Security

Quirky QWERTY killed a password in Paris

Quelle tragédie – techie had to visit the city of lights twice to sort this one out


On Call Hard-coded into The Register's week is that each Friday morning you’ll find a new instalment of On Call, our reader contributed tales of tech support troubles.

Techie wasn't being paid, until he taught HR a lesson

READ MORE

As this is such an instalment, meet a reader we shall Regomize as "Reynold" who once worked for a small Luxembourg-based company that refurbished laboratory equipment and then resold it.

One of Reynold's customers was a Paris-based research institute that bought some kit and accompanying software that would only run on a specific Dell computer. The software was also peculiar in that it had a hard-coded password.

And we all know how dangerous they can be!

Reynold drew the short straw and drove to Paris to install the rig and train users. After a few days the client agreed everything worked, and everyone was happy.

Then a few weeks later, they weren't happy. "The client called because they were unable to log in into the management software anymore."

Reynold remoted into the machine, but was unable to find a fix.

The client was sufficiently important that Reynold had to go to Paris – again.

"It took me about five seconds to realize that the client had changed the QWERTY keyboard that I installed for a French AZERTY keyboard."

A what? In French, a language that uses many áccènts (these are for effect), typists are more efficient with an AZERTY keyboard than a QWERTY configuration. The AZERTY layout is therefore found in France, Belgium, and other French-speaking nations.

But the software Reynold installed was unaware of this French connection.

"The password was deeply hard coded in the software, linked to the actual keys and not to the letters of the password," Reynold explained. "After inviting the client to either revert to using a QWERTY keyboard, or type 'pqsszord' instead of 'password,' everything worked again, and it was au revoir time."

Have cultural quirks ever caused you tech troubles? If so, click here to send an email to On Call and we may feature your story on some future Vendredi. ®

Send us news
281 Comments

Techie wasn't being paid, until he taught HR a lesson

It's one thing to have a twin – quite another to have an EVIL twin

The ZX81 finally gets the keyboard it deserves

Chap posts free specs for posh build with Cherry MX switches

False negative stretched routine software installation into four days of frustration

You’d think vendors would know when their products are working – not this one

Boss put project on progress bar timeline: three months … four … actually NOW!

Change approval board signed off as soon as it heard it was BT's fault

Cunningly camouflaged cable routed around WAN-sized hole in project budget

Leaf and spine networks aren't the only way to make a connection with nature

That old box of tech junk you should probably throw out saves a warehouse

When all seemed lost, here comes the Sun … workstation

Cheapest, oldest, slowest part fixed very modern Mac

Making different generations of tech work in harmony sometimes requires a strange dance

Is there anything tape can’t fix? This techie used it to defeat the Sun

In cloudy Yorkshire, a ray of light can become the enemy

Datacenter fire suppression system wasn't tested for years, then BOOM

Jumping Jack had a gas, gas, gas when his wires crossed at the worst moment

The end of Microsoft-brand peripherals is only Surface deep

Redmond ditches own line of mice, keyboards, webcams

Shocks from a hairy jumper crashed a PC, but the boss wouldn't believe it

As bizarre tales of tech support go, this may be the GOAT

GlobalFoundries, STMicro snag €7.4B in EU money for French fab project

Joint site to produce low-power chips