I'm sure we have all made mistakes. Here are two old ones that stick out in my mind. Feel free to add your own stories.
1. I had purchased a dozen very expensive SCSI HD's for a customer build. I unpacked them and placed them on a card table where I promptly kicked out a leg and watched them all fall onto a concrete floor. Boy was I unhappy. Couldn't return them (My fault) and they were universally dead. I just had to eat the $25,000 loss and reorder the HD's.
2. I was hired to change the file structure of a flat-file database for a collection agency. To make it convenient, I made a copy of the database with no data then I transferred it home. Next day I went back and copied the modified empty file back replacing the active database. I knew I had made a major mistake the instant I hit enter. The only thing that saved this from being a major disaster was that I had made a full backup the previous day so all they really lost was one days worth of work which could be updated from paper records. The company did not have any other backups ...
1. I had purchased a dozen very expensive SCSI HD's for a customer build. I unpacked them and placed them on a card table where I promptly kicked out a leg and watched them all fall onto a concrete floor. Boy was I unhappy. Couldn't return them (My fault) and they were universally dead. I just had to eat the $25,000 loss and reorder the HD's.
2. I was hired to change the file structure of a flat-file database for a collection agency. To make it convenient, I made a copy of the database with no data then I transferred it home. Next day I went back and copied the modified empty file back replacing the active database. I knew I had made a major mistake the instant I hit enter. The only thing that saved this from being a major disaster was that I had made a full backup the previous day so all they really lost was one days worth of work which could be updated from paper records. The company did not have any other backups ...