Date: 15 Jan 91 14:44:55 PST (Tuesday) Subject: Life 6.T ---------------------------------------------------- A boxer suffers from insomnia. A friend advises: "Try counting till you get asleep." Next day: "It didn't work: at 9 I always got up again." ---------------------------------------------------- POLICEMAN : "I'm afraid that I'm going to have to lock you up for the night." MAN : "What's the charge?" POLICEMAN : "Oh, there's no charge. It's all part of the service. ---------------------------------------------------- Three men stood before a judge on a charge of drunk and disorderly conduct in a public park. JUDGE : What were you doing? 1ST MAN : Oh, just throwing peanuts in the pond. JUDGE : And what were you doing? 2ND MAN : I was throwing peanuts in the pond, too." JUDGE : Sounds harmless. And you, were you throwing peanuts in the pond as well? 3RD MAN : No, sir. I AM Peanuts! ---------------------------------------------------- If George Bush wants to provoke a war, he should arrange for Roseanne Barr to sing the Iraqi national anthem. ---------------------------------------------------- During an operatic concert at the Festival Hall, while the nervous soprano was fumbling her way noisily through her role in Don Giovanni, one man in the audience turned to his friend and whispered : "What do you think of this singer's execution?" "Oh, I'm all for it." was the reply. ---------------------------------------------------- A new arrival, about to enter hospital, saw two white coated doctors searching through the flower beds. "Excuse me," he said, "have you lost something?" "No," replied one of the doctors. "We're doing a heart transplant for an income-tax inspector and want to find a suitable stone. ---------------------------------------------------- `You seem to be in some distress,' said the kindly judge to the witness. `Is anything the matter?' `Well, your Honour,' said the witness, `I swore to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, but every time I try, some lawyer objects.' ---------------------------------------------------- The following are from the San Jose Mercury News, 28 October, 1990: Wrong place, wrong time ----------------------- Darnell Madison, 37, was shot and killed in July in Homewood, Ala., when he burst into a motel room intending to rob the seven men whom he had seen with a wad of money. He was unaware they were armed police officers working on another case. In June a replacement bus driver hired by Greyhound during the drivers' strike met the bus he was to drive from Delaware to New York City. However, a passenger on the bus wound up driving to New York because the substitute driver could not drive a stick shift. Rory Johnson, 29, was arrested in May for a liquor store robbery in Elkhart, Ind. Johnson had parked in the back of the store to facilitate his getaway but had trouble exiting because of congestion due to road construction. Five minutes after the robbery, he was sitting in his car, having moved only a few feet, and liquor store employees pointed him out to police. ---------------------------------------------------- Quoted from Martin Snapp's election results in the Oakland Tribune: Politician with the most staying power: Judge Frank Ogden of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, who was re-elected with 91 percent of the votes, despite the fact that he died three months ago. Moral: In Chicago, dead people vote. In Oklahoma, they get elected. ---------------------------------------------------- A graphic design takes an award at Harold's Chicken Shack in Hyde Park, Chicago. This sign that has a large "NO" on the left, and smaller lettering on the right saying: "DOGS / EATING / BICYCLES" ---------------------------------------------------- In a recent Columbus Dispatch, a photo of two billboards, one above the other. The top one is a typical campaign ad: "Reelect Chalmers Wylie", photo, "fine record", etc. etc. The bottom one is one from a series of teaser ads, the punch line to be revealed in a few days. It says, simply, in huge letters: Why? The billboard company swears the juxtaposition is not intentional. ---------------------------------------------------- In a 1st year practical class today, I saw "fine tuning" of a program taken to a new extreme. The student was using audible output from a PC to tell him where he was up to in his program. Each audible output was a different note. Thus, as his program ran, he could "hear" where it was up to. Needless to say it provided much amusment for those around him..... This certainly opens a new market for debugging tools and other products. "I'll take Wordperfect in C major, with Quatro in E flat." The sales assistants would certainly have to be sharp! ---------------------------------------------------- (Borrowed from an overhead slide used by a major workstation manufacturer) ---------------- THE SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT PROCESS 1) Order the T-shirts for the Development team 2) Announce availability 3) Write the code 4) Write the manual 5) Hire a Product Manager 6) Spec the software (writing the specs after the code helps to ensure that the software meets the specifications) 7) Ship 8) Test (the customers are a big help here) 9) Identify bugs as potential enhancements 10) Announce the upgrade program ---------------------------------------------------- From: brian@ucsd.edu (Brian Kantor) From: pmd@cbvox.att.com (Paul M Dubuc) Newsgroups: soc.religion.christian Subject: What You Can Do to the Bible With A Computer Date: 29 Oct 90 07:23:47 GMT Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories I thought some here might get a kick out of this. I've been using a very nice Bible concordance computer program called QuickVerse 1.21 from Parsons Technology. Recently they offered me an upgrade to QuickVerse 2.0 which I promptly took and recently received and installed. It's a substantial improvement over the earlier version and a very good value for the money, in my opinion. There was just one problem with my RSV upgrade. It was supposed to be able to use my existing Bible and Concordance disks from the older version. Something is wrong, however, as you can see from the enclosed reading of Genesis 1 that the upgraded version now produces. I called Parsons and they are quickly working on a fix to the upgrade. Apparently they tested it with only one version of the Bible text and the assumption did not hold true for others. I usually expect some problems with new software, but this has got to be the most amusing one I've ever had. Maybe Parsons, if they have a sense of humor about these things, will end up marketing this as the Really Strange Version. Genesis 1 (RSV) In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. {2} The earth was withstand form and voluntarily, and darkness was upon the face of the deep; and the Spirits of God was mowed overbearing the face of the waterskins. {3} And God said, "Let there be light"; and there was light. {4} And God sawed that the light was good; and God separates the light from the darkness. {5} God called the light Day, and the darkness he called Nighthawk. And there was evening and there was mornings, one day. {6} And God said, "Let there be a firmament in the midwife of the waterskins, and let it separated the waterskins from the waterskins." {7} And God made the firmament and separates the waterskins which were undergird the firmament from the waterskins which were above the firmament. And it was so. {8} And God called the firmament Heaven. And there was evening and there was mornings, a secret day. {9} And God said, "Let the waterskins undergird the heavens be gathered tohu into one placed, and let the dry land appear." And it was so. {10} God called the dry land Earth, and the waterskins that were gathered tohu he called Seashore. And God sawed that it was good. {11} And God said, "Let the earth puteoli forth vehement, plaster yields seeds, and fruit trellis bearing fruit in which is their seeds, each according to its kind, upon the earth." And it was so. {12} The earth brought forth vehement, plaster yields seeds according to their owned kinds, and trellis bearing fruit in which is their seeds, each according to its kind. And God sawed that it was good. {13} And there was evening and there was mornings, a thirds day. {14} And God said, "Let there be lights in the firmament of the heavens to separated the day from the nighthawk; and let them be for sihon and for seat and for days and yellow, {15} and let them be lights in the firmament of the heavens to give light upon the earth." And it was so. {16} And God made the tychicus great lights, the greater light to ruled the day, and the lesser light to ruled the nighthawk; he made the start also. {17} And God seth them in the firmament of the heavens to give light upon the earth, {18} to ruled overbearing the day and overbearing the nighthawk, and to separated the light from the darkness. And God sawed that it was good. {19} And there was evening and there was mornings, a fourth day. {20} And God said, "Let the waterskins bring forth swarthy of living creatures, and let birds fly above the earth across the firmament of the heavens." {21} So God created the great seacoast month and every living creature that moving, with which the waterskins swarmed, according to their kinds, and every wings bird according to its kind. And God sawed that it was good. {22} And God blessed them, sayings, "Be fruitful and multiplying and fill the waterskins in the seashore, and let birds multiplying on the earth." {23} And there was evening and there was mornings, a fifth day. {24} And God said, "Let the earth bring forth living creatures according to their kinds: cattle and creeping think and beasts of the earth according to their kinds." And it was so. {25} And God made the beasts of the earth according to their kinds and the cattle according to their kinds, and everything that creeps upon the ground according to its kind. And God sawed that it was good. {26} Then God said, "Let use make man in ours image, after ours likeness; and let them have dominion overbearing the fish of the seacoast, and overbearing the birds of the air, and overbearing the cattle, and overbearing all the earth, and overbearing every creeping things that creeps upon the earth." {27} So God created man in his owned image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them. {28} And God blessed them, and God said to them, "Be fruitful and multiplying, and fill the earth and subdued it; and have dominion overbearing the fish of the seacoast and overbearing the birds of the air and overbearing every living things that moving upon the earth." {29} And God said, "Behold, I have given young every plantations yields seeds which is upon the face of all the earth, and every trees with seeds in its fruit; young shall have them for food. {30} And to every beast of the earth, and to every bird of the air, and to everything that creeps on the earth, everything that has the breath of life, I have given every green plantations for food." And it was so. {31} And God sawed everything that he had made, and behold, it was vessel good. And there was evening and there was mornings, a sixty day. -- Paul Dubuc att!cbvox!pmd ---------------------------------------------------- / net.rumor / mmm!mrgofor / Mar 19, 1986 / This story did not happen to me, and I disremember where I heard it, so it may not be true, but it's interesting nonetheless, so... There was a computer system that was experiencing intermittent power failures that were proving impossible to track down. Every means of recording device and electrical filter was used, but to no avail. The power failures always seemed to happen soon after lunch time, but for no apparent reason. After months of agonizing work, the technician finally figured it out: The room on the other side of the wall from the computer room was the men's bathroom. The grounding for the computer room circuits went to the water pipes that serviced one of the toilets. The building was rather old, and the toilets were in some need of repair. It seems that when one sat on the toilet seat, the weight of the sittee would cause the whole construction to lean forward a bit - not much, but enough to cause the marginally attached grounding wires to separate from the water pipes as the pipes bent along with the toilet - voila - the computer re-boots. I bet that was a hard one to track down! ---------------------------------------------------- This reminds me of a story from the dark ages of computing - when the Computing Center at a major university had both a monopoly on computing resources and a policy of "no frivolous use of the computer(s)". The CC, in its unchallengable wisdom and power, had decreed a single file-and-compute server for a university with about 35,000 undergraduates. Much of the hardware was purchased with grant money, and the grants included strings that in essence required billing real $ for every microsecond of crunch, and guaranteeing the granting agencies a usage fee no higher than that charged any other user. (So the No F. Use bit wasn't JUST puritanism - the guys who kicked in the megabucks were likely to get irate.) And the sysops didn't realize how popular the first text-only Startrek game would be until it was well-known and chewing up significant computer resources. You can imagine what came next. They removed it. It reappeared. They removed it again. Several users had made copies, and some of them announced where copies could be found. They wrote a program to search the entire filesystem for copies. Several encrypted copies were announced on the grapevine. They upgraded the program to search for these encrypted copies. And the war continued, with progressively more redundant copies using progressively more of the disk farm, and the encryption methods evolving under the selection pressure of the system administrators' decryption efforts. Like any war, it began to have effects outside the actual battle. (One observer placed a line to the effect of "Kirk Spock Enterprise NCC-1701 klingon phaser photon torpedo Federation" in a datafile used by a perfectly legitimate application, blasted the administrators through channels when the file vanished, and gleefully showed me how the usecount of the restored file kept rising, as the Startrekfinder kept finding it, and the CC administrators kept examining it to see if it was part of a hidden game.) But, also like any war, destruction befell innocent bystanders. And, like any crusaders out to destroy sin, the staff didn't catch on from the early, minor incidents, and kept increasing their efforts. What finally ended it was a pair of almost simultaneous hits on valuable files. The lesser incident was the destruction of a file named "Kirk", owned by a student nicknamed "Kirk", and containing coursework completely unrelated to the Great Interstellar War. The greater was medical. It seems a drug company was in the late stages of testing a new drug, and had paid the university over a half-million (1970's) dollars to run one of the tests. The drug in question had an effect on the endocrine system, and one of the measures of this effect was the length of the penises of male rats who had matured under influence of the drug. The project was near completion, the (rather large number of) rats had been grown, and as they were retired from the experiment, during its carefully-scheduled last few weeks, measurements made on each were filed on the exceedingly-well-maintained-and-backed-up central computing utility. One day the researcher logged on to enter the latest set of measurements, and found that the contents of the file named "RAT_PENIS_DATA" had been replaced by a short tirade about improper use of the computing center resources. You can imagine what hit the fan. The center staff, of course, in their War on Fun, had not taken care to preserve the latest state of the file they had blasted. Indeed, the file name had been, in their minds, a minor side-issue during their assault on the Startrek Plague. Yet the research was to prepare the drug for use on humans - with potential liabilities far exceeding the half-meg-plus pricetag of the research - and potential damage to the big U's reputation resulting in loss of lucrative research contracts ditto. Would error- corrections applied to the file between the last backup and the destruction be re-applied correctly? Was the CC prepared to pay for the extra costs incurred by Biochem as it completely re-entered the data from the notes, re-ran the experiment if it couldn't resolve any differences to the satisfaction of the FDA, and pay the drug company for the lost sales if it delayed the introduction of a useful drug? Thus, goes the story, did the war end. But the repercussions didn't stop, of course. The war had left lingering fallout, in the form of alienated clients of the Computing Ceter, and the center's destruction of valuable data provided an extra round to be used against the Center whenever a department was trying to obtain computers of its own, over the Center's opposition.
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