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Computer Jokes - Funny Joke
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Programmer's
drinking song
99 little
bugs in the code,
99 bugs in the code,
Fix one bug, compile it again,
101 little bugs in the code.
101 little bugs in the code,
101 bugs in the code,
Fix one bug, compile it again,
103 little bugs in the code.
The computer
user's reboot poem
Don't you
wish when life is bad
and things just don't compute,
That all we really had to do
was stop and hit reboot?
Things would all turn out ok,
life could be so sweet
If we had those special keys
Ctrl, Alt, and Delete
Your boss is mad, your bills not paid,
your wife, well she's just mute
Just stop and hit those wonderful keys
that make it all reboot
You'd like to have another job
but you fear living in the street?
You solve it all and start a new,
Ctrl, Alt, and Delete
Actual calls
to technical support
Computer
novices may feel like they're alone these
days, but some of the following calls to
IBM's help center show there are plenty of
people out there who still are inching onto
the information superhighway.
After a caller gave a technician her PC's
serial number, he scanned a database of
registered users and responded, "I see you
have an Aptiva" desktop unit. Before he
could say another word, the caller shrieked
and said she'd be right back. When the
customer returned, the technician asked if
she was all right. The caller responded:
"Had I realized you could see me, I never
would have telephoned in my bathrobe."
A customer who had just received a laptop
computer asked about the power-saving
feature known as "hibernate." Would this
hibernate device work in the spring and
summer, the caller asked.
Another caller explained she had received a
gift of software on 5.25-inch diskettes, but
she had only a 3.5-inch disk drive on her
computer. The technician said she had two
options: Get a second disk drive, or use
3.5-inch diskettes. The customer called back
later, now complaining that her disk drive
was making a terrible noise. And this
despite the fact that she was using a
3.5-inch diskette, she said. After a bunch
of questions, the technician determined the
caller had used a pair of scissors to trim
the 5.25-inch diskettes to fit the 3.5-inch
drive.
A caller, perplexed that his new desktop
computer--the one that was supposed to do
everything short of bringing on world peace
- was doing nothing, cried out for help. No
problem, the IBM technician said. First,
open a "window" to launch a specific
program. The conversation continued, and the
caller asked a few moments later if it might
be all right to close the window. Why, the
IBM technician asked. Because, the caller
responded, it was getting very chilly.
Bill Gates
can choose his punishment
Bill Gates
suddenly dies and finds himself face to face
with God. God stood over Bill Gates and
said, "Well Bill, I'm really confused on
this one. It's a tough decision; I'm not
sure whether to send you to Heaven or Hell.
After all, you helped society enormously by
putting a computer in almost every home in
America, yet you also created that ghastly
Windows '95 among other indiscretions. I
believe I'll do something I've never done
before; I'll let you decide where you want
to go."
Bill pushed up his glasses, looked up at God
and replied, "Could you briefly explain the
difference between the two?" Looking
slightly puzzled, God said, "Better yet, why
don't I let you visit both places briefly,
then you can make your decision. Which do
you choose to see first, Heaven or Hell?"
Bill played with his pocket protector for a
moment, then looked back at God and said, "I
think I'll try Hell first." So, with a flash
of lightning and a cloud of smoke, Bill
Gates went to Hell.
When he materialized in Hell, Bill looked
around. It was a beautiful and clean place,
a bit warm, with sandy beaches and tall
mountains, clear skies, pristine water, and
beautiful women frolicking about. A smile
came across Bill's face as he took in a deep
breath of the clean air. "This is great," he
thought, "if this is Hell, I can't wait to
see heaven."
Within seconds of his thought, another flash
of lightning and a cloud of smoke appeared,
and Bill was off to Heaven. Heaven was a
place high above the clouds, where angels
were drifting about playing their harps and
singing in a beautiful chorus. It was a very
nice place, Bill thought, but not as
enticing as Hell.
Bill looked up, cupped his hands around his
mouth and yelled for God and Bill Gates was
sent to Hell for eternity.
Time passed, and God decided to check on the
late billionaire to see how he was
progressing in Hell. When he got there, he
found Bill Gates shackled to a wall in a
dark cave amid bone thin men and tongues of
fire, being burned and tortured by demons.
"So, how is everything going?" God asked.
Bill responded with a crackling voice filled
with anguish and disappointment, "This is
awful! It's nothing like the Hell I visited
the first time!! I can't believe this is
happening! What happened to the other
place....with the beaches and the mountains
and the beautiful women?
"That was the demo," replied God.
Microsoft
buys church
MICROSOFT
Bids to Acquire Catholic Church
VATICAN CITY (AP) -- In a joint press
conference in St. Peter's Square this
morning, MICROSOFT Corp. and the Vatican
announced that the Redmond software giant
will acquire the Roman Catholic Church in
exchange for an unspecified number of shares
of MICROSOFT common stock. If the deal goes
through, it will be the first time a
computer software company has acquired a
major world religion.
With the acquisition, Pope John Paul II will
become the senior vice-president of the
combined company's new Religious Software
Division, while MICROSOFT senior
vice-presidents Michael Maples and Steven
Ballmer will be invested in the College of
Cardinals, said MICROSOFT Chairman Bill
Gates.
"We expect a lot of growth in the religious
market in the next five to ten years," said
Gates. "The combined resources of MICROSOFT
and the Catholic Church will allow us to
make religion easier and more fun for a
broader range of people."
Through the MICROSOFT Network, the company's
new on-line service, "we will make the
sacraments available on-line for the first
time" and revive the popular
pre-Counter-Reformation practice of selling
indulgences, said Gates. "You can get
Communion, confess your sins, receive
absolution -- even reduce your time in
Purgatory -- all without leaving your home."
A new software application, MICROSOFT
Church, will include a macro language which
you can program to download heavenly graces
automatically while you are away from your
computer.
An estimated 17,000 people attended the
announcement in St Peter's Square, watching
on a 60-foot screen as comedian Don Novello
-- in character as Father Guido Sarducci --
hosted the event, which was broadcast by
satellite to 700 sites worldwide.
Pope John Paul II said little during the
announcement. When Novello chided Gates,
"Now I guess you get to wear one of these
pointy hats," the crowd roared, but the
pontiff's smile seemed strained.
The deal grants MICROSOFT exclusive
electronic rights to the Bible and the
Vatican's prized art collection, which
includes works by such masters as
Michelangelo and Da Vinci. But critics say
MICROSOFT will face stiff challenges if it
attempts to limit competitors' access to
these key intellectual properties.
"The Jewish people invented the look and
feel of the holy scriptures," said Rabbi
David Gottschalk of Philadelphia. "You take
the parting of the Red Sea -- we had that
thousands of years before the Catholics came
on the scene."
But others argue that the Catholic and
Jewish faiths both draw on a common
Abrahamic heritage. "The Catholic Church has
just been more successful in marketing it to
a larger audience," notes Notre Dame
theologian Father Kenneth Madigan. Over the
last 2,000 years, the Catholic Church's
market share has increased dramatically,
while Judaism, which was the first to offer
many of the concepts now touted by
Christianity, lags behind.
Historically, the Church has a reputation as
an aggressive competitor, leading crusades
to pressure people to upgrade to
Catholicism, and entering into exclusive
licensing arrangements in various kingdoms
whereby all subjects were instilled with
Catholicism, whether or not they planned to
use it. Today Christianity is available from
several denominations, but the Catholic
version is still the most widely used. The
Church's mission is to reach "the four
corners of the earth," echoing MICROSOFT's
vision of "a computer on every desktop and
in every home".
Gates described MICROSOFT's long-term
strategy to develop a scalable religious
architecture that will support all religions
through emulation. A single core religion
will be offered with a choice of interfaces
according to the religion desired -- "One
religion, a couple of different
implementations," said Gates.
The MICROSOFT move could spark a wave of
mergers and acquisitions, according to Herb
Peters, a spokesman for the U.S. Southern
Baptist Conference, as other churches
scramble to strengthen their position in the
increasingly competitive religious market.
Airplanes
running operating systems
Here are some
basic descriptions of what may happen if
airplanes had different operating systems
running them.
DOS: Everybody pushes it till it
glides, then jumps on and lets it coast till
it skids, then jumps off, pushes, jumps back
on, etc.
DOS with QEMM: Same as DOS, but with
more leg room for pushing.
Macintosh: All the flight attendants,
captains and baggage handlers look the same,
act the same and talk the same. Every time
you ask a question, you are told you don't
need to know, don't want to know and
everything will be done for you without your
knowing, so just shut up.
OS/2: To get on board, you have to
have your ticket stamped 10 different times
by standing in 10 different lines. Then you
fill out a form asking how you want your
seating arranged--with the look and feel of
an ocean liner, a passenger train or a bus.
If you get on board and off the ground, you
will have a wonderful trip, except when the
rudder and flaps freeze, in which case you
have time to say your prayers before you
crash.
Windows: Colorful airport terminal,
friendly flight attendants, easy access to a
plane, and an uneventful takeoff. Then, all
in a sudden, boom! You blow up without any
warning whatsoever.
NT: The terminal and flight
attendants all look like those the Windows
plane uses, but the process of checking in
and going through security is a nightmare.
Once aboard, those passengers with first
class tickets can go anywhere they want and
arrive in half the time, while the vast
majority of passengers with coach tickets
can't even get aboard.
Unix: Everyone brings one piece of
the plane. Then they go on the runway and
piece it together, all the while arguing
about what kind of plane they're building.
CAIRO: The airplane is distributed
among 47 different hangars in 13 airports
scattered over 8 states, 4 Canadian
provinces, and a remote mountain hideaway in
Nicaragua. But you don't need to know where
the airplane is or who it belongs to in
order to fly it. Actually, you don't fly the
airplane itself; you fly a simulation that
behaves just like the real thing except that
you don't go anywhere. But that's okay,
because when the world is at your fingertips
you never need to leave home.
Real
software engineers
Real software
engineers eat quiche.
Real software engineers don't read dumps.
They never generate them, and on the rare
occasions that they come across them, they
are vaguely amused.
Real software engineers don't comment their
code. The identifiers are so mnemonic they
don't have to.
Real software engineers don't write
applications programs, they implement
algorithms. If someone has an application
that the algorithm might help with, that's
nice. Don't ask them to write the user
interface, though.
If it doesn't have recursive function calls,
real software engineers don't program in it.
Real software engineers don't program in
assembler. They become queasy at the very
thought.
Real software engineers don't debug
programs, they verify correctness. This
process doesn't necessarily involve
executing anything on a computer, except
perhaps a Correctness Verification Aid
package.
Real software engineers like C's structured
constructs, but they are suspicious of it
because they have heard that it lets you get
"close to the machine."
Real software engineers play tennis. In
general, they don't like any sport that
involves getting hot and sweaty and gross
when out of range of a shower. (Thus
mountain climbing is Right Out.) They will
occasionally wear their tennis togs to work,
but only on very sunny days.
Real software engineers admire PASCAL for
its discipline and Spartan purity, but they
find it difficult to actually program in.
They don't tell this to their friends,
because they are afraid it means that they
are somehow Unworthy.
Real software engineers work from 9 to 5,
because that is the way the job is described
in the formal spec. Working late would feel
like using an undocumented external
procedure.
Real software engineers write in languages
that have not actually been implemented for
any machine, and for which only the formal
spec (in BNF) is available. This keeps them
from having to take any machine dependencies
into account. Machine dependencies make real
software engineers very uneasy.
Real software engineers don't write in ADA,
because the standards bodies have not quite
decided on a formal spec yet.
Real software engineers like writing their
own compilers, preferably in PROLOG (they
also like writing them in unimplemented
languages, but it turns out to be difficult
to actually RUN these).
Real software engineers regret the existence
of COBOL, FORTRAN and BASIC. PL/I is getting
there, but it is not nearly disciplined
enough; far too much built in function.
Real software engineers aren't too happy
about the existence of users, either. Users
always seem to have the wrong idea about
what the implementation and verification of
algorithms is all about.
Real software engineers don't like the idea
of some inexplicable and greasy hardware
several aisles away that may stop working at
any moment. They have a great distrust of
hardware people, and wish that systems could
be virtual at ALL levels. They would like
personal computers (you know no one's going
to trip over something and kill your DFA in
mid-transit), except that they need 8
megabytes to run their Correctness
Verification Aid packages.
Real software engineers think better while
playing WFF 'N' PROOF.
Operating
systems as beers
DOS Beer
-- Requires you to use your own can opener,
and requires you to read the directions
carefully before opening the can. Originally
only came in an 8-oz. can, but now comes in
a 16-oz. can. However, the can is divided
into 8 compartments of 2 oz. each, which
have to be accessed separately. Soon to be
discontinued, although a lot of people are
going to keep drinking it after it's no
longer available.
Mac Beer -- At first, came only a
16-oz. can, but now comes in a 32-oz. can.
Considered by many to be a "light" beer. All
the cans look identical. When you take one
from the fridge, it opens itself. The
ingredients list is not on the can. If you
call to ask about the ingredients, you are
told that "you don't need to know." A notice
on the side reminds you to drag your empties
to the trashcan.
Windows 3.1 Beer -- The world's most
popular. Comes in a 16-oz. can that looks a
lot like Mac Beer's. Requires that you
already own a DOS Beer. Claims that it
allows you to drink several DOS Beers
simultaneously, but in reality you can only
drink a few of them, very slowly, especially
slowly if you are drinking the Windows Beer
at the same time. Sometimes, for apparently
no reason, a can of Windows Beer will
explode when you open it.
OS/2 Beer -- Comes in a 32-oz can.
Does allow you to drink several DOS Beers
simultaneously. Allows you to drink Windows
3.1 Beer simultaneously too, but somewhat
slower. Advertises that its cans won't
explode when you open them, even if you
shake them up. You never really see anyone
drinking OS/2 Beer, but the manufacturer
(International Beer Manufacturing) claims
that 9 million six-packs have been sold.
Windows 95 Beer -- You can't buy it
yet, but a lot of people have taste-tested
it and claim it's wonderful. The can looks a
lot like Mac Beer's can, but tastes more
like Windows 3.1 Beer. It comes in 32-oz.
cans, but when you look inside, the cans
only have 16 oz. of beer in them. Most
people will probably keep drinking Windows
3.1 Beer until their friends try Windows 95
Beer and say they like it. The ingredients
list, when you look at the small print, has
some of the same ingredients that come in
DOS beer, even though the manufacturer
claims that this is an entirely new brew.
Windows NT Beer -- Comes in 32-oz.
cans, but you can only buy it by the
truckload. This causes most people to have
to go out and buy bigger refrigerators. The
can looks just like Windows 3.1 Beer's, but
the company promises to change the can to
look just like Windows 95 Beer's - after
Windows 95 beer starts shipping. Touted as
an "industrial strength" beer, and suggested
only for use in bars.
Unix Beer -- Comes in several
different brands, in cans ranging from 8 oz.
to 64 oz. Drinkers of Unix Beer display
fierce brand loyalty, even though they claim
that all the different brands taste almost
identical. Sometimes the pop-tops break off
when you try to open them, so you have to
have your own can opener around for those
occasions, in which case you either need a
complete set of instructions, or a friend
who has been drinking Unix Beer for several
years.
AmigaDOS Beer -- The company has gone
out of business, but their recipe has been
picked up by some weird German company, so
now this beer will be an import. This beer
never really sold very well because the
original manufacturer didn't understand
marketing. Like Unix Beer, AmigaDOS Beer
fans are an extremely loyal and loud group.
It originally came in a 16-oz. can, but now
comes in 32-oz. cans too. When this can was
originally introduced, it appeared flashy
and colorful, but the design hasn't changed
much over the years, so it appears dated
now. Critics of this beer claim that it is
only meant for watching TV anyway.
VMS Beer -- Requires minimal user
interaction, except for popping the top and
sipping. However cans have been known on
occasion to explode, or contain extremely
un-beer-like contents.
Solution to
the Y2K problem
The
government's system administration team,
working with computer manufacturers and
experts in the computer industry, has found
a lower cost alternative to address the Y2K
(Year 2000) issue: The goal is to remove all
computers from the desktop by December 31,
1999. In exchange for taking every computer,
an Etch-A-Sketch will be issued to all
Americans. There are many reasons for doing
this:
1. No Y2K problems.
2. No technical glitches keeping working
from being done.
3. No more wasted time reading and writing
E-Mails.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) from the
Etch-A-Sketch Help Desk:
Q: My Etch-A-Sketch has funny lines all over
the screen. What do I do?
A: Pick it up and shake it.
Q: How do I turn my Etch-A-Sketch off?
A: Pick it up and shake it.
Q: What's the shortcut for Undo?
A: Pick it up and shake it.
Q: How do I create a new document?
A: Pick it up and shake it.
Q: How do I set the background and
foreground to the same color?
A: Pick it up and shake it.
Q: What is the proper procedure for
re-booting my Etch-A-Sketch ?
A: Pick it up and shake it.
Q: How do I delete a document on my
Etch-A-Sketch ?
A: Pick it up and shake it.
Q: How do I save my Etch-A-Sketch Document ?
A: Don't shake it.
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