In a previous version of our software we had a message in the Activation Wizard telling users who were activating a multi-user license that they had additional seats available and giving them the option to activate multiple seats on that computer if it was going to be a network server with multiple clients.
Of course many of our dumber users figured the *HAD* to activate all the remaining seats and ended up eating all their organizations remaining seats.
Which resulted in the next person not being able to activate and having to hunt down the idiot to re-activate that computer for just one user so that other people could use the license
We took our share of blame for this because we obviously made it too easy for idiots to do this. On the next release I got to help design the interface for that screen. After some collaboration we came up with this:
The ability to change the number of users from the default (1) would be disabled unless you check a box with the label "This computer will manage a multiuser shared activation."
The check box and the label are at the bottom of the screen. Most people in beta tests decided (correctly) that, if they did not understand the label, that they shouldn't check the box. But some did anyway.
So we added a warning above the check box and the label:
"Select the option below if the installation on this computer will be used by other users through a network. (CAUTION: Please select this option only if you've read [Software's] Network Administrator's Guide.)"
That seemed to do it and, for the most part we've had little trouble with this since that version was released. Everyone wins, right?
Enter today's idiot. Not only did she ignore that message and check the box, I also saw in our notes that she was one of the people who did this with the previous version.
Which means:
1. We explained it to her when she made that mistake with the previous version.
2. She gets the next version and plows ahead despite what happened last time AND the warnings not to check the bloody box unless you know what you're doing.
The thing that make me
is that people who manage to defeat our safeguards through their own stupid bullheaded persistence are always ALWAYS the most difficult people to provide tech support to. So talking her though fixing it was lots of hair-ripping fun.
Of course many of our dumber users figured the *HAD* to activate all the remaining seats and ended up eating all their organizations remaining seats.
Which resulted in the next person not being able to activate and having to hunt down the idiot to re-activate that computer for just one user so that other people could use the license
We took our share of blame for this because we obviously made it too easy for idiots to do this. On the next release I got to help design the interface for that screen. After some collaboration we came up with this:
The ability to change the number of users from the default (1) would be disabled unless you check a box with the label "This computer will manage a multiuser shared activation."
The check box and the label are at the bottom of the screen. Most people in beta tests decided (correctly) that, if they did not understand the label, that they shouldn't check the box. But some did anyway.
So we added a warning above the check box and the label:
"Select the option below if the installation on this computer will be used by other users through a network. (CAUTION: Please select this option only if you've read [Software's] Network Administrator's Guide.)"
That seemed to do it and, for the most part we've had little trouble with this since that version was released. Everyone wins, right?
Enter today's idiot. Not only did she ignore that message and check the box, I also saw in our notes that she was one of the people who did this with the previous version.
Which means:
1. We explained it to her when she made that mistake with the previous version.
2. She gets the next version and plows ahead despite what happened last time AND the warnings not to check the bloody box unless you know what you're doing.
The thing that make me
is that people who manage to defeat our safeguards through their own stupid bullheaded persistence are always ALWAYS the most difficult people to provide tech support to. So talking her though fixing it was lots of hair-ripping fun.



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