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Computer Jokes - Funny Joke
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Computer
lingo guide
Log on
- Adding a log to your wood stove
Log off - Don't add a log to your
wood stove
Monitor - Keep an eye on the wood
stove
Megahertz - When a big log drops on
your bare foot in the morning
Floppy disk - What you get from
piling too much wood into your wood stove
Ram - The hydraulic machine that
makes the woodsplitter work
Drive - Getting home during most of
the winter to your wood stove
Hard drive - Trying to get home
during a heavy snow storm
Prompt - What you wish the mail was
during the snow season
Enter - Come on in
Windows - What you must shut when the
temperature hits 10 below
Screen - What is a must during black
fly season
Chip - What you munch during a
football games
Microchip - What's left in the bag
when the normal chips are gone
Modem - What you did to your fields
last July
Dot Matrix - Eino Matrix's wife
Laptop - Where the grandkids sit
Keyboard - Where you're supposed to
put the keys so the wife can find them
Software - Plastic picnic utensils
Mouse - What leaves those little
turds in the cupboard
Mainframe - The part of the house
that holds up the roof
Port - Where the commercial fishing
boats dock
Random Access Memory - When you can't
remember how much you spent on the new deer
rifle when wife asks about it
If Dr. Seuss
was a technical writer
What if Dr.
Seuss was a technical writer? Here are
several examples of what he may write to
help you resolve your computer problems.
If a packet hits a pocket on a socket on a
port, And the bus is interrupted as a very
last resort, And the address of the memory
makes your floppy disk abort, Then the
socket packet pocket has an error to report!
If your cursor finds a menu item followed by
a dash, And the double-clicking icon puts
your window in the trash, And your data is
corrupted 'cause the index doesn't hash,
Then your situation's hopeless, and your
system's gonna crash!
If the above doesn't help with your computer
troubles, perhaps this will.
If the label on the cable on the table at
your house, Says the network is connected to
the button on your mouse, But your packets
want to tunnel on another protocol, That's
repeatedly rejected by the printer down the
hall.
And your screen is all distorted by the side
effects of gauss So your icons in the window
are as wavy as a souse, Then you may as well
reboot and go out with a bang, 'Cause as
sure as I'm a poet, the sucker's gonna hang!
When the copy of your floppy's getting
sloppy on the disk, And the microcode
instructions cause unnecessary risc, Then
you have to flash your memory and you'll
want to RAM your ROM. Quickly turn off the
computer and be sure to tell your mom!
Top ten
signs you bought a bad computer
10. Lower
corner of screen has the words
"Etch-a-sketch" on it.
9. It's celebrity spokesman is that "Hey
Vern!" guy.
8. In order to start it, you need some
jumper cables and a friend's car.
7. It's slogan is "Pentium: redefining
mathematics".
6. The "quick reference" manual is 120 pages
long.
5. Whenever you turn it on, all the dogs in
your neighborhood start howling.
4. The screen often displays the message, "Ain't
it break time yet?"
3. The manual contains only one sentence:
"Good Luck!"
2. The only chip inside is a Dorito.
1. You've decided that your computer is an
excellent addition to your fabulous
paperweight collection.
Fifty ways
to be annoying in computer labs
1. Log on,
wait a sec, then get a frightened look on
your face and scream "Oh my God! They've
found me!" and bolt.
2. Laugh uncontrollably for about 3 minutes
& then suddenly stop and look suspiciously
at everyone who looks at you.
3. When your computer is turned off,
complain to the monitor on duty that you
can't get the it to work. After he/she's
turned it on, wait 5 minutes, turn it off
again, and repeat the process for a good
half hour.
4. Type frantically, often stopping to look
at the person next to you evily.
5. Before anyone else is in the lab, connect
each computer to a different screen than the
one it's set up with.
6. Write a program that plays the "Smurfs"
theme song and play it at the highest volume
possible over & over again.
7. Work normally for a while. Suddenly look
amazingly startled by something on the
screen and crawl underneath the desk.
8. Ask the person next to you if they know
how to tap into top-secret Pentagon files.
9. Use Interactive Send to make passes at
people you don't know.
10. Make a small ritual sacrifice to the
computer before you turn it on.
11. Bring a chainsaw, but don't use it. If
anyone asks why you have it, say "Just in
case..." mysteriously.
12. Type on VAX for a while. Suddenly start
cursing for 3 minutes at everything bad
about your life. Then stop and continue
typing.
13. Enter the lab, undress, and start
staring at other people as if they're crazy
while typing.
14. Light candles in a pentagram around your
terminal before starting.
15. Ask around for a spare disk. Offer $2.
Keep asking until someone agrees. Then, pull
a disk out of your fly and say, "Oops, I
forgot."
16. Every time you press Return and there is
processing time required, pray "Ohpleaseohpleaseohpleaseohplease,"
and scream "YES!" when it finishes.
17. "DISK FIGHT!!!"
18. Start making out with the person at the
terminal next to you (It helps if you know
them, but this is also a great way to make
new friends).
19. Put a straw in your mouth and put your
hands in your pockets. Type by hitting the
keys with the straw.
20. If you're sitting in a swivel chair,
spin around singing "The Lion Sleeps
Tonight" whenever there is processing time
required.
21. Draw a pictue of a woman (or man) on a
piece of paper, tape it to your monitor. Try
to seduce it. Act like it hates you and then
complain loudly that women (men) are
worthless.
22. Try to stick a Ninetendo cartridge into
the 3 1/2 disk drive. When it doesn't work,
get the supervisor.
23. When you are on an IBM, and when you
turn it on, ask loudly where the smiling
Apple face is.
24. Print out the complete works of
Shakespeare, then when its all done (two
days later) say that all you wanted was one
line.
25. Sit and stare at the screen, biting your
nails noisily. After doing this for a while,
spit them out at the feet of the person next
to you.
26. Stare at the screen, grind your teeth,
stop, look at the person next to you,
grinding. Repeat procedure, making sure you
never provoke the person enough to let them
blow up, as this releases tension, and it is
far more effective to let them linger.
27. If you have long hair, take a typing
break, look for split ends, cut them and
deposit them on your neighbor's keyboard as
you leave.
28. Put a large, gold-framed portrait of the
British Royal Family on your desk and loudly
proclaim that it inspires you.
29. Come to the lab wearing several layers
of socks. Remove shoes and place them of top
of the monitor. Remove socks layer by layer
and drape them around the monitor. Exclaim
sudden haiku about the aesthetic beauty of
cotton on plastic.
30. Take the keyboard and sit under the
computer. Type up your paper like this. Then
go to the lab supervisor and complain about
the bad working conditions.
31. Laugh hysterically, shout "You will all
perish in flames!!!" and continue working.
32. Bring some dry ice & make it look like
your computer is smoking.
33. Assign a musical note to every key (ie.
the Delete key is A Flat, the B key is F
sharp, etc.). Whenever you hit a key, hum
its note loudly. Write an entire paper this
way.
34. Attempt to eat your computer's mouse.
35. Borrow someone else's keyboard by
reaching over, saying "Excuse me, mind if I
borrow this for a sec?", unplugging the
keyboard & taking it.
36. Bring in a bunch of magnets and have
fun.
37. When doing calculations, pull out an
abacus and say that sometimes the old ways
are best.
38. Play Pong for hours on the most powerful
computer in the lab.
39. Make a loud noise of hitting the same
key over and over again until you see that
your neighbor is noticing (You can hit the
space bar so your fill isn't affected). Then
look at your neighbor's keyboard. Hit
his/her delete key several times, erasing an
entire word. While you do this, ask: "Does
*your* delete key work?" Shake your head,
and resume hitting the space bar on your
keyboard. Keep doing this until you've
deleted about a page of your neighbor's
document. Then, suddenly exclaim: "Well,
whaddya know? I've been hitting the space
bar this whole time. No wonder it wasn't
deleting! Ha!" Print out your document and
leave.
40. Remove your disk from the drive and hide
it. Go to the lab monitor and complain that
your computer ate your disk. (For special
effects, put some Elmer's Glue on or around
the disk drive. Claim that the computer is
drooling.)
41. Stare at the person's next to your's
screen, look really puzzled, burst out
laughing, and say "You did that?" loudly.
Keep laughing, grab your stuff and leave,
howling as you go.
42. Point at the screen. Chant in a made up
language while making elaborate hand
gestures for a minute or two. Press return
or the mouse, then leap back and yell
"COVEEEEERRRRRR!" peek up from under the
table, walk back to the computer and say.
"Oh, good. It worked this time," and calmly
start to type again.
43. Keep looking at invisible bugs and
trying to swat them.
44. See who's online. Send a total stranger
a talk request. Talk to them like you've
known them all your lives. Hangup before
they get a chance to figure out you're a
total stranger.
45. Bring an small tape player with a tape
of really absurd sound effects. Pretend it's
the computer and look really lost.
46. Pull out a pencil. Start writing on the
screen. Complain that the lead doesn't work.
47. Come into the computer lab wearing
several endangered species of flowers in
your hair. Smile incessantly. Type a
sentence, then laugh happily, exclaim
"You're such a marvel!!", and kiss the
screen. Repeat this after every sentence. As
your ecstasy mounts, also hug the keyboard.
Finally, hug your neighbor, then the
computer assistant, and walk out.
48. Run into the computer lab, shout
"Armageddon is here!!!!!", then calmly sit
down and begin to type.
49. Quietly walk into the computer lab with
a Black and Decker chainsaw, rev that baby
up, and then walk up to the nearest person
and say, "Give me that computer or you'll be
feeding my pet crocodile for the next week".
50. Two words: Tesla Coil.
You have an
Internet addiction when . . .
You kiss your
girlfriend's home page.
A VRML virtual walk through a park is your
idea of a good date.
Your bookmark takes 15 minutes to scroll
from top to bottom.
Your eyeglasses have a web site burned in on
them.
All your daydreaming is preoccupied with
getting a faster connection to the net:
28.8...ISDN...cable modem...T1...T3.
And even your night dreams are in HTML.
You turn off your modem and get this awful
empty feeling, like you just pulled the plug
on a loved one.
You refer to going to the bathroom as
downloading.
You start introducing yourself as "Jim at
I-I-Net dot net dot au
Your heart races faster and beats
irregularly each time you see a new WWW site
address in print or on TV, even though
you've never had heart problems before.
You step out of your room and realize that
your parents have moved and you don't have a
clue when it happened.
You turn on your intercom when leaving the
room so you can hear if new e-mail arrives.
Your wife drapes a blond wig over your
monitor to remind you of what she looks
like.
All of your friends have an @ in their
names.
When looking at a pageful of someone else's
links, you notice all of them are already
highlighted in purple.
Your dog has its own home page.
Your dog's homepage is actually good.
You can't call your mother...she doesn't
have a modem.
You check your mail. It says "no new
messages." So you check it again.
Your phone bill comes to your doorstep in a
box.
You code your homework in HTML and give your
instructor the URL.
You don't know the sex of three of your
closest friends, because they have neutral
nicknames and you never bothered to ask.
Your husband tells you he's had the beard
for 2 months.
You wake up at 3 a.m. to go to the bathroom
and stop and check your e-mail on the way
back to bed.
You tell the kids they can't use the
computer because "Daddy's got work to do"
and you don't even have a job.
You buy a Captain Kirk chair with a built-in
keyboard and mouse.
Your wife makes a new rule: "The computer
cannot come to bed."
You get a tatoo that says "This body best
viewed with Netscape 2.01or higher."
You never have to deal with busy signals
when calling your ISP...because you never
log off.
The last girl you picked up was only a jpeg.
You ask a plumber how much it would cost to
replace the chair in front of your computer
with a toilet.
Your wife says communication is important in
a marriage...so you buy another computer and
install a second phone line so the two of
you can chat.
As your car crashes through the guardrail on
a mountain road, your first instinct is to
search for the "back" button.
The Windows
Rejection Song
sung to the
tune of The Rainbow Connection by Kermit
Frog
Why are there
so many, users of Windows?
Don't people have any pride?
Windows is useless, and designed by morons,
and Windows had got DOS inside.
But some don't care and continue to use it.
I know they're wrong, wait and see.
Someday we'll see it, the Windows rejection,
the users, and Bill Gates, and me.
Who said that every bug, would be found but
left there?
It seems so strange and bizarre.
Microsoft thought of that, and millions
accept it,
look what it's done, so far.
What's so amazing are all the delays in
the replacement for Windows 3.
Someday we'll see it, the Windows rejection,
the users, and Bill Gates, and me.
All of us under its spell,
we know that it's utterly tragic...
Have you been not saving, and then torn your
hair out,
because of a G.P. fault?
Is this the error, that occurs most often,
and causes your system to halt?
I've seen it too many times to ignore it,
I think it is just s'posed to be.
Someday we'll see it, the Windows rejection,
the users, and Bill Gates, and me.
la, da da, lee, da la loo,
a, la, la la, la lee la roo!
Help stories
from Tech Support
Compaq is
considering changing the command "Press Any
Key" because of the flood of calls asking
where the "Any" key is. AST technical
support had a called complaining 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.
Another Compaq technician recieved a call
from a man complaining that the system
wouldn''t read word processing files from
his old diskettes. After trouble-shooting
for magnets and heat failed to diagnose the
problem, it was found that the customer
labeled the diskettes then rolled them into
the typewriter to type the labels.
Another AST customer was asked to send a
copy of her defective diskettes. A few days
later a letter arrived from the customer
along with Xeroxed copies of the disk.
A Dell technician advised his customer to
put his troubled floppy back in the drive
and close the door. The customer asked the
tech to hold on, and was heard putting the
phone down, getting up crossing the room to
close the door to his room.
Another Dell customer called to say he
couldn''t get his computer to fax anything.
After 40 minutes of trouble-shooting, the
technician discovered the man was trying to
fax a piece of paper by holding it in front
of the monitor screen and hiting the "send"
key.
Another Dell customer needed help setting up
a new program, so a Dell tech suggested he
go to the local Egghead. "yeah, I got me a
couple of friends," the customer replied.
When told Egghead was a software store, the
man said,"Oh, I thought you meant for me to
find a couple of geeks."
Yet another Dell customer called to complain
that his keyboard no longer worked. He had
clearned it by filling up his tub with soap
and water and soaking the keyboard for a
day, then removing all the keys and washing
them individually.
A Dell technician recieved a call from a
customer who was enraged because his
computer had told him he was "bad and an
invalid." The tech explained that the
computer''s "bad command" and "invalid"
responses shouldn''t be taken personally.
An exasperated caller to Dell Computer Tech
Support couldn''t get her new Dell Computer
to turn on. After ensuring the computer was
plugged in, the technician asked her what
happened when she pushed the power button.
Her response, "I pushed and pushed on the
foot pedal and nothing happens." The "foot
pedal" turned out to be the computer''s
mouse.
Another customer called Compaq tech support
to say her brand-new computer wouldn''t
work. She said she unpacked the unit,
plugged it in, 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?"
I'm ignoring
Y2K
Jack was a
COBOL programmer in the mid to late 1990s.
After years of being taken for granted and
treated as a technological dinosaur by all
the Client/Server programmers and website
developers, he was finally getting some
respect. He'd become a private consultant
specializing in Year 2000 conversions.
Several years of this relentless,
mind-numbing work had taken its toll on
Jack. He began having anxiety dreams about
the Year 2000. All he could think about was
how he could avoid the year 2000 and all
that came with it.
Jack decided to contact a company that
specialized in cryogenics. He made a deal to
have himself frozen until March 15th, 2000.
The next thing he would know is he'd wake up
in the year 2000; after the New Year
celebrations and computer debacles; after
the leap day. Nothing else to worry about
except getting on with his life.
He was put into his cryogenic receptacle,
the technicians set the revive date, he was
given injections to slow his heartbeat to a
bare minimum, and that was that.
The next thing that Jack saw was an enormous
and very modern room filled with excited
people. They were all shouting "I can't
believe it!" and "It's a miracle" and "He's
alive!". There were cameras (unlike any he'd
ever seen) and equipment that looked like it
came out of a science fiction movie.
Someone who was obviously a spokesperson for
the group stepped forward. Jack couldn't
contain his enthusiasm. "Is it over?" he
asked. "Is the year 2000 already here? Are
all the millennial parties and promotions
and crises all over and done with?"
The spokesman explained that there had been
a problem with the programming of the timer
on Jack's cryogenic receptacle, it hadn't
been year 2000 compliant. It was actually
eight thousand years later, not the year
2000. Technology had advanced to such a
degree that everyone had virtual reality
interfaces which allowed them to contact
anyone else on the planet.
"That sounds terrific," said Jack. "But I'm
curious. Why is everybody so interested in
me?"
"Well," said the spokesman. "The year 10000
is just around the corner, and it says in
your files that you know COBOL".
Instructions
for Microsoft's TV dinner
You must
first remove the plastic cover. By doing so
you agree to accept and honor Microsoft
rights to all TV dinners. You may not give
anyone else a bite of your dinner (which
would constitute an infringement of
Microsoft's rights). You may, however, let
others smell and look at your dinner and are
encouraged to tell them how good it is.
If you have a PC microwave oven, insert the
dinner into the oven. Set the oven using
these keystrokes:
\mstv.dinn.//08.5min@@50%heat//
Then enter:
ms//start.cook_dindin/yummy\|/yum~yum:-)gohot#cookme.
If you have a Mac oven, insert the dinner
and press start. The oven will set itself
and cook the dinner.
If you have a Unix oven, insert the dinner,
enter the ingredients of the dinner (found
on the package label), the weight of the
dinner, and the desired level of cooking and
press start. The oven will calculate the
time and heat and cook the dinner exactly to
your specification.
Be forewarned that Microsoft dinners may
crash, in which case your oven must be
restarted. This is a simple procedure.
Remove the dinner from the oven and enter:
ms.no.good/tryagain\again/again.crap.
This process may have to be repeated. Try
unplugging the microwave and then doing a
cold reboot. If this doesn't work, contact
your hardware vendor.
Many users have reported that the dinner
tray is far too big, larger than the dinner
itself, having many useless compartments,
most of which are empty. These are for
future menu items.
If the tray is too large to fit in your oven
you will need to upgrade your equipment.
Dinners are only available from registered
outlets, and only the chicken variety is
currently produced. If you want another
variety, call MicrosoftHelp and they will
explain that you really don't want another
variety. Microsoft Chicken is all you really
need.
Microsoft has disclosed plans to discontinue
all smaller versions of their chicken
dinners. Future releases will only be in the
larger family size. Excess chicken may be
stored for future use, but must be saved
only in Microsoft approved packaging.
Microsoft promises a dessert with every
dinner after '98. However, that version has
yet to be released. Users have permission to
get thrilled in advance.
Microsoft dinners may be incompatible with
other dinners in the freezer, causing your
freezer to self-defrost. This is a feature,
not a bug. Your freezer probably should have
been defrosted anyway.
There was
life before the computer
An
application was for employment
A program was a TV show
A cursor used profanity
A keyboard was a piano!
Memory was something that you lost with age
A CD was a bank account!
And if you had a broken disk,
It would hurt when you found out!
Compress was something you did to garbage
Not something you did to a file
And if you unzipped anything in public
You'd be in jail for awhile!
Log on was adding wood to a fire
Hard drive was a long trip on the road
A mouse pad was where a mouse lived
And a backup happened to your commode!
Cut--you did with a pocket knife
Paste you did with glue
A web was a spider's home
And a virus was the flu!
I guess I'll stick to my pad and paper
And the memory in my head
I hear nobody's been killed in a computer
crash
But when it happens they wish they were
dead!
I have a
Microsoft waiter
Patron:
Waiter!
Waiter: Hi, my name is Bill, and I'll
be your Support Waiter. What seems to be the
problem?
Patron: There's a fly in my soup!
Waiter: Try again, maybe the fly
won't be there this time.
Patron: No, it's still there.
Waiter: Maybe it's the way you're
using the soup; try eating it with a fork
instead.
Patron: Even when I use the fork, the
fly is still there.
Waiter: Maybe the soup is
incompatible with the bowl; what kind of
bowl are you using?
Patron: A SOUP bowl!
Waiter: Hmmm, that should work. Maybe
it's a configuration problem; how was the
bowl set up?
Patron: You brought it to me on a
saucer; what has that to do with the fly in
my soup?!
Waiter: Can you remember everything
you did before you noticed the fly in your
soup?
Patron: I sat down and ordered the
Soup of the Day!
Waiter: Have you considered upgrading
to the latest Soup of the Day?
Patron: You have more than one Soup
of the Day each day?
Waiter: Yes, the Soup of the Day is
changed every hour.
Patron: Well, what is the Soup of the
Day now?
Waiter: The current Soup of the Day
is tomato.
Patron: Fine. Bring me the tomato
soup, and the check. I'm running late now.
[Waiter leaves and returns with another bowl
of soup and the check]
Waiter: Here you are, Sir. The soup
and your check.
Patron: This is potato soup.
Waiter: Yes, the tomato soup wasn't
ready yet.
Patron: Well, I'm so hungry now, I'll
eat anything.
[The waiter leaves.]
Patron: Waiter! There's a gnat in my
soup!
The check:
Soup of the Day . . . . . . . . . . $5.00
Upgrade to newer Soup of the Day. . $2.50
Access to support . . . . . . . . . $1.00
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