"Do Not Eat iPod Shuffle": 30 Dumb Warning Labels 143
jfruhlinger writes "You'd think that people would know electronic equipment isn't for eating, but apparently you'd be wrong. Find out what dumb things companies felt compelled to warn their customers not to do in this list compiled by JR Raphael. Some of the best include: Don't throw your mouse at a co-worker, do not attempt to stop with hands or genitals, and do not put lit candles on phone."
Label works (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Label works (Score:5, Insightful)
Just goes to show you what Apple thinks about our intelligence: us dumb Americans would actually swallow the iPod, whereas the rest of the world is much smarter and would only munch on it.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
He should have eschewed the Shuffle, then.
Re: (Score:2)
Chewing on an iPod touch isn't so far-fetched. Some people have the habit of absent-mindedly putting small stuff they're carrying into their mouth.
How many pencils have you seen with teeth marks all over them? I suppose in ancient times these folks would walk around with twig in their mouth, but you can see their modern counterparts chewing all kinds of random stuff: writing instruments, notebooks, fingernails and so on. I've seen people absent-mindedly chewing the end of their hair. Would it be so far-f
Re: (Score:2)
Chewing on an iPod touch isn't so far-fetched. Some people have the habit of absent-mindedly putting small stuff they're carrying into their mouth.
Never mind that, I used to work with a guy who regularly used to stick things in his ears.
Re: (Score:2)
It has got nothing to do with how smart or dumb Apple thinks people are, and has got everything to do with the legal system. Most of the US and the UK fall under Common Law where judges interpret laws and contracts to the letter. If something isn't written in the contract then it isn't there. This in contrast to Civil Law countries where judges interpret laws and contracts according to their spirit. If something isn't written in the contract then the judge can still make a decision based on what is reasonab
Re: (Score:2)
I was going to comment that you are looking slim and very healthy the other day, but you were busy on the phone. Kudos to the new iPod Shuffle free diet! Jumping high five!
Re: (Score:1)
When I first saw the story and your comment, I read it as iPod Souffle.
I dropped one in coffee once (Score:2)
It was not on purpose, and it was really annoying, especially since the iPod Shuffle is a no-user-serviceable-parts design. Once it dried out and I got the switch unstuck, I found that the electronics were mostly ok, but the battery or its charging system was toast, so it only works when plugged into a USB power source. Since then I've mostly used it as a memory stick, but 1GB is becoming less useful than it used to be.
Re: (Score:2)
If it's not that useful to you, try soaking it in distilled water then re-drying. That might kill it completely or it might fix it.
Re: (Score:1)
That is a bad thing. It prevents natural selection.
I personally don't want someone even close to me, who would eat a electronics device otherwise! Would you?
I say: ( http://bash.org/?4753 [bash.org] )
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
That is a bad thing. It prevents natural selection.
I personally don't want someone even close to me, who would eat a electronics device otherwise! Would you?
Never mind the iPod nibbler, I don't want to be near the guy who tries to stop a chainsaw with his genitals...
Re: (Score:1)
Pregnancy test? (Score:2)
I haven't eaten a single iPod Shuffle
Have you ever peed on it? [youtube.com]
Re: (Score:1)
the shuffle is not actually gum (Score:2, Informative)
hrmph- i remember those ads. They showed the shuffle next to a pack of gum. The "warning" was a joke.
whoosh.
Ob. AppleGeeks (Score:2)
AppleGeeks 170: Do Not Eat [applegeeks.com]
LED candles (Score:2)
It's all about the Pentiums baby (Score:1)
Seen on materials for a Pentium processing chip: "If this product exhibits errors, the manufacturer will replace it for a $2-shipping and a $3-handling charge, for a total of $4.97."
calculated on a P5 most likely
External Use Only (Score:1)
I've often marveled at the number of things which come with the warning "For External Use Only". I've seen it posted on things ranging from sunblock to various topical creams. Though I never have, I hope to see it on a box of ear plugs. That would quickly make it to the top of the list of dumb labels.
Re: (Score:2)
I have seen earplugs with a warning not to eat them.
Re: (Score:2)
I have seen 9mm ammo with a "DO NOT EAT" warning on the box.
Seen in the manual for a T-Mobile G2 smartphone: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
We at T-Mobile would like to apologize for accidentally giving you the wrong phone. We sent you the "G2 smartass phone" instead of the "G2 smartphone".
Harbor Freight (Score:2)
Everything you buy from Harbor Freight has the same boilerplate on it:
"Always wear ANSI approved safety goggles etc etc"
I found the warning on an apple slicer [hfreviews.com], and all kinds of other silly things.
I BROKE IT (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Dremel manual is a goldmine (Score:2)
I saw only one quote from the Dremel manual, and it's probably the least ridiculous one.
The 30 Labels - because clickthroughs be damned. (Score:5, Informative)
If you would like the full article and marginally funny commentary, feel free to click through to the article.
For just the 30 labels:
anon - because karma be damned, too.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Okay, some of these are funny, just because they are so absurd.
Where I have trouble is in the realization that there are far too many of the pointless labels, which are generally ignored. So people get in the habit of ignoring ALL labels, even the important ones.
Thats when it gets dangerous.
Re:The 30 Labels - because clickthroughs be damned (Score:4, Interesting)
There is exactly zero chance of that being an actual warning label.
OK, maybe .00003 chance.
Re: (Score:2)
Seen on a New Holland tractor: "Avoid death."
Pretty sure a tractor is one of the best ways to kill death if you don't have a potion.
the Duke's got other ideas (Score:1)
Seen on chainsaw: Do not attempt to stop chain with your hands or genitals.
But I've got balls of steel.
The Shuffle warning was JOKE (Score:4, Interesting)
See here. [archive.org] The page (the article only shows a bit of it in the screenshot) said "iPod shuffle: Smaller than a pack of gum and much more fun.* ". The "warning" was a joke.
* actually, it was a [2] footnote, but Slashdot doesn't allow <sup> tags.
Re: (Score:2)
What's really funny is that the first page for the Mac mini [archive.org] showed a bunch of them in a stack next to a PC (animated .gif that grows and shrinks) but the instructions that came with the Mini said "do not put things on top of the Mini" so they quickly took down that graphic.
Re: (Score:2)
Most of These Have to Be Jokes (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
In the case of the iPod, the joke was part of the marketing. They compared it to a packet of gum, to impress you with how small it was. Nobody expected you to try to eat it; the fake warning was a bit of humor.
I have no idea how many of the others are jokes, or how many of them have other stories that make them less than they might appear. I do know that the authors of the article didn't try to find out.
Re: (Score:2)
Lawsuit (Score:1)
You realize that there is probably a story behind each of the warning labels. And an expensive lawsuit.
Re: (Score:2)
Probably not.
Ring ring ring (Score:5, Interesting)
"Warning! Disconnect telephone lines before opening!"
As someone who was once zapped when removing a PCI modem, I can understand this one. Phone lines carry a moderate DC voltage, plus a higher AC voltage when ringing. It is a good idea to disconnect those lines before handling the circuit boards they connect to. It wouldn't be lethal, but it's unpleasant and could cause you to yank your hand away suddenly (right into a pointy heat-sink or razor-sharp edge of sheet metal).
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
5 VDC on the hook
40 VDC while talking
90 VDC while ringing
the last 2 can kill you.
Telephone power (Score:2)
Talk battery is nominally -48 VDC, on hook or off. It usually measures a bit lower in practice, due to line losses and the like. It really is a battery, for POTS: Telco COs run everything off batteries, and the phones are powered from them, more-or-less directly.
Ring voltage is AC, not DC. 90 VAC, 20 Hz.
At least, that's what the numbers are in the US. Prolly some other countries are different, I'm guessing.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
My Mac SE/30 hada tip broken off the tube, so it only displayed on it's huge 19" external monitor. And it had a cooling problem, so it usually had the castoff. And finally,the eject tab on the floppy had to be bent a little more every few months.
Since the cover was off, and the display didn't work anyway, so the socket was off the back of the tube. I needed the disk out, and since the socket was off, I reached in . . . yipped in pain . . . and a second later, people were coming into my office, where I wa
Re: (Score:2)
Thank you for explaining that. That was the only one I didn't understand, so I figured it must have been part of a marketing campaign that I'd never seen.
And they warn in 50 languages.. (Score:2)
EN: Wash, Rinse, Repeat.
ES: Tu gato tiene una piruleta apestoso.
FR: Aprenda a leer las instrucciones de shampoo en Inglés!
Re: (Score:2)
CZ: Jag ser vad du gjorde dÃr.
pics or it didn't happen (Score:1)
Whoosh (Score:1)
I think somebody's missed the joke. 30 times.
My personal favorite (Score:2)
Early on when we were becoming a litigious society (mid 80's) my dad purchased a new fan belt for his car. It didn't have a warning but instruction #1 was:
"Shut off engine before removing old belt"
Given the time it may have been an early C.Y.A. thing or maybe someone lost a few fingers.
Another personal favorite one I have seen a few times, most recently in the instruction manual for my Lawn Boy mower I bought last year:
"Do not use mower to trim hedges"
Re: (Score:1)
The iron one is common (Score:1)
I like to think that the instruction writer who wrote these instructions fought for that addendum and insisted that if they have to treat some customers as idiots, at least assume some of them have a sense of humour.
Last gen's iPod Shuffle was almost edible (Score:2)
Considering it had no buttons and was just a metal stick, I could see how someone might eat it. I wonder if that iPod Shuffle actually carried the warning for real. (I suspect it's small enough to actually be eaten without much difficulty.)
And yes, I know it referred to the first iPod Shuffle.
Beagle Bros Disk Care Warnings (Score:2)
My favorite warnings were on the dust jacket of 5.25" floppy disks from Beagle Bros, as seen here http://stevenf.com/beagle/diskcare.html [stevenf.com]
Best Software Company Ever!
I don't get it (Score:1)
Seen on a Samsung 3D TV disclaimer: "Pregnant women, the elderly, sufferers of serious medical conditions, those who are sleep deprived or under the influence of alcohol should avoid utilizing the unit's 3D functionality."
It seems legitimate to me. Did anyone think this one was funny?
I Have an Electric Shaver (Score:2)
I wish I'd been able to see the lawsuit that drove THAT warning. Though really, it would be fitting for very nearly every device that I own...
Re: (Score:2)
An ex used a waterproof shaver with the blades removed and a piece of silk folded over the end as an entertainment device. That is probably a good warning.
Evil solution (Score:1)
Worst. Article. Ever. (Score:1)
The article is really fucking stupid.
Some of the "Warnings" were clearly jokes ("Be careful of bad language on this mobile phone, because a partner’s feeling is going to be bad."), others seemed silly but are something that people actually do, ALOT ("Do not use for drying pets."(Regarding microwaves)). Some were just lies or taken completely out of context, like "Seen on a Boeing 757 plane: "Fragile. Do not drop." and "Seen on a New Holland tractor: "Avoid death.""
"Seen on a washing machine: "DO NOT
Re: (Score:2)
The Streisand Warning Label (Score:2)
The manufacturer of a popular motorscooter placed a graphic on the inside of the compartment under the seat (where riders typically store their helmets) which depicted a cat with the universal "no" symbol. Henceforth this compartment has come to be known among scooterists as "the pet carrier".
They are funny to read, but ... (Score:1)
These are a bit much like toothpick instructions (Score:1)
welcome outside
Wonko the Sane
Hmmm. (Score:1)
What's REALLY scary, is that each one of these usually indicated that there was some litigation somewhere along the line regarding incidents such as these...
Epic (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, some of these are really "top brilliant tech writer jokes". The SGI mouse warning was obviously a joke (and funnier than the author's lame comment about it). Same with the TV antenna (which I think was my personal favorite).
As far as the 3D TV... reminds me of a subtly different message/grammatical error I saw on an LG TV:
"Prevent women, the elderly, children, or sufferers of serious medical conditions should not use the 3D functions of this device."
Healthy young men, only, please!
Re:That was a joke... (Score:5, Insightful)
Do not look into laser with remaining eye is such an obvious joke that I really, really feel bad for the author. Someone replaced his sense of humor with Folgers and he still hasn’t noticed.
Re: (Score:3)
I thought it was a refrence to the fact that the original shuffle was the size of a pack of gum.
Re: (Score:2)
i thought you were just idly guessing until I googled around and saw that Apple in an advert for the Mini which had a pair of hands in it said, "Keyboard, mouse, megaphone and display sold separately." and "Keyboard, iPod mini, dock, hands, AirPort, Bluetooth and PC sold separately." [macrumors.com]
so yeah. Apple has a sense of humor.
I'm calling BS on this list (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe next week we can get a list of 30 Dumb Slashdot Articles.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
>>Lots of these are jokes, and I'd like to see some evidence that they ever actually appeared in manuals.
No, our world really is that stupid.
When I was at the gym, I noticed that there is a warning label on the bench (the bench!) saying that people should consult with their doctor before using it.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
I saw one of those labels on a dessicant inside a computer I was building that said "do not eat". Two weeks later I was hospitalized for malnutrition! "No, doctor, I'm not anorexic, I was just following the directions on the warning label!"
Re: (Score:2)
When I was a little kid I was confused about the meaning of "don't drink and drive" as seen in TV ads. I drank orange juice before driving my Power Wheels jeep all the time, was I doing something wrong!? O_O
Also, this is so bizarre that it perplexes me to this day, but I remember watching some safety cartoon (I think it was at school?) that showed kids in dangerous situations, and then indicated that you shouldn't do them by showing a big lightning bolt through the picture. The usual obvious stuff, don't cr
Re: (Score:2)
I've been parked in front of this "DO NOT PASS" road sign for almost 3 weeks now...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Yeah, good point, every single business, which actually has to earn a profit rather than spit out cheap talk, and which has extensively analyzed court precedent and consulted with lawyers, is just being completely stupid and enjoys having to water down real warnings with tons fake ones.
It's can't possibly have anything to do with the non-trivial risk of dumb-shit juries, charming lawyers, or a court system that tolerates them. It's good we have you around to save everyone the problem of actually *looking*
Re: (Score:2)
I world with lawyers. As a rule, they will take the most safest and conservative way. If you said "Do you think we shoudl put a do not eat on this item?" they would say yes, not matter what it is.
Also, management will put warning stickers/signs that they think they might need, as well consultants, and so on
Your fallacy is that you think corporation are all group think like minded pursuit to complete optimization and efficiency. They are not.
The 'litigation society' is pretty much bullshit.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
You may want to try blocking everything from Idle then as that is what Idle is...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Yes, but the warning doesn't say what you're opening (opening a laptop usually refers to tipping up the display) and the warning is something you'd see before connecting a phone line to the laptop... this one actually made me laugh the first time I saw it on Vaio packaging (it would make sense in the dis-assembly part of the manual).
Re: (Score:3)
Actually, I suspect lots of these are snuck into the manuals by tech support staff as jokes.
True some probably did happen, and they couldn't resist putting them in there.
Not all are dumb, suggesting the author's experience from the actual field work, such as:
Seen on materials for a Sony Vaio computer: "Warning! Disconnect telephone lines before opening!"
There is 100 volts pulsed DC on a telephone ring signal, and if you are pawing around inside your computer
connected to a dial up modem when someone calls you it can lead to expletives and the possibility that
your co-workers will spill hot coffee while l
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
The best of the genre in TFA was:
"Seen on materials for a Pentium processing chip: 'If this product exhibits errors, the manufacturer will replace it for a $2-shipping and a $3-handling charge, for a total of $4.97.' "
Re: (Score:1)
Actually, I suspect lots of these are snuck into the manuals by tech support staff as jokes.
Yes, it's quite obvious that they're jokes when you look up the original sources. For example, the article only quotes the first warning of the following:
http://www.antennasdirect.com/cmss_files/attachmentlibrary/pdf/generic_instructions.pdf [antennasdirect.com]
Do not taunt Happy First Poster (Score:3)
Discontinue use of Happy First Poster if any of the following occurs: