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[personal profile] akirlu
I didn't realize the full scale of the annoyance I'd brought on my own head when I decided to change my last name upon marrying. It's a stealth thing, really. Because I figured, how hard could it be to spell "O'Brien"? Plenty hard, apparently. Hal periodically gets exercised about this.

For ordinary humans, the confusion lies in the final vowel -- often as not they misspell it as "O'Brian". For programmer humans the problem lies with the apostrophe. It seems that a great many programmer humans were not imaginative enough to recognize that apostrophes are needful and legitimate characters to include in database fields. Or too lazy to test the utility of their fields against outlier cases.

Programmer humans who work for credit card companies are evidently particularly unimaginative, and so only about half of the cards in my wallet actually contain a correct-down-to-the-apostrophe spelling of my last name. The rest don't have an apostrophe available. Compound that with the fact that credit cards spell out your name in all-caps on the card, and have different protocols for re-mixing the cases, and you find that one of my cards thinks my last name is "Obrien" while another thinks it is "OBrien". *sigh* But for the purposes of credit cards, I am grown reconciled to living with a state of error.

For the purposes of my real name, or rather my "Real Name", though, I would rather have my apostrophe. Regular Amazon.com users may be getting an inkling of where this is going.

See, I had decided I wanted to add a "Real Name" certification to my Amazon profile for purposes of reviewing. Which took a deal of fiddling to figure out how to do, because I am apparently not the demographic for which the Amazon user interface was designed. But once I sorted out how to get to the setting, I had a new joy in store for me. Amazon validates your "Real Name" by what is on the credit cards you have on file with them. And, for some reason, they only validate against a subset of the cards you have on file with them. And with unerring accuracy, the only two cards they offered me to validate against were cards that had no apostrophe. Naturally, since they're "certifying" the realness of my "Real Name", they won't let me edit my choices. So I have the option of affirming that my "Real Name" is either "OBrien" or "Obrien".

Fuck no. I realize I'm a bonehead. Nonetheless, I won't do it. Instead, I took the option of taking a "pen name" instead. My "pen name" is O'Brien.

Thus we see the real power of the pen.

Date: 2008-05-21 09:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chiefwirehead.livejournal.com
Care to guess how many legitimate spellings of "Allen" there are?

Of course, none of them have apostrophes (as far as I know, anyway). Or intermediate capitalization.

Date: 2008-05-21 09:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] athenais.livejournal.com
I noticed early on in John's and my relationship that people had a lot of trouble spelling as well as pronouncing his last name, "Bartelt," whereas they always get mine, "Huntzinger," right. So even had I been interested in swapping my surname for John's I would have thought long and hard about how much I wanted to spend the rest of my life saying, "No, not Bartlett."

Of course, if he'd been named, I dunno, Plantagenet, I might have been willing to put up with the inconvenience. But I'm sure Amazon.com would have thought my Real Name was Plant Agent or something.
Edited Date: 2008-05-21 09:50 pm (UTC)

Date: 2008-05-21 09:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalimac.livejournal.com
Peculiar that it should be often rendered O'Brian, because I've always thought of O'Brien as the default spelling, and have to remember that the famous sea-stories author spells it differently.

There are of course plenty of other names that begin O', so apostrophe trouble is presumably not rare. Kudos to alphebetizing programs that know to ignore the apostrophe.

Date: 2008-05-21 10:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] maryread.livejournal.com
I have never actually changed my name upon marriage, and it astounds me what a hassle such a supposedly traditional procedure presents. (Rite of passage anyone?) So we always order out under the name of Adams, which happens to be my mom's second husband's name, and mine, kinda random! and is marginally easier for the Thai restaurant to spell than our official norske S-u-n-D-as-in-Dog-B-as-in-Boy-Y (otherwise rendered Sunday or Sundy).

Nonetheless my son has the same name as dozens of other people on Facebook. We gave him a Mc-middle family name so he can distinguish himself from the rest when he wants. No worries there, altho I suppose he could fuss about the space/ no space and the second capital letter, but it's so badly misspelled from the Scots as to be unrecognizable in ye olde countrie anyway. McKaskle = McCaskle and that ilk = McAsgill. Vikings! Arrr!

Date: 2008-05-22 01:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dd-b.livejournal.com
My experience with my name has actually gotten rather *better* in the computer era. My expectations are higher, so it might not have changed my level of annoyance much. But these days I can quite routinely count on finding it filed under "D"; before, it was pretty much a tossup between "D" and "B".

And have you noticed how hard it is to find a way to actually complain to the web site managers about such things?

Date: 2008-05-22 01:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dd-b.livejournal.com
Oh, and I should have mentioned -- my most insulting theory about this is it's a result of their using the COBOL "IF ALPHABETIC" test to validate the name field.

Date: 2008-05-22 02:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] don-fitch.livejournal.com
You haven't mentioned the potential problem some people have been discussing recently -- airline check-in and/or national entry may be delayed or refused if there is some descrepancy in the spelling between the name in which it was purchased, the name on the credit card used, and the photo-IDs presented. Good Luck to those who travel under such fiendishly-complicated names.

Date: 2008-05-22 03:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mjlayman.livejournal.com
I don't have apostrophes and all my cards and government stuff is right. What bothers me are the websites I buy from that don't offer a space for a middle initial. My name looks wounded without the J.

Date: 2008-05-22 06:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dd-b.livejournal.com
Oh, and jumping back to the original article title -- NO! Lazy programmers are what you *want*; what we're complaining about here is programmers who went to *extra effort* to exclude our names. That's not lazy, that's overly-energetic, and terribly ignorant.

Date: 2008-05-23 04:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] apostle-of-eris.livejournal.com
I took to spelling my last name out before pronouncing it, "R-e-s-t, Rest."
One of the current jokes is, "I used to say it was the shortest name people could get wrong, until someone Chinese [with a three-letter surname] corrected me."

Family joke: My mother's maiden name was Rosenberg, and when my parents got married, she said now people could spell her name. On their honeymoon, a bundle of laundry came back with "Rest" carefully crossed out and "West? Best?" written in.

March 2022

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