The other sections of the Rules of Tech Support are available at https://https://github.com/morriscox/Rules-of-Tech-Support
Credits are listed there. The requirements for being listed here is that the main Rule must have "Users will" in it.
#Users Will...
Rule W1A - If they do try to follow instructions, they will blame you if they screw up.
Rule W2 - No matter how much skill and knowledge and experience you have, users will claim they know more than you.
Rule W2A - No matter how much skill and knowledge and experience you have, users will claim others know more than you.
Rule W4 - Users will delete or remove things they shouldn't, since they figure they don't need what they are removing or because it might "fix things".
Rule W5A - Often they think you are that one single thing.
Rule W5A.1 - More often they are that one single thing.
Rule W5B - Telling them otherwise will only anger them.
Rule W5C - Unless asked, they have no reason for doing something. If asked, it is computering or wizardry.
Rule W6 - Users will try to make and use their own solutions and not accept blame when they don't work.
Rule W6A - If the solution happens to work, the user will think they are now qualified for future issues.
Rule W8 - Users will forget their password (and often their username), even if it's their own name and written down next to them.
Rule W9 - If a document fails to print, users will keep trying just to make sure it prints. See Rule 30C.
Rule W9A - The true importance of the documents they are trying to print will be inversely proportional to the fit they are throwing. See Rule 30C.
Rule W10 - Users will store important documents where they shouldn't. The Recycle Bin, the Trash folder, the Deleted Items folders...
Rule W10A - You will be blamed when things get deleted.
Rule W11A - Users will often have one phrase for everything, like "The Internet is down".
Rule W11B - People will think any piece of hardware is actually the computer, even a power strip.
Rule W13A - A user's self-perceived intelligence is directly proportional to the level of condescension to which they treat you.
Rule W13B - The lack of knowledge a user has on a subject is proportional to the amount they claim to know about a subject.
Rule W14 - Users will be certain that the laws of physics and the (current) limits of technology do not apply.
Rule W14A - Users will believe that anything in a movie that involves technology is real.
Rule W15A - When users do search, they will try to use GoogleBing.
Rule W16 - Users will use cheap equipment like surge protectors to protect their expensive equipment.
Rule W16A - Users will use cheap chargers for expensive items like smartphones.
Rule W17 - Users will refuse to accept that anything involving computers isn't too difficult for them.
Rule W17A - Or give up at the slightest obstacle.
Rule W17B - Users will refuse to accept that anything involving computers is too difficult for you.
Rule W18A - Users will demand help at any hint of trouble.
Rule W18B - The longer it takes to report it, the more urgent the user will claim that it is.
Rule W18C - The time it takes to fix the issue is inversely proportional to the amount of time it took to report it.
Rule W18D - The problem has retroactively been your responsibility for the months or years the user never told you about it, not just for the 10 minutes since they did.
Rule W19 - Users will believe something that can only affect one device can affect others by their mere presence.
Rule W20A - Users will believe anything that can connect to anything can completely control that thing.
Rule W20B - Users will believe one entity (a server or the cloud) controls all things digital, as well as time and space.
Rule W21A — Users believe there is a super secret DWIM (Do what I Mean) mode that all support people have access to but rudely refuse to use to resolve the user's issue.
Rule W23A - They will plug it into your network.
Rule W23B - And demand you support it.
Rule W23C - While the DHCP server, and the rest of the network, crashes.
Rule W23D - This will be your fault.
Rule W24A - That users should have learned in primary school.
Rule W24B - Users will think that a single course is sufficient.
Rule W26A- They might not even be on the correct screen, page, website, or operating system.
Rule W27 - Users will click on things that say "Click Here!" or "Download Now" just because they think they are supposed to.
Rule W27A- Unless that "Click Here!" or "Download Now" button is the one they are actually supposed to click on.
Rule W28 - Users will try to use their computer while you are working on it, especially if you are not present.
Rule W28A - Users will get mad that you have to kick them off the computer to fix the problem.
Rule W28B - No matter how important it was that you had to do so.
Rule W28C - Any attempt to justify your actions will just get you in more trouble.
Rule W29A - Users will claim that something impossible worked before.
Rule W29B - Despite all evidence to the contrary, users will insist that things having worked yesterday means they must also be working today.
Rule W29C - In fact, it always worked that way before, even if doing so would have been physically impossible.
Rule W32A - And leave the kid(s) alone with said expensive items.
Rule W32B - And not fix anything that might happen. See Rule W18.
Rule W34 - Users will use jargon in an attempt to make it seem that they know what they are talking about.
Rule W34A - Users will make up their own jargon and expect you to understand it as though it was standard jargon everyone knows.
Rule W35 - Users will insist on not using products that are better than what they are currently using.
Rule W36A - Users will call from anywhere except in front of the equipment with the issue.
Rule W38 - Once you've touched something, whether you fixed it or not, users will blame you for all further issues.
Rule W38A - And expect you to provide free support for all further issues.
Rule W38B — Acknowledging the existence of a piece of equipment is equivalent to touching it and accepting responsibility for its 100% uptime, including coffee makers and Tamagotchis.
Rule W39A - Users will confuse a company with products that it doesn't make.
Rule W40 - Users will expect you to know everything about their computer at home even if you only deal with large corporate systems.
Rule W45A - Or do things they shouldn't do without asking.
Rule W47 - Corporate users will expect you, instead of their boss or training department, to train them on how to do their job.
Rule W48A - And insist that it is, in fact, YOUR job, not theirs.
Rule W49 - Users will complain about your security measures but will claim that you should have done a better job when things go wrong.
Rule W52 - Users will refuse to do anything that improves things for them yet go out of their way to make things difficult.
Rule W54 - Users will assume that websites have www as a subdomain unless they are supposed to actually use www.
Rule W55 - Users will not know the phonetic alphabet, and will suggest the worst possible words. They will also refuse to use the ones you've previously used in the current conversation.
Rule W58 - Users will be certain that IT has infinite faster/shinier/better gear that they are keeping for themselves.
Rule W58A - The more they want that gear the less they need it.
Rule W61 - Users will be a lot more cautious if they have to pay upfront. Make sure they pay upfront for as much as you can.
Rule W62A - Only those who know what RTFM means will do it.
Rule W62B - It doesn't matter how accessible you make the documentation, they won't consult it.
Rule W64A - Users will not realize that they need power.
Rule W64B - Users will think that the Internet/network powers their devices.
Rule W65A - Or anything that doesn't.
Rule W70A - Users will believe that techo-kinesis exists.
Rule W71 - Users will complain if they are inconvenienced, even if you go out of your way to help them.
Rule W73 - Users will create and rename a new document thinking that will retrieve the contents of the old document that they had deleted.
Rule W74 - If there is more than one button, users will instantly click on the first button without reading. If there is only one button, they will stop and ask what to do.
Rule W76A - Since they don't want to be held responsible for their actions.
Rule W78 - Users will insist on you going outside the scope of your job and threaten to have you fired if you don't.
Rule W79A - Users will unplug the UPS so they can plug in their coffee maker or space heater.
Rule W79B - Users will plug everything into a surge protector and ignore the UPS.
Rule W79C - Users will plug heavy duty equipment into the UPS.
Rule W86A - Users will then complain about being unable to work for an even longer time.
Rule W87 - Users will simply click "Yes" or "OK" to anything that pops up on their screen without bothering to read it or understand what they are clicking.
Rule W87A - Or will close anything that pops up on their screen without bothering to read it or understand it.
Rule W87B - Users will do this even when you are helping them in-person or remotely and needed to have read or seen what they just clicked.
Rule W88A - They will think you are late no matter how early you show up.
Rule W89A - Even if you tell them not to.
Rule W90A - They will spend more time writing a long detailed email to your boss than filling out a support ticket.
Rule W90B - You will be summoned by your boss, who didn't read more than two lines, to explain that email.
Rule W90C - This will be the first time that you will have been told about any problems.
Rule W90D - If they do submit a ticket, it will be as vague as possible and will be missing critical information.
Rule W90E - Attempts to obtain the information will be ignored, turning a five minute fix into something than can take long periods of time.
Rule W90F - After noting multiple attempts at contact and closing the ticket, following procedure, the user will reopen the ticket or make a new ticket and complain that you didn’t contact them or fix their problem.
Rule W90G - User will log a ticket minutes before going on vacation, claim it is for one week long, actually be on vacation for at least two weeks, and then ask why this wasn't fixed while they were gone.
Rule W91A - This has been happening for a long time.
Rule W91B - Multiple people have been having this problem yet no one has bothered to tell anyone. See Rule W90C.
Rule W91C - They won't even bother telling you, just complain to each other within earshot.
Rule W95A - Users will duplicate the ticket on Monday at 9:10AM.
Rule W95B - Users will think 76 hours have passed between these requests.
Rule W95C - Techs will know that only 20 minutes has gone by between these requests.
Rule W96A - Users will expect you to treat their forgotten password on a Saturday night as priority one.
Rule W96B - Users will always call you directly, even when you are not on call.
Rule W97 - Users will throw away important stuff because they think it's not important.