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Computer Jokes - Funny Joke
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Twas the
night before crisis
Twas the
night before crisis,
And all through the house,
Not a program was working,
Not even a browse.
Programmers were wrung out,
Too mindless to care,
Knowing chances of cutover
Hadn't a prayer.
The users were nestled
All snug in their beds,
While visions of inquiries
Danced in their heads.
When out in the lobby
There arose such a clatter,
That I sprang from my tube
To see what was the matter.
And what to my wondering
Eyes should appear,
But a Super Programmer,
Oblivious to fear.
More rapid than eagles,
His programs they came
And he whistled and shouted
And called them by name.
On Update! On Add!
On Inquiry! On Delete!
On Batch Jobs! On Closing!
On Functions Complete!
His eyes were glazed over,
His fingers were lean,
From weekends and nights
Spent in front of a screen.
A wink of his eye,
And a twist of his head,
Soon gave me to know
I had nothing to dread.
He spoke not a word,
But went straight to his work,
Turning specs into code,
Then he turned with a jerk.
And laying his fingers
Upon the ENTER key,
The system came up,
And worked perfectly!
The updates updated;
The deletes they deleted;
The inquiries inquired;
And the closing completed.
He tested each whistle,
He tested each bell,
With nary an abend,
And all had gone well.
The system was finished,
The tests were concluded,
The client's last changes
Were even included!
And the client exclaimed,
With a snarl and a taunt,
"It's just what I asked for,
But it's not what I want!"
Emacs
acronyms
EMACS:
Escape-Meta-Alt-Control-Shift
EMACS: Eight Megabytes And Constantly
Swapping
EMACS: Even a Master of Arts Comes Simpler
EMACS: Emacs Manuals Are Cryptic and Surreal
EMACS: Energetic Merchants Always Cultivate
Sales
EMACS: Each Manual's Audience is Completely
Stupified
EMACS: Emacs Means A Crappy Screen
EMACS: Eventually Munches All Computer
Storage
EMACS: Even My Aunt Crashes the System
EMACS: Eradication of Memory Accomplished
with Complete Simplicity
EMACS: Elsewhere Maybe Alternative
Civilizations Survive
EMACS: Egregious Managers Actively Court
Stallman
EMACS: Esoteric Malleability Always
Considered Silly
EMACS: Emacs Manuals Always Cause Senility
EMACS: Easily Maintained with the Assistance
of Chemical Solutions
EMACS: Edwardian Manifestation of All
Colonial Sins
EMACS: Extended Macros Are Considered
Superfluous
EMACS: Every Mode Accelerates Creation of
Software
EMACS: Elsewhere Maybe All Commands are
Simple
EMACS: Emacs May Allow Customised Screwups
EMACS: Excellent Manuals Are Clearly
Suppressed
EMACS: Emetic Macros Assault Core and
Segmentation
EMACS: Embarrassed Manual-Writer Accused of
Communist Subversion
EMACS: Extensibility and Modifiability
Aggravate Confirmed Simpletons
EMACS: Emacs May Annihilate Command
Structures
EMACS: Easily Mangles, Aborts, Crashes and
Stupifies
EMACS: Extraneous Macros And Commands Stink
EMACS: Exceptionally Mediocre Algorithm for
Computer Scientists
EMACS: EMACS Makes no Allowances Considering
its Stiff price
EMACS: Equine Mammals Are Considerably
Smaller
EMACS: Embarrassingly Mundane Advertising
Cuts Sales
EMACS: Every Moron Assumes CCA is Superior
EMACS: Exceptionally Mediocre Autocratic
Control System
EMACS: EMACS May Alienate Clients and
Supporters
EMACS: Excavating Mayan Architecture Comes
Simpler
EMACS: Erasing Minds Allows Complete
Submission
EMACS: Emacs Makers Are Crazy Sickos
EMACS: Eenie-Meenie-Miney-Mo- Macros Are
Completely Slow
EMACS: Experience the Mildest Ad Campaign
ever Seen
EMACS: Emacs Makefiles Annihilate C- Shells
EMACS: Eradication of Memory Accomplished
with Complete Simplicity
EMACS: Emetic Macros Assault Core and
Segmentation
EMACS: Epileptic MLisp Aggravates Compiler
Seizures
EMACS: Evenings, Mornings, And a Couple of
Saturdays
EMACS: Emacs Makes All Computing Simple
EMACS: Emacs Masquerades As Comfortable
Shell
EMACS: Emacs: My Alternative Computer Story
EMACS: Emacs Made Almost Completely Screwed
EMACS: Each Mail A Continued Surprise
EMACS: Every Mode Acknowledges Customized
Strokes
EMACS: Eating Memory And Cycle-Sucking
EMACS: Everyday Material Almost Compiled
Successfully
EMACS: Elvis Masterminds All Computer
Software
EMACS: Emacs Makes A Computer Slow
Possible IBM
acronyms
IBM: It's
Being Mended
IBM: Inmense Ball of Muck
IBM: I Believe in Memorex
IBM: It's Better than Macintosh!
IBM: Idiots Built Me
IBM: Intense Bowel Movement
IBM: Inferior But Marketable?
IBM: I've Been Mislead
IBM: It's Better Manually
IBM: Infinitly Better Macintosh
IBM: Indefinitly Boggled Machine
IBM: I Bought a Mac
IBM: I Blame Microsoft.
IBM: I Bought Macintosh
IBM: I'll Buy Macintosh
IBM: I've Been Moved
IBM: I've Been Mugged
IBM: Incontinent Bowel Movement
IBM: Identical Blue Men
IBM: Idiotic Bit Masher
IBM: Idiots Become Managers
IBM: Incompatible Business Machines
IBM: Incredibly Boring Machine
IBM: Infernal Bloody Monopoly
IBM: Institute of Black Magic
IBM: Internal Beaurocratic Mess
IBM: International Brotherhood of Magicians
IBM: Intolerant of Beards and Mustaches
IBM: It'll Be Messy
IBM: It's Backwards, Man
IBM: Itty Bitty Machines
IBM: Itty Bitty Morons
IBM: It Barely Moves
IBM: I Buy Mainframes
IBM compatible - IBM contemptible
Computer
help stories
This
article is from the Wall Street Journal,
Tuesday, March 1, 1994: Befuddled PC Users
Flood Help Llines, and No Qquestion Seems To
Be Too Basic
AUSTIN, Texas - The exasperated help-line
caller said she couldn't get her new Dell
computer to turn on. Jay Ablinger, a Dell
Computer Corp. technician, made sure the
computer was plugged in and then asked the
woman what happened when she pushed the
power button.
"I've pushed and pushed on this foot pedal
and nothing happens," the woman replied.
"Foot pedal?" the technician asked. "Yes,"
the woman said, "this little white foot
pedal with the on switch." The "foot pedal,"
it turned out, was the computer's mouse, a
hand-operated device that helps to control
the computer's operation.
Personal-computer makers are discovering
that it's still a low-tech world out there.
While they are finally having great success
selling PCs to households, they now have to
deal with people to whom monitors and disk
drives are as foreign as another language.
"It is rather mystifying to get this nice,
beautiful machine and not know anything
about it," says Ed Shuler, a technician who
helps field consumer calls at Dell's
headquarters here. "It's going into
unfamiliar territory," adds Gus Kolias, vice
president of customer service and training
for Compaq Computer Corp. "People are
looking for a comfort level."
Only two years ago, most calls to PC help
lines came from techies needing help on
complex problems. But now, with computer
sales to homes exploding as new "multimedia"
functions gain mass appeal, PC makers say
that as many as 70% of their calls come from
rank novices. Partly because of the volume
of calls, some computer companies have
started charging help-line users.
The questions are often so basic that they
could have been answered by opening the
manual that comes with every machine. One
woman called Dell's toll-free line to ask
how to install batteries in her laptop. When
told that the directions were on the first
page of the manual, says Steve Smith, Dell
director of technical support, the woman
replied angrily, "I just paid $2,000 for
this stupid thing, and I'm not going to read
a book."
Indeed, it seems that these buyers rarely
refer to a manual when a phone is at hand.
"If there is a book and a phone and they're
side-by-side, the phone wins time after
time," says Craig McQuilkin manager of
service marketing for AST Research, Inc. in
Irvine, Calif. "It's a phenomenon of people
wanting to talk to people.
And do they ever. Compaq's help center in
Houston, Texas, is inundated by some 8,000
consumer calls a day, with inquiries like
this one related by technician John Wolf: "A
frustrated customer called, who said her
brand new Contura would not work. She said
she had unpacked the unit, plugged it in,
opened it up and sat there for 20 minutes
waiting for something to happen. When asked
what happened when she pressed the power
switch, she asked, "What power switch?
Seemingly simple computer features baffle
some users. So many people have called to
ask where the "any" key is when "Press Any
Key" flashes on the screen that Compaq is
considering changing the command to "Press
Return Key.
Some people can't figure out the mouse.
Tamra Eagle, and AST technical support
supervisor, says one customer complained
that her mouse was hard to control with the
"dust cover" on. The cover turned out to be
the plastic bag the mouse was packaged in.
Dell technician Wayne Zieschan says one of
his customers held the mouse and pointed it
at the screen, all the while clicking madly.
The customer got no response because the
mouse works only if it's moved over a flat
surface.
Disk drives are another bugaboo. Compaq
technician Brent Sullivan says a customer
was having trouble reading word-processing
files from his old diskettes. After
troubleshooting for magnets and heat failed
to diagnose the problem, Mr. Sullivan asked
what else was being done with the diskette.
The customer's response: "I put a label on
the diskette and rolled it into the
typewriter."
At AST, another customer dutifully complied
with a technician's request that she send in
a copy of a defective floppy disk. A letter
from the customer arrived a few days later,
along with a Xerox copy of the floppy. And
at Dell, a technician advised his customer
to put his troubled floppy back in the drive
and "close the door." Asking the technician
to "hold on," the customer put the phone
down and was heard walking over to shut the
door to his room. The technician meant the
door to his floppy drive.
The software inside the computer can be
equally befuddling. A Dell customer called
to say he couldn't get his computer to fax
anything. After 40 minutes of
troubleshooting, the technician discovered
the man was trying to fax a piece of paper
by holding it in front of the monitor screen
and hitting the "send" key.
Another Dell customer needed help setting up
a new program, so Dell technician Gary Rock
referred him to the local Egghead. "Yeah, I
got me a couple friends," the customer
replied. When told Egghead was software
store, the man said, "Oh! I thought you
meant for me to find couple of geeks.
Not realizing how fragile computers can be,
some people end up damaging parts beyond
repair. A Dell customer called to complain
that his keyboard no longer worked. He had
cleaned it, he said, filling up his tub with
soap and water and soaking his keyboard for
a day, and the removing all the keys and
washing them individually.
Computers make some people paranoid. A Dell
technician, Morgan Vergaran says he once
calmed a man who became enraged because,
"his computer has told him he was bad and an
invalid." Mr. Vergara patiently explained
that the computer's "bad command" and
"invalid" responses shouldn't be taken
personally.
These days PC-help technicians increasingly
find themselves taking on the role of
amateur psychologists. Mr. Shuler, the dell
technician who once worked as a psychiatric
nurse, says he defused a potential domestic
fight by soothingly talking a man through a
computer problem after the man had screamed
threats at his wife and children in the
background
There are also the lonely hearts who seek
out human contact, even if it happens to be
a computer techie. One man from New
Hampshire calls Dell every time he
experiences a life crisis. He gets a
technician to walk him through some
contrived problem with his computer,
apparently feeling uplifted by the process.
"A lot of people want reassurance," says Mr.
Shuler.
Architect
programmer
If
architects had to work like programmers . .
.
Dear Mr.
Architect,
Please design and build me a house. I am not
quite sure of what I need, so you should use
your discretion.
My house should have between two and
forty-five bedrooms. Just make sure the
plans are such that the bedrooms can be
easily added or deleted. When you bring the
blueprints to me, I will make the final
decision of what I want. Also, bring me the
cost breakdown for each configuration so
that I can arbitrarily pick one.
Keep in mind that the house I ultimately
choose must cost less than the one I am
currently living in. Make sure, however,
that you correct all the deficiencies that
exist in my current house (the floor of my
kitchen vibrates when I walk across it, and
the walls don't have nearly enough
insulation in them).
As you design, also keep in mind that I want
to keep yearly maintenance costs as low as
possible. This should mean the incorporation
of extra-cost features like aluminum, vinyl,
or composite siding. (If you choose not to
specify aluminum, be prepared to explain
your decision in detail.)
Please take care that modern design
practices and the latest materials are used
in construction of the house, as I want it
to be a showplace for the most up-to-date
ideas and methods. Be alerted, however, that
kitchen should be designed to accommodate,
among other things, my 1952 Gibson
refrigerator.
To insure that you are building the correct
house for our entire family, make that you
contact each of our children, and also our
in-laws. My mother-in-law will have very
strong feelings about how the house should
be designed, since she visits us at least
once a year. Make sure that you weigh all of
thses options carefully and come to the
right decision. I, however, retain the right
to overrule any choices that you make.
Please don't bother me with small details
right now. Your job is to develop the
overall plans for the house: get the big
picture. At this time, for example, it is
not appropriate to be choosing the color of
the carpet. However, keep in mind that my
wife likes blue.
Also, do not worry at this time about
acquiring the resources to build the house
itself. Your first priority is to develop
detailed plans and specifications. Once I
approve these plans, however, I would expect
the house to be under roof within 48 hours.
While you are designing this house
specifically for me, keep in mind that
sooner or later I will have to sell it to
someone else. It therefore should have
appeal to a wide variety of potential
buyers. Please make sure before you finalize
the plans that there is a consensus of the
population in my area that they like the
features this house has.
I advise you to run up and look at my
neighbor's house he constructed last year.
We like it a great deal. It has many
features that we would also like in our new
home, particularily the 75-foot swimming
pool. With careful engineering, I believe
that you can design this into our new house
without impacting the final cost.
Please prepare a complete set of blueprints.
It is not necessary at this time to do the
real design, since they will be used only
for construction bids. Be advised, however,
that you will be held accountable for any
increase of construction costs as a result
of later design changes.
You must be thrilled to be working on as an
interesting project as this! To be able to
use the latest techniques and materials and
to be given such freedom in your designs is
something that can't happen very often.
Contact me as soon as possible with your
complete ideas and plans.
PS: My wife has just told me that she
disagrees with many of the instructions I've
given you in this letter. As architect, it
is your responsibility to resolve these
differences. I have tried in the past and
have been unable to accomplish this. If you
can't handle this responsibility, I will
have to find another architect.
PPS: Perhaps what I need is not a house at
all, but a travel trailer. Please advise me
as soon as possible if this is the case.
New
Microsoft Windows advertising slogans
At the time
of writing, Microsoft's slogan for Windows
95 was "Where do you want to go today?"
These are some alternative and probably more
truthful ad slogans for use with Windows.
1. Microsoft gives you Windows - OS/2 give
you the whole house.
2. A computer without Windows is like a fish
without a bicycle.
3. Windows and DOS: A turtle and its shell.
4. Bang on the left side of your computer to
restart Windows.
5. Windows: The colorful clown suit for DOS.
6. Error #152 - Windows not found: (C)heer (P)arty
(D)ance.
7. Windows 3.1: The best $89 solitaire game
you can buy.
8. Windows NT: Insert wallet into Drive A:
and press any key to empty.
9. I'll never forget the first time I ran
Windows, but I'm trying.
10. I still miss Windows, but my aim is
getting better
11. My lastest screen-saver: Curtains for
Windows.
12. Double your drive space: Delete Windows!
13. OS/2. Opens up Windows, shuts up Gates.
14. Out of disk space. Delete Windows? [Y]es
[A]solutely [O]f Course!
15. How do you want to crash today?
The Ten
Commandments for C Programmers
1. Thou shalt
run lint frequently and study its
pronouncements with care, for verily its
perception and judgement oft exceed thine.
2. Thou shalt not follow the NULL pointer,
for chaos and madness await thee at its end.
3. Thou shalt cast all function arguments to
the expected type if they are not of that
type already, even when thou art convinced
that this is unnecessary, lest they take
cruel vengeance upon thee when thou least
expect it.
4. If thy header files fail to declare the
return types of thy library functions, thou
shalt declare them thyself with the most
meticulous care, lest grievous harm befall
thy program.
5. Thou shalt check the array bounds of all
strings (indeed, all arrays), for surely
where thou typest ``foo'' someone someday
shall type
``supercalifragilisticexpialidocious''.
6. If a function be advertised to return an
error code in the event of difficulties,
thou shalt check for that code, yea, even
though the checks triple the size of thy
code and produce aches in thy typing
fingers, for if thou thinkest ``it cannot
happen to me'', the gods shall surely punish
thee for thy arrogance.
7. Thou shalt study thy libraries and strive
not to re-invent them without cause, that
thy code may be short and readable and thy
days pleasant and productive.
8. Thou shalt make thy program's purpose and
structure clear to thy fellow man by using
the One True Brace Style, even if thou
likest it not, for thy creativity is better
used in solving problems than in creating
beautiful new impediments to understanding.
9. Thy external identifiers shall be unique
in the first six characters, though this
harsh discipline be irksome and the years of
its necessity stretch before thee seemingly
without end, lest thou tear thy hair out and
go mad on that fateful day when thou
desirest to make thy program run on an old
system.
10. Thou shalt foreswear, renounce, and
abjure the vile heresy which claimeth that
``All the world's a VAX'', and have no
commerce with the benighted heathens who
cling to this barbarous belief, that the
days of thy program may be long even though
the days of thy current machine be short.
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