittent causing the system to revert to self test. We got a keyboard replacement from PB (under warranty) and everything was fine. 2. Worked as IT repair at a very large community college (20,000 students at the time). Faculty were issued computers for the first time. One faculty member said his computer kept locking up randomly. A tech retrieved the computer (no cables) and brought it for testing. On the bench it worked fine. So the tech returned it. The faculty member used it for a little over two weeks and called about the same problem. Since this was a second call for the same problem, I grabbed a stocked keyboard (just in case). The tech didn't understand. So we went to the office in question while the faculty member was there. It turned out that it did happen a lot, but since he had lost a lot of typing he reported it again. Rebooting fixed the lock-up but it was annoying. So I had the faculty member sit down and show us what he did exactly. He began random typing and decided he wanted music (music faculty). He grabbed a remote control and turned on a stereo - and the computer locked up. The keyboard was infrared and on the same frequency as the remote. swapped with a wired keyboard. Problem solved. 3. Last one. By now, keyboards ALWAYS were brought in. IT gets a call that the letters typed randomly changed from the key hit. Both the computer and keyboard came. But when we changed out the keyboard it was fine. But what caused that? While swapping keyboards, we saw dip switches on the bottom of the offending keyboard. The keyboard was programmable. There was a dip switch for clear/reset. So we reset it. But the other switch was programming on/off and it was a loose switch. So when you pressed a key, it was reassigned to the next key you pressed. So we reset again, determined the off position and superglued that switch. We returned the computer with the modified keyboard which never came back in that generation of computers.
@tenchimasake6 жыл бұрын
wow. i have to say i've never encountered issues like that in 20 years of using computers. who knew keyboards could be such bitches...
@niko1u4266 жыл бұрын
You don't see programable keyboards that oftenin offices now
@waspnuts6 жыл бұрын
I love these stories. They take me back to my youth.
@BarstoolBlues335 жыл бұрын
The late 90s were the computer wars. I was just talking with a friend and brought up Comp USA and assumed they had closed down, but was curious when and found some article back in 2007 that they were closing all stores. lol Makes sense. By the mid 2000s everyone who wanted a computer had one so there was no way a store like Comp USA could stay in business. Kids that grew up in the last 20 years would just be baffled by this era since they have grown up with computers and now have tablets and smart phones.
@shankysays3 жыл бұрын
These videos are so good. I really love your videos. In india, those very early computer never came to masses and first system i remember which was literally kept in showcases were windows 98. My childhood school had 1 computer and we were only allowed to look at it through a window.
@samr11727 жыл бұрын
As teenager who built his own computer in the late 90s, I really enjoyed these stories
@nyft33524 жыл бұрын
Oh boy, that last story was awesome, a few years after i started tinkering with computers i learned about cpu overheating and stuff, eventually started checking the outside temp. (where i live summer gets really hot). one day i went into overkill mode with my amd fx 4100 cpu: it was summer, a hot day, my cpu's temp wasnt low, its max was 80ºC and i started overclocking knowing all of that, even tho the cpu was at 80C i kept on overclocking, that bad boy sat at around 85C and ready to blow up at any moment after the OC, it felt like gambling your life at poker against a psychic.
@pixelflow7 жыл бұрын
I remember having a local mall computer shop that did repairs. Around that time Computer Shopper was also huge, so we bought our PII-300 with i740 agp graphics mail order. Prior to that our first family computer was an IBM PS/2 486DX bought from a Sears no less.
@dreammfyre7 жыл бұрын
My scrappy little town here in northern Sweden even had five computer stores at one point in the 90s. Now we are stuck with a franchised electronic store(basically our version of Best Buy), with a pretty lacking computer section to boot. We still have our ten pizzerias tho, that's one thing us Swedes never get tired of. 😋
@johnathin00618927 жыл бұрын
You can say "shy", it isn't a disease. I had the exact same problem in my IT career. Being a major introvert was a real hindrance at times, I can totally relate. At one place we had to do cold calling to existing customers (bothering people on the phone to to buy more stuff), man that sucked beyond belief. The story about the guy refusing to stock the shelves... WOW... I mean... WOW... telling your boss "no" when asked to do a simple task... seriously...? Around my area people were so desperate for jobs we'd do anything short of being a human toilet if asked to do something by our boss.
@ericdodson36307 жыл бұрын
Colin I worked for best buy in the PC department. I feel the same way you do about being an introvert, but when it's a topic i love (Computers, technology, Sports) i can open up and be very social, but if it's a topic i'm not familiar with i am usually the wallflower, so i get where you are coming from.
@brentdrafts22907 жыл бұрын
Well I might go a bit further back to the early mid 80s. My first computer was a Ti99/4a, I got part-time job with a company, which was a steel supplier, who's owner was opening a store called U-Compute where you could rent time on a bunch of different computers. He was also working on a book on computers and he gave me an office to create and edit, and comments about the function of programs. I also remember my dad buying a 512Mac and a LaserWriter for about $10,000.00. Funny thing is that he took to designing his news paper advertising on it and created quite a negative stir at the news paper where they counted on doing full mock up and layout. Now keep in mind that the ads had a noticeable Mac like look for the product description, and the photo were scanned digital picture. He had a scanner that went into the dot matrix printer and could scan as the print head was driven back and forth by the software. I think it was called a Thunderscanner. Anyways my ramblings.
@brentdrafts22907 жыл бұрын
About advertising, it was funny to find the ads in the news paper on Google Newspaper site, all these years later.
@Blades7296 жыл бұрын
Brent Drafts Oh Texas Instruments I had 1 of them also. Nostalgia overload.
@linkinworm17 жыл бұрын
These were quite amusing, I remember my mum bought a Compaq "internet" pc around 95, I was 5 at the time but knew a bit about computers, could run programs and knew about parts, and I went a bit mad she spent a whopping £1000 on this PC with monitor KB etc because she could have got a PC for the same price that could at least play games which I wanted to do. but she had it in her head that "internet PC" was the only thing that could go on the internet. GG Compaq with that marketing silkscreened right on the front of the tower.
@dood92457 жыл бұрын
I worked at a used game store and I can really relate to these stories. I have experienceda similar shift with games as they continue to impprove on home consoles and PCs so rapidly, although, they have been way more mainstream for a while. Warrenties, repairs, and people getting the wrong hardware, I have dealt with all of that. I would love to hear more stories like these. They are very entertaining and make me laugh thinking of similar experiences that I have had.
@maxh7717 жыл бұрын
Loved hearing your IT stories, Colin, and it took me back to my experiences with computers in the late 90s too (as I think I'm a similar age to you, and remember a lot of that tech equipment, especially the AMD K6 2s, quite fondly). Personal anecdotes are always interesting - it would be great to hear some more.
@NETKC7 жыл бұрын
Hi Colin. I love your podcasts and always look forward to seeing them. Always very insightful. Love all the hard work you put into these videos. Would love to hear more stories or anything you feel like sharing. It's very entertaining
@TheFreakRocker7 жыл бұрын
Amazing stories!!! really entertaining!!! Hi from Uruguay Colin, super fan of your channel here!!
@NikitaRazinkov3 жыл бұрын
COLLEN, PLEASE MAKE A PART 2 WITH MORE STORIES LIKE THESE!!!
@ralphsmithmckenzie4391Ай бұрын
Very nice story. My first job after graduating from university was at a CompUSA in Houston, in the 1990s as a sales and service technician. I would eventually graduate to a level1 and level2 call centre job, at Bell Canada. Anyway, the stories you conveyed in your video, bring back many good memories of my time as a CompUSA tech. Today, I am in the cloud computing and network security field.
@Xpurple6 жыл бұрын
Yep. I worked at a dialup service provider years ago and had a client who had a heck of a time getting connected. I ended up offering to head to her place to try a new modem. When I got there I found she was using an extension that ran her phone line through the 110 volt power supply in the house. Fine for voice, but it wasn't good enough for dialup. I string a cable along the wall of the room and her problem went away. I never would have found that issue if I wouldn't have gone on site.
@altluigi57336 жыл бұрын
In my fist job as a technician, the boss sometimes ask me to go and buy coffee for customers. There was another technician that never do any favor because he was a technician. One time the work slow down and the technician was fired. Wen I ask the boos what happened to the other guy. He say, he never went to buy coffee.
@jgkirbie7 жыл бұрын
I sold computers from the mid-1990's to the early 2000's; so I can totally relate to your stories, and I found them entertaining.
@klwthe3rd3 жыл бұрын
I know i'm super late to the video but i really really enjoyed watching this video. IT brought back so many memories of those times in the late 90's when computers started making their ways into the "everyday household". My only complaint was that i wanted to hear more stories! Smiles.
@a.c.n90767 жыл бұрын
Hahaha I know that feeling about being an introvert. Sometimes you just don't wanna talk to people 😂 I had to deal with a similar issue when I started my first job.
@Manatarms257 жыл бұрын
Love the stories! Working in the same felid, I could relate on so many levels
@ACRPC-dot-NET7 жыл бұрын
I can really relate to a lot of these stories, I worked at a Computer Renaissance store (in the MN metro area) in the late 90's, lot's of similar interactions with quirky customers, and cool cutting edge tech of the day. I instantly recognized this video's thumbnail image as a Computer Renaissance store too ;-)
@epic_paul273 жыл бұрын
I too love late 90s computers
@dazuk19695 жыл бұрын
What a wonderfully endearing story....thank you dude
@stevesstuff14506 жыл бұрын
Great video! Some of those stories brought back memories for me too!! Where I work, on a USAF base in the UK, at RAF Lakenheath, back in the mid 90's in our computer store, we once had a customer bring back a "faulty" Packard Bell desktop computer, and when the tech went to work on it, found that it was empty apart from a few house bricks (to give it weight!!)..... that was in the days when RAM chips and CPU's cost more than a second-hand car...!! Ha Ha!! :-D The things that people do, eh? Happy new year, and I look forward to more great videos to come ;-)
@ALitleBitSpecial7 жыл бұрын
Guy who brought back the PC had buyers remorse and was trying to do anything he could to make it not work; a classic situation.
@davecmatthes10377 жыл бұрын
Hey Colin, Great video and great stories. Sales.... story of my life! lol Keep the uploads coming my friend, I really enjoy and appreciate them ~ Thanks
@kuzadupa1852 жыл бұрын
"Even the cup holder was working!!! Oh boy!"
@Thinkofsomethingnew7 жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed your stories! Would love to hear more from then and later on in your career.
@AndrewStonerock2 жыл бұрын
Maybe not from the 90s, but I have a real soft spot for the commodore 64. I remember playing the Oregon trail on it, space quest, and some text bases king Arthur game. I loved that thing.
@agepbiz7 жыл бұрын
We need more stories for sure!
@banana_junior_90002 жыл бұрын
I was a sales floor dude, university bookstore computer section. 1997. Dude came up to me, said he had a problem with his computer. I told him that we don't have a repair department. He asked me if I could fix it. I was quite certain I knew what the problem was so I agreed. I ESDed the motherboard. It felt terrible. I now run a repair shop. To this day, I take every ESD precaution possible within reason.
@rwdplz13 жыл бұрын
I built my first computer in 1998, had about $1500 into it. The funniest part of early computing was watching new users trying to figure out a mouse, usually holding it up in the air trying to move it around and the screen cursor not moving.
@DarkVeilGaming7 жыл бұрын
Yes, more stories! I love hearing computer stories, no matter when the timeline ;)
@snorman19116 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting! I really like work stories.
@willhall3037 жыл бұрын
Colin I think that was my favorite podcast video I’d love to hear more stories like this
@mkalic4 жыл бұрын
Great video, loved it. We also get a lot of "special" people in our store/repair shop. I know exactly what you mean with your stories.
@KyleAwsm7 жыл бұрын
It's been awhile since I've watched one of your podcasts, and I've gotta say, I really identified with this one. I miss your ThisDoesNotCommute segments, because it always felt like I was riding in the car with a buddy, just having a good solid conversation about whatever. I think you re-captured some of that feeling with this podcast though. I enjoyed listening to/watching this one. :) I've been in IT about half as long as you have, but this makes me think of my own stories that I want to share. Thanks for making this one!
@ThisDoesNotCompute7 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the kind words! Opinions were split on the in-the-car episodes, but they may return occasionally ;-)
@TheRealSuperJ4 ай бұрын
I owned a computer store during the 90’s and have lots of the same memories. AOL 5.0 was my arch nemesis 😮
@RSWebery7 жыл бұрын
I really loved this video. If you have any more stores to share, I would love to hear them.
@Parallelepiped27 жыл бұрын
Those stories were fun , and more stories would be great! When I was a kid my parents got our first computer: Macintosh Performa 636
@Danielcoleco7 жыл бұрын
I remember going to the Compaq computer HQ here in Houston with my dad to buy his first computer. The price sheet I still have. 2 thousand bucks for a 100mhz machine I believe. 1gb had I think. But to be a part of Compaq at the height of it's power I still remember.
@classicmwk7 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the great video, Colin! Love your channel!
@greedyfirstalgorithmlast263 жыл бұрын
Dude! That Blue Wave is a Graffity in San Francisco I have Photos of it, by 2 second street & Howard before the Salesforce was built. I may be Crazy, however. I love your story.
@Yomarz7 жыл бұрын
Dude these stories are great. I'd love to hear more.
@supermariobros4237 жыл бұрын
Definitely entertaining, interesting at the very least. Keep em comin! :)
@GeminiJay6547 жыл бұрын
Very enjoyable, especially as someone who lives in MN!
@Tall_Order7 жыл бұрын
Regarding that one customer who had no AC at home, I live in Florida so I know how hot it can get on the second floor of a house myself. I had a gaming rig that kept blue screening until I got proper cooling. For a while I had placed a box fan next to it but then I decided to invest in better cooling. My current gaming rig had liquid cooling from the start.
@PicoFromTX7 жыл бұрын
She's STILL printing photos of Manson till this day.....:P
@Bristecom4 жыл бұрын
Rumor has it, the entire walls of her house are covered in Manson printings!
@sturosshomevideo4 жыл бұрын
I know that this is an old video, but I just found you recently. I actually started working in sales at our Best Buy (formerly a Future Shop) in 2000, when I was a Sophomore in high school. They hired me in sales where I worked for about a year before I moved into their service center (what would later become Geek Squad). I ended up leaving because, as my manager put it, "you make too much money and so they are cutting your hours"; I have a feeling that the mom and pop place was better to work for. I ended up going to a local ISP which led to a larger ISP job and now I am a Network and Systems Administrator for a large school district. We all start somewhere and it can lead to great placed if you can stick to it! That being said, I also consider myself an introvert....
@compaqdeskpro57704 жыл бұрын
Yes, education IT is the shit, lower pay but your never on the chopping block during downturns.
@compaqdeskpro57704 жыл бұрын
I got: The person who bought a laptop then called asking why it turned off after several hours, she thought the whole point of laptops is they don't need to be plugged in. The person who abandoned a laptop then came back 2 years later looking for it, pissed off we sold it (we had a generous 6 month policy, with lots of calls until then) The Indian guy who bought the cheapest crappiest old laptop we had (~$200), came back a year later wanting to trade it in at equal value for a recent well equipped laptop (~$650), and it had a broken CDROM bezel and logo missing. The guy argued for an impossible deal in a thick accent so fast he was frothing at the mouth for more than an hour, until the owner had to throw him out. The service customer who I informed on the phone his hard drive died, no data coming back, offer to sell him a new drive and Windows install, he agrees. He comes in the next day screaming, called me an asshole for deleting all his data. (Came in day after that apologizing) The guy who I didn't like who wanted my number so he could call me up randomly about computer problems at his job, I refused, he was pissed off.
@Thecody5034 жыл бұрын
I loved all stories. I need more
@Auxodium3 жыл бұрын
I wish computers in the 90s in Australia were 1,500. Before July 2000, computers were slugged with numerous taxes and what not and to get an ok mid range pc was 3,000 plus. Then GST (sales tax) came in and my second PC i bought was 2,000 and was almost top of the line. The 90s and computing were an exciting time.
@benh.6357 жыл бұрын
I love hearing these stories. Please, keep it up! :)
@RuinerXL7 жыл бұрын
The stories were hilarious and I'd love to hear more in the future!
@johnsabilla58977 жыл бұрын
Great story, please make more videos like this!
@zincmann7 жыл бұрын
Always great content Colin. Thanks!
@markerichannelly6 жыл бұрын
Can relate to your days in retail dude, working in a phone store has a lot of parallels to a computer store, lot of confused people, sometimes very ornery but when things work out they're over the moon happy. Interesting to say the least
@friedem0n20047 жыл бұрын
I think this is my favorite podcast episode so far!
@MrPulse20097 жыл бұрын
such a great video i love this type of podcast, keep up the good work
@MegaSo20107 жыл бұрын
Loved hearing these stories, thanks !
@john8675309tm4 жыл бұрын
WHOA I happened upon your channel, I think you worked at Computer Renaissance in Mankato Mn! Crazy small world I worked there in 2002. Am I right? R & M :)
@ALitleBitSpecial7 жыл бұрын
That shift in the public perception of PCs mentioned (@7:00) started, IMHO, when AOL started it's unlimited pricing plan (December 1996). Various other factors were at play, but AOL's unlimited internet was the tipping point that finally ushered us into a new, digital, age.
@ItsaFurryThing17 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of my time at my first job, PC sales and service from a mom and pop shop. So many people came in with dusty, dirty, bug ridden computers to fix.
@sporkstar19112 жыл бұрын
There was also a CERTAIN SMELL that accompanied computer stores, which you did not find anywhere else, even in the walmart electronics section. Radio Shack always also had a Different smell no matter which one you went to. Not saying that it was necessarily pleasant, but computer stores had their own smell.