Thank you
@Cptnchia for getting what I was driving at.
Was my horse analogy that hard to follow? It basically stated the story exactly as it happened, and attempted to explain a big reason as to why the ensuing result ended up with some people flipping out on the FB page.
"Horse. Water. Thirsty horse."
To use that horse analogy, in this case it was 5,000 thirsty horses and the water you led them
5,000 pilot applicants sat ready at exactly the opening time of the slot lottery system.
to was only enough for 600 horses, and they drank it all in less than 2 minutes. You're gonna have 4,400 horses who had no water.
Only enough slots for 600 pilots, and they all filled in less than 2 minutes. 5,400 pilots have nothing. But so far, that's just fine. Because that was the deal they provided. 600 slots this day.
Now here comes the problem:
And seemingly, quite a few horses got their tongue into what they thought was water, but it was actually a mirage. (Signed in on time, as soon as it was open picked open slot, then got error message).
There are many definitions of a mirage, but the one I was going for was the definition of the appearance of water over a sand-like surface or pavement type surface when you look at it from a distance (radiance of heat thing), gives a full appearance of water. But it's not water, and you won't get water.
Now this is a legitimate problem. Many sat there, ready, and clicked a slot that was available. So filled everything out, hit submit, and it should have been a done deal. To them, that looked just like water. When they get the error message, they realize that wasn't water, it was just a mirage - the appearance of water, and they thought they had obtained a slot whereas in reality they didn't.
Most are smart enough to keep it to themselves,
Many people in this boat. They sucked it up and kept to themselves. Many also politely wrote on Delta's FB about this event happening when they selected a slot, it was available, but then they got the error message. It sent them out, they re-entered, picked another slot that showed available, and then it was sold out, error message.
but a few are gonna horse around.
My point finishing up is "a few are going to horse around." Meaning, a guy like David *most likely* did try to get a slot this day, in all likeliness sat there at exactly :30 past the hour ready to click and get a slot, probably did get an open slot, fills the info out, and by the time the confirmation page is suppose to come up, he ends up with an error message and has to start over. He does, picks another time slot that's available, and same error message again because it filled up. He enters a 3rd time, and all slots are gone. So now at this some point, some horses have had it, and they are gonna horse around, as in show their displeasure directly to the place they were to gain entrance.
I've already prefaced the entire story by saying that this is wrong, that an applicant shouldn't shoot themselves in a post and basically trash talk against their potential employer on facebook/social media. I'm simply just trying to say "hey, this is probably why this applicant did this...."
It's just like what
@jtrain609 said above. People are doing what they are told to do in order to get positive results and/or an interview shot. But in MANY cases people end up finding the field goal posts keep moving.