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Scientists Discover Network-Based Lifeforms
Jonathan Day, jd9812@my-deja.com
February 2, 2000

Researchers in the field of Cryptonet-Zoology issued the
following announcement today, after several years of
painstaking research into the phenomena of "Network Lag":

"We have successfully identified three new species of life
within the Internet, and two new habitats. Our research
indicates that these are having a significant impact on the
usage of the Internet.

Extensive studies led to the discovery of Network Buffalo,
a species of buffalo which now exists entirely within
analog and digital networks. Our research indicates that a
technician at MIT left the back of a computer open, in the
early 60's, which allowed the buffalo to enter. Since then,
they have been grazing on clumps of packets and
substantially changing the electronic ecosystem. Some
buffalo also broke into the old analog phone system, prior
to the installation of cattle grids on Internet gateways.
By supersampling the sound of so-called 'phone static', we
have shown this to be the animal calls between the buffalo.

Additional research led us to the discovery of Router
Swamps. Drinks spilled onto keyboards drip down the wires
and collect in pools at the bottom of the routers. These
eventually become swamps, which unwary connections can fall
into. Inhabiting these swamps is a species of digital
alligator, previously unknown to science. These alligator
feed off the trapped connections, and other nearby prey.
Extensive tests with traceroute indicate that connections
sometimes do escape these swamps, but injuries can be
severe.

Lastly, we wish to introduce to the world a third species,
an electronic penguin. It has long been known that in the
aquatic depths of the Electron Ocean, there exist schools
of red herring, which confuse and mislead the unwary
voyager. The penguin (scientific name Tuxus Tuxus) eats
these in large quantities. Voyagers are advised to have
several of these penguin aboard, for safety."

-
Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

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That Could Have Been Me!
February 3, 2000

Thousands of Linux zealots are kicking themselves in
response to the VA Linux/Andover.Net MegaPortal merger[1]. 
"I had this brilliant idea for a Linux portal website back
in 1997," said "Bob16", a poor college student.  "But I
decided to drink beer instead of working on 'Bob16's Linux
Homepage'.  I could've been a billionaire like Taco Boy!"

Bob16 isn't alone.  "I was going to create this cool free
software repository called Freshbeef.org," said another
IPO-less Linux zealot with 20/20 hindsight.  "But I had
second thoughts about the idea.  Why would anyone visit my
site when they could just browse the Linux Software Map?"

One hacker has founded a small Support Group for other
people that missed the portal bandwagon -- and the
accompanying riches. "Not everybody can be Rob Malda," Mr.
Eric Poor, the founder of the People Without Portals
Support Group, admitted.  "Still, if we had played our
cards right, we could've been raking in the stock options
now. Besides, unlike Rob Malda, I can actually write a full
article without making a dumb spelling or grammatical
error."

Mr. Poor then added, not realizing who he was talking to,
"One thing is sure, though, I'm glad that I never bothered
to found a Linux humor site.  That market segment is going
nowhere fast!"

Actually, Linux humor is looking more and more lucrative.
Humorix's Investor Relations Liason (Mr. G. E. Trich)
calculated, on the back of a napkin while eating lunch
today, that the total net worth of the Humorix website is
US$3,380,000!

"I'm not making that number up," he said. "You see,
Andover.Net is being acquired for US$813 million[2].  Now,
Andover.Net handles 2.4 million unique visitors per
month[3]. That comes out to around $338 per visitor.  In
January, Humorix received about 10,000 unique visitors. 
So, $338 multiplied by 10,000 yields $3.38 million!"

He then added a disclaimer, "Nobody would acquire Humorix
unless we claimed a dot com domain name.  Unfortunately,
humorix.com is already taken by some Swedish guy that
actually has the first name of 'Humorix'.  I discussed the
matter with our lawyer Noah Morals; he doesn't think we can
snatch the domain from him without spending millions on
legal fees.  All of the other good domains --
LowBudgetLinuxPortal.com, LinuxMoneyMakingPortal.net,
LinuxFakeNewsAndPropaganda.com, LawyersAreEvil.com, and
NonStopBillGatesJokes.com -- have already been snatched by
domain squatters trying to resell them unsuccessfully on
eBay for $1 million a pop."

Any megaportals wishing to acquire this hot Linux PORTAL
property may send their offers to
give-us-money@i-want-a-website.com. Other corporations
unable to afford our asking price may still be interested
in our Advertising Rate Schedule[4]; we'll refrain from
poking fun at your company if you give us enough money.


[1] http://slashdot.org/articles/00/02/03/0823235.shtml
[2] http://linuxtoday.com/story.php3?sn=16081
[3] http://www.salon.com/tech/log/2000/02/03/slashdot/index.html
[4] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/about.shtml#Advertising

--

James S. Baughn
http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/
-
Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

From owner-humorix@nl.linux.org Mon Feb  7 21:44:21 2000
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Brief History Of Linux (Part 2)
February 7, 2000

After we published Part 1 of this series, both of our
regular readers sent flames complaining that this "Brief
History of Linux" was neither brief, nor a history of
Linux.  Whatever.  It's now time to present Part 2 of this
series in which we describe the invention of computers,
Unix, and Al Gore's Internet.

* Let's all holler for Hollerith

The US Constitution mandates that a census be held every
ten years.  In 1890 the US Congress extended the census to
collect exhaustive demographic information on each citizen
that could be resold to marketing companies to help pay for
the newly installed gold-plated toilets in Capitol Hill
bathrooms.  With the sheer amount of data to be collected,
some people estimated that the 1890 Census wouldn't be
completed until 1900. It was hoped that an electronic
tabulating machine using punchcards designed by Herman
Hollerith would speed up the process.

It didn't quite work out that way.  First, an infestation
of termites ate their way through the wooden base of
Hollerith's machines, and then a wave of insects devoured
several stacks of punchcards.

Second, some Hollerith models had the propensity to crash
at the drop of a hat... literally.  In one recorded
instance, the operator dropped his hat while standing
nearby, and when he reached down to pick it up, he bumped
the machine, causing it to flip over and crash. 
(Incidentally, the hat in question was a blue hat, not a
Red Hat as a certain Microsoft-owned encyclopedia has
claimed.)

These flaws meant that the census was delayed for several
years. However, the system was, in the words of one
newspaper reporter, "good enough for government work", a
guiding principle that lives on to this very day and
explains the government's insistence on using Windows-based
PCs.

The company that Hollerith later founded merged with two
others to form C-T-R (Calculating-Tabulating-Recording, one
of the most hideously named companies of the time, only to
be surpassed years later by Bill Gates' "Traf-O-Data").
C-T-R was later renamed to IBM in 1924.

* Edison's most important invention

One of Thomas Edison's most profound inventions was that of
patent litigation. Edison used his many patents on motion
pictures to monopolize the motion picture industry.  One
could argue that Edison was an early pioneer for the
business tactics employed by Microsoft and the
MPAA/DVD-CCA[1].

Indeed, Edison's company, the Motion Picture Patent Company
(MPPC), formed in 1908, bears a striking resemblance to the
modern-day Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA).
Similar intitials, different people, same evil.  The MPCC,
with the help of hired thugs, ensured that all motion
picture producers paid tribute to Edison and played by his
rules.  The MPAA, with the help of hired lawyers, ensures
that all motion picture producers pay tribute and play by
their rules.

Ironically, filmmakers that found themselves facing Edison
patent litigation (or worse) fled to Texas, California, and
Mexico.  Those same filmmakers outlasted Edison's monopoly
(broken up in 1917 by the courts[2]) -- and eventually
banded together to form the MPAA! History has a tendency to
repeat itself; so it seems likely that today's DVD lawsuit
victims may well come to power in the future -- and soon
become the evil establishment, thus completing another
cycle.

* The AnyQuack Computer

The days of Hollerith's mechnical tabulating machines were
soon replaced by electronic machines.  One such device,
Colossus, was used by the British in World War II to decode
Nazi transmissions.  The code-breakers were quite
successful in their mission, except for the tiny detail
that nobody at Bletchly Park knew how to read German.  They
had decoded unreadable messages into... unreadable
messages.

Two years later in 1945, a group of professors and graduate
students at the University of Pennsylvania were discussing
computing theory. An argument quickly ensued, in which one
professor yelled, "Any quack can build an electronic
computer!  The real challenge is building one that doesn't
crash every five minutes."

One graduate student, J. Presper Eckert, Jr., responded,
"I'm any quack! I'll take you up on that challenge.  I'll
build a device that can calculate 1,000 digits of pi in one
hour... without crashing!" Several professors laughed;
"Such high-speed calculations are beyond our level of
technology.  Surely you jest," one responded.

Eckert, with the help of others, did build such a device.
As a joke, he called the machine "AnyQuack", which
eventually became ENIAC -- ENIAC's Not Intended As
Crashware, the first known example of a self-referential
acronym.

* Birth of Gates and the Anti-Gates 

October 28, 1955 saw the birth of William H. Gates, who
would rise above his humble beginnings as the son of
Seattle's most powerful millionaire lawyer and become the
World's Richest Man(tm). A classic American rags-to-riches
story (with "rags" referring to the dollar bills that the
Gates family used for toilet paper), Bill Gates is now
regarded as the world's most respected businessman by
millions of clueless people that have obviously never
touched a Windows machine[3].  

Nature is all about balance.  The birth of Gates in 1955
tipped the cosmic scales toward evil, but the birth of
Linus Torvalds in 1969 finally balanced them out.  Linus'
destiny as the savior of Unix and the slayer of
money-breathing Redmond dragons was sealed when, just mere
hours after his birth, the Unix epoch began January 1st,
1970. While the baseline for Unix timekeeping might be
arbitrary, we here at Humorix like to thank the its
proximity of Linus' birth is no coincidence.

* Bill Gates hasn't changed a bit

The early Gates childhood is best summed up in this excerpt
from a note his second grade teacher wrote to his parents:

   Billy has been having some trouble behaving in class
   lately...  Last Monday he horded all of the crayons and
   refused to share, saying that he needed all 160 colors
   to maximize his 'innovation'.  He then proceeded to sell
   little pieces of paper ("End-User License Agreement for
   Crayons" he called them) granting his classmates the
   'non-transferable right' to use the crayons on a limited
   time basis in exchange for their lunch money...

   When I tried to stop Billy, he kept harping about his
   right to innovate and how my interference violated basic
   notions of free-market capitalism.  "Holding a monopoly
   is not illegal," he rebutted.  I chastised him for
   talking back, and then I took away the box of crayons so
   others could share them... angrily, he then pointed to a
   drawing of his hanging on the wall and yelled, "That's
   my picture!  You don't have the right to present my
   copyrighted material in a public exhibition without my
   permission! You're pirating my intellectual property. 
   Pirate!  Pirate!  Pirate!"

   I developed a headache that day that even the maximum
   allowed dosage of Aspirin wasn't able to handle.  And
   what I've described happened only on Monday.  On
   Tuesday, it was worse... he conned several students out
   of their milk money by convincing them to play a rigged
   game of three-card Monty...

* Wanted: Eunuchs programmers

Everything you know about the creation of the Unix
operating system is wrong. Research by our Vast Spy
Network(tm) has uncovered the truth: Unix was a conspiracy
hatched by Ritchie and Thompson to thwart the AT&T monopoly
that they worked for.  The original system -- code-named
EUNUCHS (Electronic UNtrustworthy User-Condemning Horrible
System), a play on Multics, was horribly conceived, just as
the co-conspiractors had planned.  

The system, quickly renamed to a more respectable "Unix" to
downplay rumors about the author's private lives, was
adopted first by Ma Bell's Patent Department and then by
the rest of the monopoly.  AT&T saw an inexpensive,
multi-user, portable operating system that it had all
rights to; the authors, however, saw a horrible,
multi-crashing system that the company would become
hopelessly dependent on.  AT&T would go bankrupt trying to
maintain the system, and the Evil Empire of Ma Bell would
collapse just as the authors had hoped.

That, as we all know, didn't happen.  Ritchie and Thompson
were too talented to create a crappy operating system; no
matter how hard they tried the system was better than they
wanted.  Their last ditch effort to sabotage the system by
recoding it C (a newly developed language so obfuscated and
complex that only Kernighan and Ritchie could read it) was
unsuccessful.   Before long Unix spread outside of Bell
Labs and their conspiracy collapsed.  

* Military Intelligence: Not an oxymoron in 1969

The network that eventually became the Internet[4] was
formed in 1969.  It was the Department Of Defense that
commissioned the ARPANET, a rare example of the US military
breaking away from its official motto, "The Leading Edge Of
Yesterday's Technology(tm)".  

In the years leading up to 1969, packet switching
technology had evolved enough to make the ARPANET
possible.   Bolt Beranek and Newman, Inc. received the ARPA
contract in 1968 for packet switching "Interface Message
Processors".  US Senator Edward Kennedy, always on the
ball, sent a telegram to BBN praising them for their
non-denominational "Interfaith" Message Processors, an act
unsurpassed by elected representatives until Al Gore
invented the Internet years later.

While ARPANET started with only four nodes[5] in 1969, it
evolved rapidly.  Email was first used in 1971; by 1975 the
first mailing list, MsgGroup, was created by Steve Walker
when he sent a message containing the text "First post!" to
it. In 1979 all productive use of ARPANET ceased when
USENET and the first MUD were created.  In 1983, when the
network surpassed 1,000 hosts, a study showed that 90.4% of
all traffic was devoted to email and USENET flame wars. 
Some things never change.

* Too many hyphens: Traf-O-Data and Micro-soft

Bill Gates and his classmate Paul Allen attended an
exclusive private school in Seattle.  In 1968, after
raising $3,000 from a yard sale, they gained access to a
timeshare computer and immediately became addicted.  After
depleting their money learning BASIC and playing Solitaire,
they convinced a company to give them free computer time in
exchange for reporting bugs -- ironically, an early form of
Open Source development!  It should be noted that this
company, Computer Center Corp., went bankrupt in 1970,
primarily because Gates & Allen kept crashing their central
computer while trying to program a Minesweeper game in
BASIC.

The two then founded a small company called Traf-O-Data[6]
that collected and analyzed traffic counts for
municipalities using a crude device based on the Intel
"Pretanium" 8008 CPU.  They had some success at first, but
ran into problems when they were unable to deliver their
much hyped second-generation device called "TrafficX".  A
civil engineer in Spokane, Washington is quoted as saying
that "Traf-O-Data is the regional leader in vaporware", the
first documented usage of the term that has come to be
synonymous with Bill Gates.  

Soon thereafter, the two developed their own BASIC
interpreter, and sold it to MITS for their new Altair
computer.  April 4, 1975 is the fateful day that Micro-soft
was officially founded in Albuquerque, NM as a language
vendor.  (Remember that date if you do happen to stumble on
a time-machine during your life.)  

* Closed source, opened wallets

In 1976 Bill Gates wrote the famous letter to Altair
hobbyists accusing them of "stealing software" and
"preventing good software from being written"[7]. We must
assume Bill's statement was true, because no good software
was being written at Micro-soft.

Bill Gates did not innovate the concept of charging
megabucks for software, but he was the first to _make_
megabucks from peddling commercial software.

* If only Gary had been sober

When Micro-soft moved to Seattle in 1979 (leaving behind
the hyphen), most of its revenue came from sales of BASIC,
a horrible language so dependant on GOTOs that spaghetti
looked more orderly than its code did.  (BASIC has ruined
more promising programmers than anything else, prompting
its original inventor Dartmouth University to issue a
public apology in 1986.)

However, by 1981 BASIC hit the backburner to what is now
considered the luckiest break in the history of computing:
MS-DOS[8]. (We use the term "break" because, well, MS-DOS
was -- and always will be -- broken.)  IBM was developing a
16-bit "personal computer" and desperately needed an
operating system to drive it.

Their first choice was Gary Kildall's CP/M[9], but IBM
never struck a deal with him.  Historians to this day still
argue why Kildall got the shaft, although, after extensive
research, we've discovered the true reason: Kildall was
drunk at the time the IBM representatives went to talk with
him. A sober man would not have insulted the reps, calling
their employer an "Incredibly Bad Monopoly" and referring
to their new IBM-PC as an "Idealistically Backwards
Microcomputer for People without Clues".  Needless to say,
Gary "I Lost The Deal Of The Century" Kildall was not
sober.

We all know what terrible calamity happened next: IBM chose
Microsoft's Quick & Dirty Operating System. QDOS (along
with the abomination known as EDLIN) had been acquired from
a Seattle man, Tim Paterson[10], for the paltry sum of
$50,000. "Quick" and "Dirty" were truly an accurate
description of this system, because IBM's quality assurance
department discovered 300 bugs in QDOS's 8,000 lines of
assember code (that's about 1 bug per 27 lines -- which, at
the time, was appalling, but compared with Windows 98
today, it really wasn't that shabby).

Thanks in part to IBM's new marketing slogan, "Nobody Ever
Got Fired For Choosing IBM(tm)", and the release of the
VisiCalc spreadsheet program that everybody and their
brother wanted, IBM PCs running DOS flew off the shelves
and, unfortunately, secured Microsoft's runaway success.
Bill Gates was now on his way to the Billionaire's Club;
his days as a mediocre programmer were long gone: he was
now a Suit.  The only lines of code he would ever see would
be the passcodes to his Swiss bank accounts.

But, as we shall see in next installment, Bill Gates was
not without his enemies.  Richard M. Stallman set in motion
the GNU Project -- a snowball rapidly rolling down the
mountain and poised to bury Microsoft. Linus Torvalds, of
course, comes on the scene in 1991 when he sets in motion
the Linux kernel -- a boulder rapidly rolling down the
mountain and poised to bury Microsoft as well.

Check back soon for Part 3 which chronicles the rise and
rise of the Microsoft Empire -- and the beginnings of the
Open Source and Linux revolution.

To be continued...

* References and links

[1] http://www.feedmag.com/essay/es105_master.html
[2] http://laws.findlaw.com/US/243/502.html
[3] http://photo.net/bg/
[4] http://www.isoc.org/guest/zakon/Internet/History/HIT.html
[5]
http://www.computerhistory.org/exhibits/internet_history/full_size_images/1969_4-node_map.gif
[6]
http://www.physplt.wsu.edu/pub/people/BremnerFiles/MicroHistory04.html
[7] http://www.blinkenlights.com/classiccmp/gateswhine.html
[8] http://www.tuxedo.org/~esr/jargon/html/entry/MS-DOS.html
[9] http://www.joyce.de/english/cpmstory.htm
[10] http://patersontech.com/Dos/

---

James S. Baughn
http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

-
Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

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Hey,
    I'm pretty new to the humorix mailing list but I really enjoy it!
Keep up the good work & don't listen to those people flaming about
"Brief History Of Linux- Part 1", I liked both of them :)

Tim :)
----- Original Message -----
From: James Baughn <jbaughn@ldd.net>
To: <humorix@nl.linux.org>
Sent: Monday, February 07, 2000 3:26 PM
Subject: [humorix] Brief History Of Linux (Part 2)


Brief History Of Linux (Part 2)
February 7, 2000



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Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

From owner-humorix@nl.linux.org Wed Feb 16 21:57:00 2000
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The Linux Forecaster
February 16, 2000

Another day, another portal opens.  Today's latest
get-rich-quick portal is called "LinuxForecast.com". 
Operated by a former meterologist, this site uses complex
models to predict trends in the Linux world.  "We can
predict short-term weather events pretty well," he said,
"So why can't we forecast the next Linux vs. FreeBSD flame
war on Usenet or predict the duration and intensity of the
dreaded Slashdot Effect?"

As the founder of LinuxForecast.com, Eric "Stormy" Jones is
living out the American Geek dream: he just built his very
own Beowulf cluster.  "After getting 'The Letter' from Red
Hat and VA Linux, I made enough money to buy my own Beowulf
cluster," he boasted.  "My old co-workers at the National
Weather Service are so jealous; my cluster rivals those new
supercomputers they just installed. They'll have trouble
keeping up with this Jones."

Eric's cluster certainly is impressive.  It accurately
forecasted a Slashdot Effect 24 hours in advance, allowing
Eric to send this warning email to the victim before the
storm hit:

   NOTICE: LinuxForecast.com has issued a Slashdot Effect
   Watch for your domain effective for the next 48 hours. 
   Forecast models indicate that Taco Boy is planning on
   posting an article about your "Penguin Porn" site. The
   models disagree on the timing or duration of the storm,
   although we can say that a moderate risk of server
   crashes, excess bandwidth usage, and increased website
   hosting bills are possible.

   Please take appropriate action by mirroring your site. 
   It might be too late now, but you might also want to
   consider purchasing Denial Of Service insurance.

Eric Jones hopes to expand his portal website so that
Slashdot Effect advisories are automatically issued.  "It's
a public service," he explained.  "I mean, look at all the
publicity those (cr|h)ackers who launched an attack on
Yahoo got.  What they did is a pittance compared to the
daily firestorms that Andover.Net is responsible for."

The former weatherman is also using his personal Beowulf
cluster to predict other trends.  "Did you see that massive
trollfest on Slashdot yesterday when somebody used an
automatic comment poster? I saw that coming days in
advance," he boasted.  "I can predict the signal-to-noise
ratio on Slashdot, Usenet, and other forums days in advance
with a margin of error of only 5%.  Of course, with
Slashdot that's easy: the S/N ratio is always less than
1:10,000."

Stock prices and business events are also tracked by Jones'
cluster.   "My site is going to be acquired within a month
by some media conglomerate; it'll have an IPO within six
months and I'll be a multi-millionaire by Christmas."  When
I asked about the future prospects for Humorix, he replied,
"Both of your regular readers will be joined by a third
reader by the end of the year.  Otherwise your crappy site
will remain crappy and you'll have to break down and get a
day job. Nobody will find your pathetic attempts at
self-referential meta-meta-humor funny."

Jones also made some dire predictions for Linux portals. 
"There's just too many of them.  The daily amount of new
open source code written will drop by 22% next month as
people stop hacking and start working on Linux websites,
hoping to get-rich-quick by selling out to Andover and VA
Linux.  In years past start-up companies dreamed of being
acquired by Microsoft; now everybody wants to be acquired
by VA Linux or Red Hat."

"The bubble will burst," he continued, before I could get a
word in edgewise reminding him that his own site is a
get-rich-quick sellout-bound portal site.  "Take, for
example, the new LinuxBeacon.com portal. The site runs
Microsoft IIS 5.0 and Windows 2000!  The webpages were
composed using Windows software, and they urgently need to
be demoronised. Within 48 hours the webmaster is going to
be on the receiving end of a flamewar initiated by outraged
Linux zealots.  That site is doomed to fail, just like many
others."

He then added quickly, "Except mine."

At this point his beeper went off and he exclaimed, "Oh,
crap! One of my forecast models indicates that my site is
about to be hit by the Slashdot Effect.  Oh dear Lord! I
gotta run."

---

James S. Baughn
http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

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Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
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From owner-humorix@nl.linux.org Tue Feb 22 05:28:03 2000
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Redmond Roundup
sjs@sjswebhack.com and James Baughn
February 21, 2000

Back in the early 1990s, Bill Gates promised that Microsoft
would finally produce an enterprise-level operating system
that worked perfectly.  Ten years and 63,000 bugs later,
that dream is still five Service Packs away.  Nevertheless,
Redmond's latest creation, Windows 2000, is now officially
available. Public reaction has been mixed.  Below is a
roundup of events and responses surrounding the Win2K
launch that our Vast Spy Network(tm) has collected.

* I want my bugs!

An entymologist in Georgia is threatening to sue Microsoft
over false advertising in Windows 2000. "According to
Microsoft, Win2K contains 63,000 bugs[1]," he explained. 
"However, the shrink-wrapped box I purchased at CompUSSR
only had one cockroach along with some worthless papers and
a shiny drink coaster.  I got ripped off."

The entymologist hoped that the 63,000 promised bugs would
greatly add to his insect collection.  "I had my doubts
that Microsoft could deliver 63,000 insects in one small
box for only US$299," he said.  "However, with a company as
innovative as Microsoft, the sky is the limit.  Or at least
that's what I thought." He then asked angrily, "Where do I
want to go today?  Back to the store for a refund!"

* Publicity gimmicks generate publicity

Microsoft teamed up with electronics superstore Conductor
City to provide promotional specials to buyers who
pre-ordered Windows 2000.  All copies of Win2K were bundled
with a specially designed Microsoft keyboard[2] attachment
containing only three keys: CTRL, ALT, and DEL.  One happy
customer said, "This is great... On my old keyboards, those
three keys were the first to fail. Now with this
attachment, I won't have to replace my main keyboard every
month."

Conductor City also offered a special program to offset the
high price tag of the full Windows 2000 product.  CC
partnered with the Third Bank of Timbuktu to offer a
Rent-To-Own program to people who couldn't afford to pay
cash upfront for the operating system. The store
advertised, "Now you too can own the most innovative
Microsoft product ever for only one dollar down and 10
cents a day!"

Another publicity stunt called ActiveXXX generated much
publicity -- and tremendous sales.  People who pre-ordered
Windows 2000 and signed up with the Microsoft Network for
one year received a special password allowing them access
to MSN's new ActiveXXX site, featuring live video feeds
from cameras placed on the chests of scantily-clad
waitresses at Hooters restaurants.

* Failure is not an option.  It comes standard with every
  Windows installation.

Even though Win2K has only been on the market for less than
a week, one high-profile failure of a mission-critical
system has already occured. A Win2K machine at the US
Postal Service went on a "cyber" killing spree over the
weekend taking out several sub-servers (rumored to be
running Linux) on its own network. Officials had no
explanation for the violent outburst, saying that the
computer had always been friendly and out-going to its
fellow routers and hubs.

Windows 2000 isn't the only failure-prone Redmond system. 
Microsoft CuteJo(R),  the software giant's answer to Sony's
$2,500 robotic dog AIBO, has been recalled due to a recent
incident in which the Windows Powered(tm) pup mauled its
owner. The company released a statement saying this issue
does not reflect any critical defects in its product, and
that it was the owner's fault when, in reading its users
guide, the person said out loud in disbelief: "You can
fetch? My ass!" 

"It did exactly what the customer demanded," the release
said. 

* Pigs are flying

Satan was forced to dawn a parka this week when a large
number of people, including some Linux longhairs, admitted
that "Windows 2000 doesn't suck [that much]".  One Linux
hacker said, "Let's be honest, certain Microsoft products
do provide a quality unmatched by any competitor.  Those
Windows 2000 manuals make excellent doorstops.  Linux books
just don't work well in this regard; they aren't thick and
heavy enough.  Also, when it comes to drink coasters and
skeet shoot targets, nothing even comes close to a
Microsoft produced  CD-ROM."

The new found respect for Windows 2000 is even evident on
Slashdot, that bastion of anti-Microsoft zealotry.  For
instance, last week somebody posted a favorable comment
about Win2K that actually got moderated up! This has never
happened before in the history of Slashdot.

Even Usenet is turning slightly pro-Microsoft.   One
anonymous coward posted on alt.linux.finnish.conspiracy,
"Windows 2000 rules... even the webmaster of
LinuxBeacon.com, a new Linux portal site, prefers Win2K." 
Several people agreed, although one Linux advocate
reponded, "So what?  Linux rules... even the webmaster of
WindowsBeacon.com, a new Windows site, prefers Linux and
Apache."

[1]
http://www.zdnet.com/filters/printerfriendly/0,6061,2436920-79,00.html
[2] http://www.xs4all.nl/~rsw/images/ms-keyboard.jpg


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Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

From owner-humorix@nl.linux.org Fri Feb 25 04:34:12 2000
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Quickies Straight From Dave's Twisted Mind
Dave Finton, surazal@nerp.net
February 24, 2000

Editor's Note:

Dave Finton has sent in another round of Quickies.  Since
both of our regular readers (hi Bob and Eric!) actually
like Dave's columns, we decided to run it even though we
still have lingering doubts about his sanity.

* Dave Declares War on Meta-Humor

David Finton, intrepid Humorix reporter, has declared war
on the scourge of the internet known as meta-humor, whereby
a joke will make fun of itself within itself.  "These
meta-jokes are going too far, and will cause some serious
imbalances in the space-time continuum," said Dave to
reporters at a press conference.  "All too often, humorists
will refer to themselves in the third person or even
pretend they're being interviewed at imaginary press
conferences just for convenience's sake.  These  so-called
meta-humorists often work out of their basements smoking
entire packs of cigarettes at a time while putting off
critical tasks that need to be done, like laundry!

"These meta-humorists can be sneaky, too.  Often times
they'll try to get a good chuckle through self-depracating
humor.  Watch out for these people; they are a menace to
society!"

James Baughn, creator of the Humorix website, has pushed
Congress into passing the It's For The Children and Dave
Quit Stealing My Jokes Act.  This bill, if enacted into
law, might be the only thing to get Dave to finally shut
up.

"Make no bones about it," said Dave.  "The first thing I
will do is publish an article on Humorix on this matter. 
No meta-humorist will be safe from the clutches of my Giant
Death Ray(tm).

[Just for your information, it is official Humorix policy
to never employ silly editor's notes as a cheap attept at
meta-meta-humor. -- The Editor]

* Microsoft releases MS BackPedal 3.1

In conjunction with the release of Windows 2000 and the the
nearing conclusion to the Justice Department Antitrust
trial, Microsoft has responded to the growing market need
for back-pedaling by releasing Microsoft BackPedal(R), a
software package designed to detract statements made by
overworked CEO's and overzealous marketing droids.

"We released this product to address the growing needs of
our biggest customer, namely ourselves," said Steve
Ballmer.  "When Bill Gates made those, um, silly comments
about open-sourcing our flagship product, well we had to
embrace and extend the concept of trying to rewrite
history."

So far the BackPedal product has shown amazing success. 
Already Microsoft has rewritten many of its own
misstatements.  "640K ought to be enough for anybody" has
already been converted to "You might be able to run
Solitaire on 640 Megabytes of RAM with Windows NT on a good
day" and "This court trial will have no impact on how we do
business" has been rewritten as "We've split our operations
up into 5 completely autonomous units, just in case".

The software is not without its bugs, however.  An
automatic e-mail form sent to bug-submitters for the
Windows 2000 beta program that was supposed to read "Thank
you for testing our beta product.  While we are certain our
product may contain a few flaws, we hope that your
experience with our software has improved your life"
instead read "This piece of crap already has 65,000 known
bugs and you want to tell us about another one?  We might
look at your bug submission, but by the time we do your
descendents may already have evolved into more advanced
life forms such as bacteria, loser.  Go use a real
operating system; see what we care!"

"Whoops," replied Ballmer when notified of this.  "Looks
like an upgrade is already in the works.  Cha-ching!"

* EFNet Reaches 7th Straight Year of Nonfunctionality

IRC users across the world celebrated the 7th anniversity
of the last known time EFNet, a network of Internet Relay
Chat servers across the internet, was actually
operational.  The nonfunctionality of EFNet and IRC in
general has become a mainstay in many internet users'
lives.

Jim Smith, system administrator in charge of one such IRC
server, lovingly patted the machine in the back corner of
the server farm room.  "This machine hasn't even been
turned on in 4 years.  Does that stop anybody from trying
to connect to it during netsplits and heavily lagged
periods of time?  Nope!  Boy, are these IRC users dumb! 
We've got three of these  babies, and none of them have
been working properly in the past decade or  so.  Just for
fun we turn one on and hook it up to the network for a
while, but when, say, a thousand lusers connect to it in
the vain hope an  IRC server is actually running, we pull
the plug just for the hell of it!"

EFNet was once the main vehicle of communications in the
early years of the internet but is now mainly used either
for SPAM purposes or for transmitting messages to IRC users
that a netsplit has occurred.

When one IRC user was asked why he just didn't go to
another IRC network, he replied "No way d00d!  This is
where all my l33t friends are!  Well it's either there or
on AOL Instant Messenger...".  AOL is in fact the only
other internet service that has broken EFNet's record by
being non-operational since the very beginning when the
power switch was first turned on in Steve Case's garage
back in the 18th century B.C.

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Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
Archive:      http://humbolt.nl.linux.org/lists/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

