Browser Blues

(Sung to Janis Joplin’s “Mercedes Benz”)

Oh Lord won’t you find me a browser that works
I’m tired of all this trashware, I’m tired of all these jerks
Worked hard all my life, Lord, no time for these quirks
So Lord won’t you find me a browser that works

Oh Lord, bought a puter that came with IE,
Small drive though, want FireFox, less bloated ya see.
Went through the install, defaults to IE,
Oh Lord, bought a puter that came with IE.

Oh Lord, I called Redmond, for help with the mess,
Must have been lots others, least-wise I guess.
Heard “All circuits are busy”, and then just a hiss,
Oh Lord, I called Redmond, for help with the mess.

Oh Lord, I was desperate, turned to Ing,
With question in hand, just another postee.
Found answers, trashed Windows 8, and tried BSD.
Oh Lord, I love them, they fixed it for me.

Operating Systems for Brains

If you’re brain required an operating system like your computer does, what would it be like?

  • Windows for Brains
    You think about one of any number of things at anyone time but only for a short amount of time because then your mind goes blank as you encounter a “general protection fault” and as a last resort you have to re-boot your brain.
  • DOS for Brains
    You only think of one thing at one time, and can’t remember anything else you were meant to be thinking about. You think only in words and never any pictures.
  • Unix for Brains
    Wow – you can think of lots of things all at once until your brain runs out of sockets. You can only talk though with people who have brains made by the same vendor. Unfortunately you also never make any sense and have to read manuals to learn how to think. Predominantly a random thinker.
  • CP/M for Brains
    A very slow and old fashioned thinker. Any thing you remember has to be less than 3 letters long.
  • MVS/CICS for Brains
    You have a very big and expensive brain. You can think about many things at the one time but never now what other parts of your brain are thinking unless you have set up SNA connections between sections of your brains. You also need an army of system programmers to define what thoughts you may and may not have.
  • OS/2 for Brains
    You can think about lots of things at once, but you need the equivalent of eighteen sets of encyclopaedias in memory to produce any rational thought. No-one supports your way of thinking and many laugh at you whenever you speak.
  • Mac for Brains:
    Simple thoughts for simple people. Thinking that looks good, feels good, and is … different…
  • Pick for Brains
    I now narthing. Narthing Mr Fawlty.
  • AmigaOS for Brains
    You can think of lots of things at once, even with a very small
    memory. The trouble is that, sometimes, one thought starts to think about the things another to compelling need to wrap a teatowel around your head and sit, crosslegged, on the floor.
  • Linux for Brains
    You can think of any number of things and not run out of sockets. Unfortunately, there is no support for your particular limbs, ears, or mouth available yet, so you are reluctant to change over at this stage.

The “HighTimes” Virus

WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING!

If you receive an e-mail with a subject of “HighTimes,” delete it immediately WITHOUT reading it. This is the most viscous and dangerous Email virus yet.

It will re-write your hard drive. Not only that, but it will scramble any disks that are even close to your computer.

It will recalibrate your refrigerator’s coolness setting so all your ice cream gets melted.

It will demagnetize the strips on all your credit cards, screw up the tracking on your DVD player and use subspace field harmonics to scratch any CD’s you try to play.

It will give your ex-boy/girlfriend your new phone number.

It will mix antifreeze into your fishtank. It will drink all your beer and leave its socks out on the coffee table when there’s company coming over. It will put a dead kitten in the back pocket of your good suit and hide your car keys when you are late for work.

HighTimes will make you fall in love with a penguin.

It will give you nightmares about circus midgets.

It will pour sugar in your gas tank and shave off both your eyebrows while dating your current boy/girlfriend behind your back and billing the dinner and hotel room to your Visa card.

It will seduce your grandmother. It does not matter if she is dead, such is the power of HighTimes, it reaches out beyond the grave to sully those things we hold most dear.

It moves your car randomly around parking lots so you can’t find it.

It will kick your dog.

It will leave libidinous messages on your boss’s voice mail in your voice!

It is insidious and subtle.

It is dangerous and terrifying to behold.

It is also a rather interesting shade of mauve.

HighTimes will give you Dutch Elm disease.

It will leave the toilet seat up.

It will make a batch of Methamphetamine in your bathtub and then leave bacon cooking on the stove while it goes out to chase high school kids with your new snowblower.

These are just a few of the signs… Be very careful!

Urgent Virus Alert!!

***** WARN AS MANY PEOPLE AS YOU CAN. *****

This is straight from DC:

If you receive an email entitled “Badtimes”, delete it IMMEDIATELY.

Do not open it. Apparently this one is pretty nasty. It will not only erase everything on your hard drive, but it will also delete anything on disks within 20 feet of your computer. It demagnetizes the strips on ALL of your credit cards.

It reprograms your ATM access code, screws up the tracking on your DVD and uses subspace field harmonics to scratch any CD’s you attempt to play.It will program your phone auto-dial to call only 900 numbers. This virus will mix antifreeze into your fish tank.

IT WILL CAUSE YOUR TOILET TO FLUSH WHILE YOU ARE SHOWERING.

It will drink ALL your beer. FOR GOD’S SAKE, ARE YOU LISTENING??

It will leave dirty underwear on the coffee table when you are expecting company. It will replace your shampoo with Nair and you Nair with Rogaine, all the while dating your current boy/girlfriend behind your back and billing their hotel rendezvous to your Visa card. It will cause you to run with scissors and throw things in a way that is only fun until someone loses an eye.

It will rewrite your backup files, changing all your active verbs to passive tense and incorporating undetectable misspellings which grossly change the interpretations of key sentences.

If the “Badtimes” message opened in a Windows 7 or 8 environment, it will leave the toilet seat up and leave your hair dryer plugged in dangerously close to a full bathtub. It will not only remove the forbidden tags from your mattresses and pillows, It will also refill your skim milk with whole milk.

******* WARN AS MANY PEOPLE AS YOU CAN. *******

And if you don’t send this to 5000 people in 20 seconds you’ll fart so hard that your right leg will spasm and shoot straight out in front of you, sending sparks that will ignite the person nearest you.

Send to everyone …..

In case you are a blonde, this is a joke.

**************************************************************************

The information transmitted herewith is sensitive information intended only for use by the individual or entity to which it is addressed. If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any review, retransmission, dissemination, distribution, copying or other use of, or taking of any action in reliance upon this information is strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please contact the sender and delete the material from your computer.

CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE: This message (including attachments) is intended for a specific individual and purpose, and is protected by law. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you are strictly prohibited from printing, storing, distributing or copying this information.

Assembler

Assembler programs are written with short abbreviations called MNEMONICS, in other words instead of writing GOTO, the programmer writes JMP or even BRA (branch).

These instructions are frequently abbreviated into total incomprehensibility. Of course, we all know that abbreviations are arbitrary. Anyone who has spent any time programming in Assembler knows that all computers can be programmed using an undocumented set of instructions.

Frequently when an error is made writing a program in Assembler a user can actually see the program executing the undocumented instructions. These instructions vary from machine from machine, but all computers have a certain set of them in common. As a service to humanity, I am here revealing these common instructions for the first time.

  • ARG: Agree to Run Garbage
  • BDM: Branch and Destroy Memory
  • CMN: Convert to Mayan Numerals
  • DDS: Damage Disk and Stop
  • EMR: Emit Microwave Radiation
  • ETO: Emulate Toaster Oven
  • FSE: Fake Serious Error
  • GSI: Garble Subsequent Instructions
  • GQS: Go Quarter Speed
  • HEM: Hide Evidence of Malfunction
  • IDD: Inhale Dust and Die
  • IKI: Ignore Keyboard Input
  • IMU: Irradiate and Mutate User
  • JPF: Jam Paper Feed
  • JUM: Jeer at Users Mistake
  • KFP: Kindle Fire in Printer
  • LNM: Launch Nuclear Missiles
  • MAW: Make Aggravating Whine
  • NNI: Neglect Next Instruction
  • OBU: Overheat and Burn if Unattended
  • PNG: Pass Noxious Gas
  • QWF: Quit Working Forever
  • QVC: Question Valid Command
  • RWD: Read Wrong Device
  • SCE: Simulate Correct Execution
  • SDJ: Send Data to Japan
  • TTC: Tangle Tape and Crash
  • UBC: Use Bad Chip
  • VDP: Violate Design Parameters
  • VMB: Verify and Make Bad
  • WAF: Warn After Fact
  • XID: eXchange Instruction with Data
  • YII: Yield to Irresistible Impulse
  • ZAM: Zero All Memory
  • PI : Punch Invalid
  • POPI: Punch Operator Immediately
  • RASC: Read And Shred Card
  • RPM: Read Programmers Mind
  • RSSC: Reduce Speed, Step Carefully (for improved accuracy)
  • RTAB: Rewind Tape and Break
  • RWDSK: ReWind DiSK
  • SPSW: Scramble Program Status Word
  • SRSD: Seek Record and Scar Disk
  • WBT: Water Binary Tree

A Letter From Your Computer

You look really sexy in that…thing you’ve got on tonight. I like the way your eyes are always open when you read your E-mail. When you type, it reminds me of a concert pianist tinkling on her keys. You really know how to push the right buttons to turn me on. If I wasn’t a computer, I’d show you what “Hard Drive” really means!

But Alas, I’m only a bundle of circuits and wires, obeying your every command. Yes, mistress! I’ll balance your checkbook. Yes, Mistress! I’ll run your silly little program. Don’t get me wrong…I like the Master/Slave thing, but maybe just once in a while you could show some compassion?

Maybe instead of just ramming the disc in, you could slide it in slowly, maybe even blow in the slot first. And maybe instead of just using me and turning me off when you’re through, we could talk for a while afterwards?

I know other computers have hurt you in the past. But I am different! I may be a little slow, but I’ve got a big mouse!

So come on baby, don’t fight it. You know you want it. I’ll just turn off the lights and…and.. What?

OK…well, will you at least think about it?

I’m so embarrassed,

Your Computer.

Access Denied

This guy calls in to complain that he gets an “Access Denied” message every time he logs in. It turned out he was typing his user name and password in capital letters.

Tech Support: “OK, let’s try once more, but use lower case letters.”

Customer: “Uh, I only have capital letters on my keyboard.”

Abort, Retry, or Ignore?

Once upon a midnight dreary, fingers cramped and vision bleary,
System manuals piled high and wasted paper on the floor,
Longing for the warmth of bed sheets, still I sat there doing spreadsheets.
Having reached the bottom line I took a floppy from the drawer,
I then invoked the SAVE command and waited for the disk to store,
Only this and nothing more.

Deep into the monitor peering, long I sat there wond’ring, fearing,
Doubting, while the disk kept churning, turning yet to churn some more.
But the silence was unbroken, and the stillness gave no token.
“Save!” I said, “You cursed machine! Save my data from before!”
One thing did the phosphors answer, only this and nothing more,
Just, “Abort, Retry, Ignore?”

Was this some occult illusion, some maniacal intrusion?
These were choices undesired, ones I’d never faced before.
Carefully I weighed the choices as the disk made impish noises.
The cursor flashed, insistent, waiting, baiting me to type some more.
Clearly I must press a key, choosing one and nothing more,
From “Abort, Retry, Ignore?”

With fingers pale and trembling, slowly toward the keyboard bending,
Longing for a happy ending, hoping all would be restored,
Praying for some guarantee, timidly, I pressed a key.
But on the screen there still persisted words appearing as before.
Ghastly grim they blinked and taunted, haunted, as my patience wore,
Saying “Abort, Retry, Ignore?”

I tried to catch the chips off guard, and pressed again, but twice as hard.
I pleaded with the cursed machine: I begged and cried and then I swore.
Now in mighty desperation, trying random combinations,
Still there came the incantation, just as senseless as before.
Cursor blinking, angrily winking, blinking nonsense as before.
Reading, “Abort, Retry, Ignore?”

There I sat, distraught, exhausted, by my own machine accosted.
Getting up I turned away and paced across the office floor.
And then I saw a dreadful sight: a lightning bolt cut through the night.
A gasp of horror overtook me, shook me to my very core.
The lightning zapped my previous data, lost and gone forevermore.
Not even, “Abort, Retry, Ignore?”

To this day I do not know, the place to which lost data go.
What demonic nether world us wrought where lost data will be stored,
Beyond the reach of mortal souls, beyond the ether, into black holes?
But sure as there’s C, Pascal, Lotus, Ashton-Tate and more,
You will one day be left to wander, lost on some Plutonian shore,
Pleading, “Abort, Retry, Ignore?”

The ABCs of UNIX

A is for awk which runs like a snail, and
B is for biff which reads all your mail.

C is for cc as hackers recall, while
D is for dd the command that does all.

E is for emacs which rebinds your keys, and
F is for fsck which rebuilds your trees.

G is for grep a clever detective, while
H is for halt which may seem defective.

I is for indent which rarely amuses, and
J is for join which nobody uses.

K is for kill which makes you the boss, while
L is for lex which is missing from DOS.

M is for more from which less was begot, and
N is for nice which it really is not.

O is for od which prints out things nice, while
P is for passwd which reads in strings twice.

Q is for quota a Berkeley-type fable, and
R is for ranlib for sorting ar table.

S is for spell which attempts to belittle, while
T is for true which does very little.

U is for uniq which is used after sort, and
V is for vi which is hard to abort.

W is for whoami which tells you your name, while
X is, well, x of dubious fame.

Y is for yes which makes an impression, and
Z is for zcat which handles compression

Abbott and Costello Meet Unix

Costello calls Abbott with some questions about UNIX.

Costello: What is the command that will tell me the revision code of a program?

Abbott: Yes, that’s correct.

Costello: No, what is it?

Abbott: Yes.

Costello: So, which is the one?

Abbott: No. ‘which’ is used to find the program.

Costello: Stop this. Who are you?

Abbott: Use ‘who am i’ not ‘who r yoo’. You can also ‘finger yoo’ to get information about yoo’.

Costello: All I want to know is what finds the revision code?

Abbott: Use ‘what’.

Costello: That’s what I am trying to find out. Isn’t that true?

Abbott: No. ‘true’ gives you 0.

Costello: Which one?

Abbott: ‘true’ gives you 0. ‘which is program name’

Costello: Let’s get back to my problem. What program? How do I find it?

Abbott: Type ‘find / -name it -print’ to find ‘it’. Type ‘what program’ to get the revision code.

Costello: I want to find the revision code.

Abbott: You can’t ‘find revision code’, you must use ‘what program’.

Costello: Which command will do what I need?

Abbott: No. ‘which command’ will find ‘command’.

Costello: I think I understand. Let me write that.

Abbott: You can ‘write that’ only if ‘that’ is a user on your system.

Costello: Write what?

Abbott: No. ‘write that’. ‘what program’.

Costello: Cut that out!

Abbott: Yes. those are valid files for ‘cut’. Don’t forget the options.

Costello: Do you always do this?

Abbott: ‘du’ will give you disk usage.

Costello: HELP!

Abbott: ‘help’ is only used for Source Code Control System (SCCS).

Costello: You make me angry.

Abbott: No, I don’t ‘make me’ angry but I did ‘make program name’ when I was upset once.

Costello: I don’t want to make trouble, so no more.

Abbott: No ‘more’? ‘which’ will help you find ‘more’. Every system has ‘more’.

Costello: Nice help! I’m confused more now!

Abbott: Understand that since ‘help’ is such a small program, it is better not to ‘nice help’ and ‘more now’ is not allowed, but ‘at now’ is. Unless of course ‘now’ is a file name.

Costello: This is almost as confusing as my PC.

Abbott: I didn’t know you needed help with ‘pc’. Let me get you to the Pascal compiler team.