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Date:	Sat, 03 Jul 1999 10:09:53 -0500
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Organization: http://i-want-a-website.com
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Dave Finton Usurps Humorix
surazal@nerp.net
July 3, 1999

Dave "Surazal" Finton has temporarily usurped control of
Humorix after a bizarre power outtage struck Humorix World
Headquarters earlier today.  The cause of the blackout is
still under investigation, but we feel confident in saying
that Microsoft is probably involved somehow. To fill the
void until power and Net access can be restored, Dave has
assumed control of the site, allowing him to publish
anything he wants...


* Linux Accidentally Beats NT in Mindcraft Benchmark
Rerun

Marketing droids and sensation-happy reporters were shocked
to learn that in the latest Mindcraft tests Linux
accidentally beat NT on every benchmark.  The cause,
however, was not so surprising.

"We were wondering 'What the hell is going on!?'" said one
Mindcraft employee.  "We did a little investigating and
found out that the so-called Linux experts replaced our
enterprise-level machines with sub-standard Pentium Pros
with only ONE network card!!!  How could ANYONE use such a
configuration for something as CPU intensive as serving web
pages?"

Indeed, not only were the servers secretly replaced before
the tests, but they were also loaded with "database"
software, which reportedly allows businesses to put their
data in something more manageable than ASCII text files. 
In addition to this, the webservers also served out what is
known as "CGI", an obscure coding method that allows
programmers and nonprogrammers alike to dynamicly change
the content of web pages without having to resort to
editing HTML by hand.  When asked about these added
features and their impact on web serving, the Mindcraft
people looked at us blankly.

"I mean, come on!  Enterprise-level webserving means
hundreds of static HTML pages per second out of the best
technology money can buy.  And buy. And keep buying.  I
mean, who really uses CGI or databases for today's
applications?  Some Linux schmuck in his parent's
basement?  Big business demands big operating systems, and
lots and lots of 4K text files."

Future Mindcraft projects include setting up a 20 NT server
farm designed to act as a ping server, and developing a
method for users to compose and send their email messages
"quickly and easily", using only a 256-processor machine. 
"NT is designed to handle these important tasks on today's
hardware.  Heck, can Linux even display its desktop on 9
computer screens concurrently?  How can anybody take that
operating system seriosly when all-important features like
these are lacking?"

"The next thing you know," said the Mindcraft expert,
"They'll be talking about things like redundant data
storage and web-driven applications. Puh-lease."


* Dave Finton Thinks About Getting Around to That Yodix
Article

Dave Finton, who reported on the Yodix OS[1] some time back,
is reportedly "thinking" about getting around to compiling
the 3 or 4 remaining submissions and emailing the damn
thing out, "just to get it over with."

"I mean, it's not a matter of being too busy, or being away
on some vacation.  I just can't get up the ambition to just
include it in an email to Humorix," said Dave.  "I'm pretty
sure I'll get around to it. Eventually."

Dave's laziness not only applies to the Yodix article, but
other areas of his life as well.  "You know, I got that
homework assignment due tomorrow, and here I am, typing
away at some humor article.  I mean, the homework's not all
that hard.  I'm just putting it off.  Because, well you
know.  I'm just lazy."

Other procrastinated projects include doing his laundry,
his web page[2], and "asking that one girl out".  Dave
reportedly hasn't gotten laid in years.  "I mean, I still
got 3 t-shirts and 5 pairs of boxers left in the 'clean'
pile.  My clean clothes are in that pile because I haven't
gotten around to folding them yet.  Maybe I'll do it
tomorrow."

While interviewing Dave for this article, many people
passing by gave him very strange looks, probably because he
was talking to himself and taking notes on the back of his
hand.


* Mozilla Plans for 1.0 Release; Space-Time Continuum
Collapses

Devolopers today at Netscape were abuzz with the
possibility of a 1.0 release of their browser, when all of
the sudden the Universe collapsed into a massive
singularity.

"I mean we were _so_ close!  1.0 was around the corner,
outside developers started to join the project, and Marc
Andreesen vowed to quit eating pizza forever!" said one
mozilla.org programmer.  "But alas, it was too much for the
Universe as we know it to handle.  I mean, Marc without
pizza is sorta like, you know, quarks without gluons.  And
the impending Mozilla release?  I think that was the last
straw."

Scientists, while perplexed, were unable to do much about
the situation, since everyone (and all the matter in the
universe) was squished into a lump the size of a pea.

Microsoft, still licking its wounds from the infinite
number of monkeys incident[3], was quick to point out
Mozilla's flaws.  "See?  We're not planning for the release
of our flagship product for at least 2 or 3 more eons.  The
denizens of some impossible-to-imagine reality will thank
us for our innovative spirit!"

Mozilla developers were optimistic, however.  "We're going
to release our product before the next Big Bang, so that we
can seed the market for our next-generation browser.  Once
intelligent life evolves after a dozen or so billion years
of Universal expansion, they'll be quick to use our readily
available technology."


* Slashdot Effect Vaporizes Ganymede

In one of the more bizarre consequences of the infamous
"Slashdot Effect", Ganymede, the largest moon in our solar
system, was completely and utterly destroyed when CmdrTaco
posted an article about the Hubble Space Telescope's latest
round of images and discoveries.

"It all started when we put up some more info on our web
page about Jupiter and Ganymede," said one NASA guy whom we
believe may be in charge of something.  "CmdrTaco got wind
of it, and posted it on his site."

According to observers, the webserver promptly exploded
thereafter, damaging the nearby remote control system used
to aim and focus the Hubble's cameras from the ground.

"All of the sudden our controls went wacky!" said one
engineer.  "The Hubble then started shooting these death
rays all over the universe.  One of those rays hit
Ganymede, and *POOF*.  There it went!  We were all like,
'COOOOOL!  Let's aim it something else!'"

In addition to Ganymede simply ceasing to exist, other
celestial fatalities included a star belonging to a nearby
alien culture.  According to government officials, the
response they got "didn't sound too friendly".  "We got
some kind of warning to leave the premises immediately, as
this planet was declared uninhabitable," said President
Hillary Clinton.  "We tried to tell them that it was
perfectly habitable, and we were happy where we were.  All
we got in response was this vaguely disquieting chuckle. 
Personally, I think there's nothing to worry about. This
whole thing smells like bu-"

---

[1] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/may99.shtml#Yodix
[2] http://surazal.nerp.net
[3] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/oct98.shtml#Monkeys


-
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@humbolt.nl.linux.org Sun Jul  4 16:20:07 1999
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Date:	Sun, 04 Jul 1999 08:56:17 -0500
From:	James Baughn <jbaughn@ldd.net>
Organization: http://i-want-a-website.com
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Boston Software Party
July 4, 1999

BOSTON, MA -- Thousands of disgruntled Linux
revolutionaries showed up at the Boston Harbor today to
protest "taxation without representation" by the oppressive
Microsoft Corporation.  Thousands of pounds of Microsoft
boxes, CD-ROMs, manuals, license agreements, promotional
materials, and registration forms were dumped into the
harbor during the First Annual Boston Software Party.

Some attendees sold hastily printed T-shirts with slogans
like "July 4th, 1999: Microsoft Independence Day!" and
"What do you call 10,000 pounds of Microsoft software at
the bottom of the ocean? A darned good start!"  Others sold
fake dollar bills with a portrait of Tux Penguin and the
saying, "In Linus We Trust".

One highlight (or lowlight, depending on perspective) of
the event was an impromptu speech given by Eric S. Raymond
in which he compared the Open Source movement with that of
the American Revolution.  "The Colonists had the Stamp Tax,
we have a Microsoft tax on new computers pre-installed with
Windows... [T]hey had the Declaration [of Independence], we
have the Cathedral and the Bazaar. They had the
Constitution... we have the Open Source Definition. They
had Thomas Jefferson, we have, um, me!"

Raymond's speech ignited a long-running thread on Slashdot
entitled, "Top Ten Differences If Thomas Jefferson Behaved
Like Eric Raymond During the American Revolution".  Some
items from the original post include:

2. The preamble to the Constitution would say, "We the
pragmatists of the Open States of America, in order to
foster the production of higher quality tea and
tobacco..."  

5. The phrases "the right to bear arms shall not be
infringed" and "Geeks With Guns" would be plastered
throughout the O.S.A. Constitution.

9. Instead of Congress, the "Open States Institute" board
of directors would make all of the national legislative
decisions.

10. Raymond, New Hampshire would be the home of the O.S.A.
capitol.

The thread immediately turned into a Raymond vs. Stallman
flame fest.  "If Stallman had been a Founding Father," one
rebuttal post argued, "we'd be living in the GNUnited
States of America.  Our Constitution would be called the
General Public License..." The discussion went downhill
from there.

Dotheads weren't the only people to scoff at the Boston
event and ESR's ego-boosting speech. One Australian ranted,
"I'm getting a little sick of those Americans comparing the
Open Source movement to some kind of US-centric democratic
revolution. It's software for crying out loud!  Eric
Raymond is not Thomas Jefferson.  Linus Torvalds is not
George Washington.  Bill Gates is not the King of England.
Get a grip, people!  If you want to combat an oppressive
regime, move down to Australia for awhile and revolt
against Net censorship!"

A history professor at a Boston university commented,
"Dumping Microsoft stuff into the Atlantic might be
therapeutic, but it's a waste of time." Any idiot who has
studied history knows that revolutions are most effective
if enemy territory is attacked. The French stormed the
Bastille.  We should storm Redmond!"

A controversial InfoWorld pundit wrote in his daily
column,  "The protest in Boston just proves my contention
that the Linux community is full of Get-Back-To-Earth
spirtualists bent on World Domination and Marxist dogma. 
Linux is doomed.  Windows Y2K is the future."


---

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@humbolt.nl.linux.org Fri Jul  9 21:32:38 1999
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Date:	Fri, 09 Jul 1999 14:31:55 -0500
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Slashdot Simulator
July 9, 1999

Inline with our upcoming IPO[1] on July 26th, Humorix has
lauchned a Software Development Lab to produce high-quality
humor software for the burgeoning Open Source community. 
Our first product, Slashdot Simulator 0.1, is now available
for your downloading and hacking pleasure[2].

As the name suggests, Slashdot Simulator (slashsim) is a
Perl script that produces a replica of the Slashdot
homepage containing fake articles and random SlashBoxes.  

What good is it?  Besides providing a way to play pranks on
your friends, you can use Slashsim to get an Emergency
Slashdot Fix in the event that the real Slashdot.org
website is offline or inaccessible.  

Slashsim is licensed under the GNU General Public License.
Our lawyer, Mr. Noah Morals, was working on a special
license called the "OpenHumor Public License".  However, he
is currently in the hospital following a tragic car
accident (he slammed into the back of an  ambulance he was
chasing), and so the license remains unfinished. As a
result, we have decided to release Slashsim under the GPL,
even though the GNU license is not Y2K-compliant[3].


[1] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/jun99.shtml#Humorix-IPO
[2] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/downloads.shtml#Slashsim
[3] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/jun99.shtml#GPL-Y2K

---

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@humbolt.nl.linux.org Fri Jul  9 22:20:31 1999
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Humorix:      Linux and Open Source(nontm) on a lighter note
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From owner-humorix@humbolt.nl.linux.org Tue Jul 13 01:12:05 1999
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Jargon Coiner 1.0
July 12, 1999

Jargon Coiner is an irregular Humorix feature that aims to
give you advance warning -- preferably before Tasty Bits
from the Technology Front picks it up -- of new jargon that
we've just made up.  Sit back and enjoy some ficticious
jargon that you won't see used anywhere else.

wincurse
   Loud expletive uttered when a Linux user comes
   face-to-face with a computer containing a WinModem.  Ex:
   "Eric wincursed when his mother showed him the new
   computer she bought from CompUSSR... which contained a
   WinModem and a WinSoundCard."

wind'oh! key
   Nickname given to the three useless Windows keys that
   come on virtually all new keyboards.  These keys are
   often hit by mistake instead of CTRL or ALT, causing the
   user to shout "D'oh!"

de-wind'oh!ed keyboard
   1. A new keyboard produced without any wind'oh! keys or
      a "Enhanced for Windows 95/98" logo.  Extremely rare.
   2. A keyboard in which the wind'oh! keys have been
      physically removed.

slashdup
   Accidentally posting two or more duplicate comments to
   Slashdot, usually as the result of hitting ENTER at the
   wrong time or fumbling with the Preview option.

You've Got Slogan
   The tendency for reporters to parody the stupid "You've
   Got Mail"  saying when writing about AOL.  Ex: "You've
   Got Spam",  "You've Got Merger" (the headline for an
   article about the Netscape/AOL Merger From Hell)

penguinization
   Ongoing trend to slap a picture of Tux Penguin next to
   anything even remotely related to Linux.  Ex: "Eric
   penguinized his Linux advocacy homepage."

idlesurf
   Aimless surfing of the Internet; looking for something
   interesting to read while killing time.  Often involves
   reloaded the Slashdot homepage every 5 minutes to see if
   a new article has been posted.

lilosplaining
   Arduous process of explaining why there's now a LILO
   boot prompt on the office computer.  Ex: "John had some
   lilosplainin' to do after his boss turned on the
   computer and the Windows splash screen didn't appear."

uptime downer
   Depression that strikes a Linux sysadmin after his 
   uptime is ruined.  Can be caused by an extended power
   outtage, a pet chewing through the power cord, a
   lightning bolt striking the power line, or an urgent
   need to reboot into Windows to read a stupid Word
   document.

OSTR (off-switch total recall)
   The sudden recollection of something terribly important
   you need to do online that occurs exactly 0.157 seconds
   after you've shut down your computer.

lexicon laziness
   Filling a humor site with a list of fake jargon instead
   of publishing something more substantive (and funny)
   that would take more effort to write.

free lecture
   Attempting to explain the concepts of Linux, Open Source
   software, free software, and gift cultures to someone
   who is not familiar with them. Made extra difficult if
   the explainee has been misled by superficial mainstream
   news articles about the subject.  Ex: "Eric gave an
   hour-long free lecture to his mother-in-law after she
   asked him about this Linux thingamajig she read about in
   USA Today."

for(;;)tune loop
   Repeatedly running fortune(6) for cheap entertainment. 
   Ex: "During a coffee break, Bob became bored and started
   a for(;;)tune loop.  His boss had to issue a SIGTERM to
   get him to resume working."

duke of url
   A person who publishes their Netscape bookmark file on
   their homepage.

wwwlize (pronounced wuh-wuh-wuh-lize)
   Habit of unconsciously appending www. in front of URLs,
   even when it's not necessary.  

dubya-dubya-dubya
   Common pronounciation of "double-u double-u double-u"
   when orally specifying a wwwlized address.

advoidance
   Hiding a particularly annoying advertising banner by
   dragging another window over it, or by placing your hand
   on the monitor to cover it up. Ex: "Bob advoided any
   Microsoft banners he came across."

stop mirage
   Trying to click on an imaginary Stop button on a
   program's toolbar after doing something you didn't want
   to.  Usually caused as the result of excessive use of
   Netscape.

ya-prefix
   Putting "another" or "yet another" in front of a name or
   tacking "YA" in front of an acronym.  Ex: "We could
   ya-prefix this article by titling it 'Yet Another Lame
   List of Fabricated Jargon'."

TLDography (pronounced till-daw-graffy)
   The study of top leval domains.  Ex: "I asked my friend,
   a TLDographer, what country .ca stood for, and he
   responded, 'California, of course'."

TLDofy (pronounced till-duh-fy)
   Identifying a country by its top level domain.  Ex: "Oh,
   so you're from .de?  Sprechen Sie Deutsch?"

html lapse
   A period of time when the brain slips into thinking in
   HTML.  "Eric suffered an html lapse when he said to
   himself, 'You <BLINK>idiot</BLINK>! <B>Olympia</B> is
   the capitol of <A HREF="http://www.state.wa.us">
   Washington State</A>, not Redmond!  What a
   <I>stoopid</I> mistake!'"

not-a-saltine explanation
   The canned response given to someone who misuses the
   term "hacker" instead of "cracker".

O'Reilly O'Writing
   Going to a bookstore and copying down notes from an
   O'Reilly computer book that you can't afford.

deep write mode
   Similar to "deep hack mode", but applies to people
   writing editorials or (very rarely) Slashdot comments. 
   We here at Humorix sometimes experience "deep humor
   mode".

Editorial War
   Skirmishes between two or more parties carried out via
   strongly-worded editorials published to sites like
   Slashdot, Linux Today, etc.  ESR and RMS are frequently
   engaged in this.

Star Spinoffs
   Applying themes and ideas from "Star Wars" and "Star
   Trek" to contemporary events.  Ex: "Let the Source be
   with you!", "Microsoft is the Evil Empire", "Resistance
   is futile.  You will be assimilated by Microsoft".

Trademarkization(tm) 
   Giving a phrase special meaning by appending a trademark
   symbol to it.  Ex: "Humorix's Vast Spy Network(tm)",
   "Think Free Speech, Not Free Beer(tm)", "Real Soon
   Now(tm)", "Blue Screen of Death(tm)"

Threenym
   Referring to someone by the first letter of their three
   names.  Used by some people (RMS and ESR), but not
   others (has anybody ever tried to refer to Linus
   Torvalds as "LBT"?).

Rhymes With Cynics 
   The final answer to any debate about how to pronounce
   Linux.  Of course, "cynics" might not be the best word
   to associate Linux with...

domaineering
   Using a service like Netcraft to determine what
   operating system and webserver a particular domain is
   running.

WISL? (Will It Support Linux?)
   The very first thought that springs into a Linux user's
   mind when a cool new piece of software or hardware is
   announced.

JJMD! (Jar Jar Must Die!)
   Meaningless reply given to a question or poll for which
   you don't have a good answer.  Ex: "Q: When did you stop
   beating your wife?  A: JJMD!"

---

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@humbolt.nl.linux.org Tue Jul 13 17:57:20 1999
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Ask Humorix: Tell Me the Future
July 13, 1999

Anonymous Coward wants to know, "Recently there's been a
lot of speculation about the future of Linux: will it
achieve world domination, will it be squashed like a bug
under the Microsoft marketing machine, or will it lose its
soul to corporate interests and then flounder miserably? 
What kind of future do you predict for Linux, open source
software, and the nerd community in general?"

Unfortunately, the Humorix Oracle is currently on vacation
in some alternate dimension.  In his absense, the Humorix
staff decided to organize a panel discussion consisting of
fortune tellers with Linux experience. The following people
made the trip to Humorix World Headquarters to participate
in our informal panel discussion:

- Starla Jones, owner of the Main Street Mysticism Temple
  in Keokuk, WI

- Bob Grimaldi, fortune teller who successfully ported
  Linux to run on his crystal ball

- Madam Cosmos, founder of the 1-900-SIGH-KIK soothsaying
  service

- Jon Splatz, Humorix's pundit and social commentator.

A condensed transcript of the event is attached below.

MODERATOR: Well, I suppose we should start off with the
father of the free software movement, Richard M. Stallman.
What do you all think the future holds for him?

STARLA JONES: Stallman's radical views about software will
further alienate him from the rest of the community he
helped to create.  He will slowly lose his mind as other
leaders gang up against him.  There's going to be quite a
bit of tension surrounding RMS, especially at upcoming
Linux conventions...

BOB GRIMALDI: Indeed.  At the next Atlanta Linux Showcase,
RMS will get worked up about a clueless reporter who said
"Linux" instead of "GNU/Linux".  The whole convention hall
will get eerily quiet as RMS starts into one of his
lectures about freedom and the evils of proprietary
software.   Tim O'Reilly and Eric Raymond, acting like
parents upset that their child is throwing a tantrum in
public, will sneak up behind RMS, shove him into a handy
Oriental rug, and dump him outside.  "Crazy Uncle Stallman"
will literally be swept under the rug.

MADAM COSMOS: What kind of stupid prediction is that? 
Microsoft Bob could foretell the future better than that. 
Your crystal ball must be running Windows 98...

BOB GRIMALDI: Hey!  My crystal ball is running Red Hat 6.0!

MADAM COSMOS: I predict a promising future for RMS.  The
Vatican Church will upgrade its computer systems to
"morally pure" GNU software, saving a vast amount of money
in the process.  As a result, the Pope will canonize RMS as
the "Saint of Free Software". As such, "Crazy Uncle
Stallman" will become "Respected Saint Stallman".

JON SPLATZ: I haven't heard a single prognostication that
sounds half-way reasonable.  

MODERATOR: Enough!  Let's move on to something else,
Slashdot. What's in store for everyone's favorite geek
watering hole?

JON SPLATZ: Everyone's favorite?  Yeah, right.  Slashdot is
getting too big; it won't be able to cope.  I expect a
"site fork" within the coming months, with a group of
disgruntled ex-Dotheads forming a renegade "News for Real
Nerds" site.  Maybe they'll call it Alterdot, or Crashdot,
or SlashDONT.  

MADAM COSMOS: I see a similar future.  People will start to
think of Slashdot as the Microsoft of the geek community; 
it's an oversized monopoly that dominates the entire "News
for Nerds" market.  The site crashes a lot, just like
Windows.  Its underlying HTML is bloated and
not-quite-standard, just like Windows.  

An "Anything But Slashdot" campaign will mount, and
alternative geek news sites will form, all with GPL'd
content preventing another evil Slashdot Monopoly from
forming...

BOB GRIMALDI: Hey, Madam Cosmos, if that is your real name,
why are you so anti-Slashdot?  Based on your "prediction",
it almost seems like you want Slashdot to fail.  I think
you're the one with the broken crystal ball.

No, I see a rosy future in store for Slashdot and Taco
Boy.  Slashdot will set the de facto standard in "new
media" websites, with Rob Malda giving seminars worldwide
about online journalism. In addition, thanks to an
unprecedented write-in campaign led by a group of Dotheads,
Paramount will cast Rob Malda as Wesley Crusher in the new
Star Trek movie "The Rednecks Generation".

STARLA JONES: Wait a minute, I don't think so.  Slashdot
can't retain its non-profit roots forever; eventually the
Suits are going to come in and turn it into yet another
portal website.  I foresee Slashdot being sold to a media
company Real Soon Now, probably Ziff-Davis or Andover
News...

MODERATOR: Uh... Slashdot _was_ sold to Andover News a
couple of weeks ago. 

STARLA JONES: Oh.  Well, I've been on vacation, so you
can't blame me for not following everything.  Still, this
just shows that I have the psychic ability to forecast the
future _and_ the past.  I predicted something that already
happened, right?  Isn't that worth something?

MODERATOR: Moving on... What about Linux?  Will it achieve
World Domination?

(Madam Cosmos starts humming the theme to the "Pinky and
the Brain" cartoon.)

STARLA JONES: Two words... Microsoft Linux.  

BOB GRIMALDI: I'm not entirely convinced that Microsoft
will pull an "embrace-and-smother" strategy on Open Source,
but it would fit their profile.  From what I've heard, Bill
Gates' personal mantra is:

"If it moves, crush it.  If it keeps moving, acquire it.  
If it stops moving, claim victory and focus on something
else."

MADAM COSMOS: Enough with the Microsoft bashing.  I think
Linux will achieve World Domination... or at least World
Acceptance.

BOB GRIMALDI: I agree; I don't see how Linux could fail.  I
think the next big innovation for Linux will be automatic
software updates via TV airwaves...

JON SPLATZ: Huh?

BOB GRIMALDI: Let me finish!  There's plenty of extra
bandwidth available on over-the-air TV broadcasts.  Instead
of going off the air overnight, PBS stations could
broadcast the contents of an entire Red Hat 6.0 distro. 
Computers equipped with TV-to-ASCII expansion boards could
decode the broadcast, and burn the resulting data onto a
CD-ROM.  Then people with little or no decent Net access
could obtain Linux without shelling out US$80 for
shrink-wrapped Red Hat.

JON SPLATZ: That's insane!  What next?  A free copy of Red
Hat included in selected boxes of Cocoa-Bombs(tm) cereal? 
A free copy of SuSE included with selected cases of
imported German beer? This is ludicrous.

MADAM COSMOS: Don't dismiss Bob's idea.  There's nothing
worthwhile on network TV anyways, so if it's possible to
broadcast Linux to the masses, then it's a good idea.  Some
nerd will figure out how, don't worry about that.

STARLA JONES: But what about Microsoft?  If this
software-by-air scheme is technologically possible, you can
bet Microsoft has already acquired a company that's
developed the tools to do it. I can see the ads now: "Watch
the SeeBS Evening News With Dan Blather with your MS
ActiveTV(tm) set and you'll automatically receive the
latest copy of Internet Explorer 7 for free!"

BOB GRIMALDI: You know, I hadn't thought about that.  Maybe
I shouldn't have mentioned it.

JON SPLATZ: I have a better prediction for Linux: the
formation of a worldwide "Geek Disunion".  Geeks will band
together into a decentralized, non-hierarchal organization
to promote Geek Interests(tm), one which is the adoption of
Open Source Software. Linux advocacy will turn into a
wide-scale revolution against Software That Sucks (read:
Windows).

MADAM COSMOS: As I recall, there was a horribly outcry
against Geek Unions recently on Slashdot.  Considering the
flare of emotions, it should be illegal to yell "union!" in
a crowded Slashdot discussion thread.

JON SPLATZ: I'm not talking about traditional labor unions
led by corrupt fatcats who make secret deals in
smoke-filled rooms.  I'm talking about an extension of the
Open Source community by geeks for geeks to solve geek
problems.  

Got problems getting a date?  The Geek Disunion can help. 
Got a problem with a Human Resource weasel who insists on
Word format resumes only?  The Geek Disunion can help.  Got
a problem with your neighorhood telco monopoly that refuses
to offer broad-band Net access?  The Geek Disuion can
help.  Got a local yokel state representative who wants to
force people to obtain licenses before they can access the
Net?  The Geek Disunion can help.

With such an organization, Linux couldn't fail.  Businesses
would be afraid to "upgrade" to Windows NT/2000 because
their best geeks would call in sick or quit.  

BOB GRIMALDI: In your dreams.  That's a stupid idea.

MODERATOR: Next topic... Linux stocks.  What will happen to
Open Source as it comes face-to-face with Wall Street?

STARLA JONES: Well, Open Source is a proven development
model that produces quality software.  Linux is the media
darling right now, and everybody is talking about Open
Source.

For those reasons, I expect Open Source stocks to fail
miserably.

MADAM COSMOS: Huh?  

STARLA JONES: If the past couple of years are any
indication, Wall Street has an infatuation with companies
that don't have a realistic chance of earning a profit. 
eBay? Amazon?  TheGlobe.com?  Get real.  Wall Street hates
sensible stocks. Red Hat, VA Linux, Cygnus, and SuSE are
all sensible stocks -- which means they'll be passed up in
favor of some other mediocre company that's operated out of
some guy's basement and has no business model...

MODERATOR: Like Humorix?  The IPO is coming up on July
26th, NASDAQ ticker symbol FAKE...

JON SPLATZ: Indeed.  I expect Humorix's stock to enter the
stratosphere.

BOB GRIMALDI: Wait a minute!  Doesn't the SEC have
regulations that prohibit employees of an IPO-bound company
from speaking about the stock?  

JON SPLATZ: SEC, shmec.  Who cares?  I predict Humorix will
have one of the most successful IPOs in the history of Wall
Street. It will, after all, be the first IPO of a
Linux-related company. The fact that I'm entitled to stock
options does not in any way bias my prediction.

BOB GRIMALDI: Yeah, right.  The only thing I'm going to
invest in is an upgraded crystal ball.  

MODERATOR: Let's wrap this discussion up: What about
Redmond?  What's in store for Microsoft?

STARLA JONES: Tourism.  That's right, in the coming years
Microsoft and the local Chamber of Commerce will attempt to
turn Redmond into the "Vacation Capitol of East-Central
Washington State".  

JON SPLATZ: What kinds of tourist attractions are they
going to offer?  A skyscraper that holds the world record
for the most number of windows?  A modern art sculpture of
Bill Gates made entirely out of discarded Microsoft
CD-ROMs?

STARLA JONES: No, no, no!  Think Disneyland, but with
Mickey Mouse replaced by Clippit the Dancing Paper Clip.  I
foresee Microsoft constructing an "Innovation World" theme
park near Redmond.

They'll be a "Blue Screen of Death" rollercoaster that
crashes in the middle of the ride, leaving passengers
upside down for a few seconds.  They'll be a "Kangaroo
Court" live action drama that depicts the DOJ antitrust
trial (obviously biased in favor of Microsoft). They'll be
parades featuring Clippit, the Internet Explorer "e" logo,
the ActiMates Barney Stuffed Dinosaur, and other "lovable"
Microsoft characters that will travel through the park on a
boulevard called "Microsoft Way"...

BOB GRIMALDI: Meanwhile, other localities will try to
capitalize on Microsoft.  New Mexico will establish a
"Birth of a Monopoly State Park" near the original site of
Micro-soft's offices in Albuquerque.  Historical markers
will be erected where Bill Gates was pulled over for
speeding during the 70's.

MADAM COSMOS: Linux will help tourism, too.  Dothan,
Alabama will erect a monument at the location of the first
known yard sale where a Linux CD was bought.  California
will erect a sign that says "This historical marker in not
here yet" in front of Transmeta's offices.  And needless to
say, Raleigh-Durham will try to cash in on being the
hometown of Red Hat Software.

JON SPLATZ: Let's not forget about the Microsoft offices in
Foster City, CA where the first Windows Refund protest took
place. I'm sure somebody will build a gift shop
commemorating the event.  "Buy your very own replica
Obi-Wan Kenobi costume wore by Eric S. Raymond during the
historical Windows Refund protest!  Only $49.95!"

MODERATOR: I think I've heard enough tourism ideas.  Any
final thoughts before we end this discussion?

BOB GRIMALDI: Linux rules.

STARLA JONES: Linux rules.

MADAM COSMOS: Linux rules.

JON SPLATZ: Huh?  What was that?  I was daydreaming about
my upcoming book tour.  Oh, and I have a job interview with
Wintel Shopper Magazine next week.  Can somebody tell me
what I missed?  Hello? Why is everybody leaving?  Come
back!  Please!


---

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@humbolt.nl.linux.org Mon Jul 26 06:35:43 1999
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One Year of Humorix
July 25, 1999

It may seem hard to believe, but this Linux humor website
has been online for a full 365 days.  That's 8760 hours. 
525,600 minutes. 31,536,000 seconds.  154 Microsoft
acquisitions.  323 Internet Explorer exploits.  150,323
first posts on Slashdot.  To mark this achievement, the
Humorix staff has compiled a brief history of the Humorix
Era.

* July 25, 1998 (2:43 PM Central)

The very first Humorix article[1] is published.

* July 25, 1998 (3:58 PM Central)

A spam message advertising "SOFTWARE TO ELIMINATE ALL SPAM"
is received in our newly created
humorix@i-want-a-website.com address.

* July 25, 1998 (4:12 PM Central)

We receive the first flame email from an irate reader
complaining that our "Red Neck Linux" article[2] is
"offensive".

* July 25, 1998 (5:10 PM Pacific)

Our newly organized Vast Spy Network(tm) reports that a
lackey in Microsoft's legal department has already
discovered the Humorix site and has sent a memo to her
superiors about the possibility of naming us in a libel
lawsuit.

* August 14, 1998 (10:12 AM Central)

Humorix is hit with the dreaded Slashdot Effect in
connection with our speculation that Microsoft might
acquire Slashdot[3].  As a result, our website hosting
service suffers several thousands dollars worth of damage.

* October 10, 1998 (11:39 PM Eastern)

Several underage drinkers are ticketed in Cape Cod,
Massachusetts after they got drunk playing the Linux
Drinking Game[4].

* October 29, 1998 (4:12 AM Central) 

We receive an email message in response to our article 
Could You Get Fired for Visiting Slashdot?[5]  It says,
"...In my case, the opposite is true... you should ask
'Could You Get Hired for Visiting Slashdot?'  I got my job
at Proactive Synergy Paradigm, Inc.[6] because I happened
to mention Slashdot during a job interview. In fact, it was
the only reason I was hired: I flubbed the interview
horribly, but when I mentioned towards the end that I was a
Slashdot addict, the interviewer said, 'You're hired!'..."

* November 12, 1998 (1:15 PM Alaskan)

A phone call from the folks at CBS denies the rumors[7]
that Linus Torvalds is scheduled to appear on The Late
Show.  The caller casually mentions, "The show's writers
like your 'Top Ten Changes If Linus Torvalds Achieves World
Domination' idea.  We might use a similar list on a show
next week..."

The following Tuesday the Late Show featured this "similar"
Top Ten List:

Top Ten Changes If Bill Gates Achieves World Domination

10. Instead of currency, all global wealth is measured in
    Microsoft stock shares.
 9. New York is renamed to New Gates City, Los Angeles
    becomes Los Gatos, St. Louis is changed to St. Gates...
 8. An illegal operation has occured in module
    TOPTEN~1.EXE.  The program will be shut down...

* December 5, 1998 (10:10 PM Central)

We receive a note from a Linux kernel hacker dismissing our
speculation[8] that /dev/null could erupt into a massive
black hole as a result of all the bits sent to it over the
last 30 years.  "There's no cause for concern," he writes,
"All bits sent to /dev/null are recycled back into the real
world via /dev/urandom."

* February 3, 1999 (4:14 PM Pacific)

Several dozen readers believe that our Slashdot Baiting Kit
article[9] is real, prompting them to call the ficticious
1-877-SLSH-DOT phone number. As it turns out, that number
is owned by a law firm in Spokane, Washington called
Slasher, Dot & Associates.  Mike Slasher called to inform
us that his business picked up considerably as a result of
our fake article. Could this be the first documented case
of the Humorix Effect?

* March 3, 1999 (1:15 AM Siberian)

We publish a press release[10] proclaiming that the Humorix
website is officially a "portal".  Within minutes a horde
of Venture Capitalists line up outside of Humorix World
Headquarters demanding to know more about our business
plan.

P.S. When they realized that Humorix has no business plan,
we were finally able to convince them not to give us any
money.

* April 2, 1999 (9:25 AM Pacific)

The producers of several anti-virus programs release
patches to detect the presence of the Tuxissa Virus[11]
that Humorix made up^H^H^H^H reported the week before.  

* April 2, 1999 (10:01 AM Central)

We receive word from one Linux advocate who said, "After I
heard about the Tuxissa Virus, I had a brainstorm.  I
installed Linux on my wife's computer (replacing Windows),
and when she asked what the hell was going on, I said with
a straight-face, 'You've been hit with the Tuxissa Virus'. 
World Domination is one person closer..."

* May 10, 1999 (12:12 AM Central)

In the article "I Got Your Virtual Property Right
Here!"[12], James Baughn offers to sell his vintage #285
Slashdot account to the person who presents him a dollar
figure containing "a whole bunch of zeros".  He receives a
bid for US$0.00000000000000000000000.

* May 10, 1999 (4:12 PM Central)

A bid for US$1.0 x 10^-114 is received.  (The buyer
stipulates that the final price will be rounded down to the
nearest cent).

* May 11, 1999 (10:43 AM Central)

A bid containing more zeros than electrons in the known
universe is received.  While this bid certainly tops all
previous offers, James Baughn replies in a brief email,
"I've changed my mind."

* May 13, 1999 (1:55 AM Australian)

After publishing an article[13] uncovering Australia's
sinister plot to ban Linux, both alert Humorix regulars
sent word that the Humorix website is no longer accessible
in Australia.

* May 24, 1999 (2:21 PM Central)

A representative for IDG Publishing calls and makes an
offer to produce a "Portals for Dummies" book based on our
Linux Portal Mini-HOWTO[14].  We decline the offer.

* May 26, 1999 (5:51 PM Greenwich)

The professor of CNT 136 at Centralia College announces[15]
that all students that visit the Humorix website will
receive extra credit.

* July 9, 1999 (1:34 PM Central)

The founder of the BloatX Project[16] sent us an email
containing some corrections to our article Bloatware Comes
To Linux.  The name of the new Linux distro is actually
BlooooooooooooooaatX.  The final version will come on 24
CD-ROMs, not 20, and it will occupy a total of 20.2 Gb.

* July 25, 1999 (10:29 PM Central)

The Humorix staff publishes a brief history of Humorix as a lame filler.

---

Links

[1] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/jul98.shtml#Mush
[2] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/jul98.shtml#RedNeck
[3] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/aug98.shtml#Microdot
[4]
http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/oct98.shtml#Drinking-Game
[5]
http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/oct98.shtml#Fired-Slashdot
[6] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/oct98.shtml#Proactive
[7] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/oct98.shtml#Letterman
[8] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/dec98.shtml#Black-Hole
[9]
http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/feb99.shtml#Slashdot-Bait
[10]
http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/mar99.shtml#Humorix-Portal
[11] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/mar99.shtml#Tuxissa
[12]
http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/may99.shtml#Virtual-Property
[13]
http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/may99.shtml#Linux-Censorship
[14]
http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/may99.shtml#Portal-HOWTO
[15] http://134.39.125.244/unix/weekly.htm
[16] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/linux/jul99.shtml#Bloatware

---

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@humbolt.nl.linux.org Mon Jul 26 18:38:13 1999
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Date:	Mon, 26 Jul 1999 11:38:25 -0500
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Humorix IPO Delayed
July 26, 1999

Humorix's IPO suffered a minor setback yesterday when a
group of bureaucrats from the Securities and Exchange
Commission visited Humorix World Headquarters and spoiled
our First Anniversary party.  The SEC has found
"irregularities" in our prospectus[1], causing the IPO to
be delayed until July 30th.

Miles Clinton, one of the SEC representatives, enumerated
some of the "irregularities" contained in our S-1 filing:

- We failed to cross five T's and dot two I's.

- Section 13, Sub-Section 'C', Sub-Sub-Section 3, Paragraph
  2, Sentence 4 contains a typo.  "Domenation" is mispelled
  in the sentence "We plan to use the IPO proceeds to fund
  our plans for World Domenation..."

- Our claim that the Humorix PORTAL Web site "has received
  a 512% increase in traffic over the last ten months" is
  wrong according to the SEC.  One bureaucrat said,  "That
  statistic is meaningless since, at the time, Humorix had
  only been online for 10 months."  He added, "We could
  claim that the number of trees killed to produce SEC
  paperwork has increased by 1,044,619% over the last 200
  years, but such a statement is also meaningless and
  wrong."

- In the statement "We plan to issue US$129.95 worth of
  common stock..." we accidentally left out the word
  "million" after the dollar amount.

- The "Expenses" section under the heading "Summary
  Financial Data" fails to include several items including
  "Electricity", "Air Conditioning for Humorix World
  Headquarters", "Internet Access & Telco Monopoly
  Charges", "Slashdot Addict Support Group Donations", and
  "Beer & Snack Foods Supply".  As a result, Humorix's
  actual net loss is US$10,253.62.

- We forgot to mention that the term Big Evil Company(R) is
  a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation. 
  Moreover, we failed to state that Microsoft(R) is also a
  registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation. In
  addition, we omitted the disclaimer that the phrase Fair
  Use Doctrine(R) is a registered trademark of the United
  States Patent & Trademark Office.

- The NASDAQ ticker symbol that we applied for, FAKE, has
  already been taken by another low-budget humor portal. 
  After considering other options like "HMRX", "DUH",
  "BSOD", and "SEGV", we've finally decided to use the
  symbol "FAUX".

The SEC has given us the green light to hold our IPO as
soon as we re-file our prospectus with the requisite
changes.  Our current schedule to hold the IPO on July 30th
will give us plenty of time to execute our Humorix IPO
Astroturf Plan.

Even with SEC approval, not everybody is happy about the
Humorix IPO.  One Wall Street Journal columnist wrote last
week, "A low-budget Linux humor website is holding a
million-dollar IPO?  This must be some kind of hoax... I
checked government records... there is no such corporation
as Humorix World Domination, Inc.  There is no Vast Spy
Network(tm) or fleet of Humorix Spy Satellites.  Humorix
World Headquarters, as far as I can tell, is a small
outhouse in the Ozarks.  This is obviously a hoax."

Nevertheless, both regular Humorix visitors are
enthusiastic about the IPO.  They have received special
invitations from E*Raid Securities to participate in the
IPO at the opening price ($10). One said, "Hopefully I'll
make enough money to afford a new shrinkwrapped copy of Red
Hat Linux 6.0..."


[1] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/jun99.shtml#Humorix-IPO

---

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

P.S. In case you were wondering, all of the URLs at the
bottom of the previous message ("One Year of Humorix") are
wrong.  These kinds of mistakes happen when it's late at
night and most of the Humorix staff is plastered following
the big First Anniversary party.

-
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@humbolt.nl.linux.org Thu Jul 29 01:36:44 1999
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Microsoft Announces Open Source for Windows 2000
John Elfrink, thehungrytiger@rocketmail.com
July 28, 1999

The computer world was stunned today with the announcement
that software giant Microsoft will open its source code for
Windows 2000 when the product hits the stores in 2002.

"It's totally unreal," one user commented. "It's like the
Berlin wall coming down 10 years back. People kept saying
over and over that it would never happen. Then one day
right out of the blue the impossible comes true."

Users thrilled by this news should be warned. Although the
source code will be available completely free of charge,
there are several limitations that Microsoft has placed on
the project. Probably most importantly is the fact that the
source code will be available in printed form only.

"We have considered many options," a spokesman for
Microsoft said today, "and at this time having a printed
copy of the source code makes the most sense. And we are
proud to be able to offer this option to our many dedicated
users."

The amount of paper needed to print the entire source code
comes in at slightly more than 30 tons. Microsoft has
admitted that this may put the open source code beyond the
reach of most developers. Shipping and handling cost alone
comes in at $475 as three tractor-trailers are needed in
order to deliver the printed work.

It was also noted that the shipping form requires a
registration number to be filled in. When asked if the
source code can actually be called open if only registered
windows users can get it, the spokesman for Microsoft noted
that it was an unfortunate necessity. "Software piracy is
everyone's problem," he said, "and this is our way of
helping the industry control it."

It was also pointed out that the shipping form requires
people to fill out 17 pages of personal likes and dislikes.
It is suspected that Microsoft may take this information
and sell advertisers the names and addresses of everyone
filling out the shipping form. Microsoft offered little
comment on this rumor, except for one anonymous
spokesperson who said, "The demographic data is for
customer support purposes."

Some people suspect Microsoft of trickery, especially in
light of last month's court case in which Microsoft tried
to claim that it holds the trademark on the term "Open
Source".  The case was tossed out because Microsoft does
not offer any "Open Source" software and therefore cannot
claim rights to the term.  Today's announcement comes
one day before an appeal on the trademark issue is heard.
According to Microsoft the timing is "purely coincidental".
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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@humbolt.nl.linux.org Fri Jul 30 02:05:26 1999
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Date:	Thu, 29 Jul 1999 17:13:54 -0500
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Subject: [humorix] The Slashdot Conspiracy!
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The Slashdot Conspiracy!
Written by humorix.pl
July 29, 1999

[Editor's Note: An anonymous member of our Vast Spy
Network(tm) sent us this exclusive report alleging that
Slashdot is actually an elaborate conspiracy sponsored by
Lucasfilms and the ultra-secret WORLD Organization (WORLD
Organizes Rapid Linux Domination).]

---

Subject: URGENT: Slashdot Conspiracy Uncovered!!!!
From: Vast Spy Network(tm) Operative #412A-9X
To: Humorix World Headquarters: Espionage & Mind Control
    Division
Date: July 28, 1999
X-Transport-Protocol: RFC 1149
X-Transmeta: This report contains no typso.

Sir,

Project "SpyDot" has been successful.  I and my assistants
have been able to infiltrate the "Geek Compound" in
Holland, MI to discover the truth about Slashdot. 
Summarized below are the results of our investigation.

In 1995, "Operation The Whole Enchilada", a conspiracy sponsored
by George Lucas and the WORLD Organization, was launched.
The purpose: to hype SW:Episode 1 and to promote Linux
World Domination by establishing a "News for Nerds" new
media website capable of brainwashing unsuspecting
visitors.

Some quick facts:

* The recent acquisition of Slashdot by Andover News was a
shrewd move to hide the conspiracy behind the front of a
media company[1]. Only a handful of employees at Andover
are aware of Whole Enchilada.

* "Rob Malda" (aka "CmdrTaco", "Taco Boy", "Numero Uno
Dothead") is really a Perl script that simulates Slashdot
articles, comments, email responses, and other online
interactions.  A Lucasfilms employee code-named "AstroTaco"
plays CmdrTaco at Linux conventions and other meatspace
events.

* "Hemos" and "sengan" are simulated by a team of
Lucasfilms marketers[2].  

* All other Slashdot contributors are real people who are
unaware of the conspiracy.  Plausible deniability at its
finest.

* The many articles hyping Star Wars came directly from the Lucasfilms
marketing department.  

* Jon Katz's negative article about Star Wars hype was an
unexpected disaster.  Since then, Jon Katz has been
replaced by a Lucas-friendly Perl script (which explains
why the writing quality of "his" commentaries have
improved). The real Jon Katz was deported to Argentina and
hasn't been heard from since[3].

* The recent Jar Jar bashing was only allowed by Lucasfilms
to quiet (unbrainwashed) critics who were complaining that
Slashdot had too much SW hype.

* Operation The Whole Enchilada is headquartered at the
"Geek Compound" in Holland. Last week I was able to break
into the building (the front door was unlocked).  Among
other things, I found two books entitled "Idiot's Guide to
Astroturf Campaigns" and "World Domination for Dummies".

* The "Slashdot Effect" is sleight-of-hand employed by
WORLD to make Slashdot seem much more popular than it
really is.  Sites mentioned on Slashdot are simultaneously
hit from thousands of WORLD/Lucasfilms computers scattered
across the world in a bizarre "Astroturf Denial-Of-Service
Attack".

In conclusion, The Whole Enchilada conspiracy has been
wildly successful (except perhaps for the foolish idea to
base SW:TPM around Jar Jar Binks, but that's another
Lucasfilms conspiracy altogether).

Footnotes

[1] This explains why the dollar amount paid to "CmdrTaco"
in the Andover "acquisition" was such a guarded secret.

[2] This fact is supported by the recent Slashdot comment
that Hemos is "really written by a team of marketdroids". 
This comment was probably posted by mistake as a result of
a bug in CmdrTaco.pl.  See
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=99/07/16/2155259

[3] The WORLD Organization has powerful contacts within the
Federal Government.

---

Yours in World Domination,

Operative #412A-9X

P.S. Jar Jar Must Die!

P.P.S. I've heard that Humorix is about to have an IPO.  Do
members of the Vast Spy Network(tm) get stock options? Use
of initialized value in line 2614 of humorix.pl.

-
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@humbolt.nl.linux.org Fri Jul 30 22:26:51 1999
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Date:	Fri, 30 Jul 1999 15:14:33 -0500
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Subject: [humorix] Humorix IPO Wildly Successful!
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Humorix IPO Wildly Successful!
July 30, 1999

NEW YORK, NY -- Wall Street has responded _very_ well to
Humorix's initial public stock offering. Our stock, FAUX,
began trading at 10:12AM (Eastern) this morning on the
NASDAQ exchange at $10 per share.  By the end of the
trading day the stock had surged to 55 9/16.  Some bold
Wall Street analysts are calling our stock offering "the
most successful IPO of a humor website in the history of
NASDAQ!"

For a brief time around 2:15PM the stock price was at an
unbelievable 125 7/8.  It prompty fell after Federal
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said, "I don't know what
the hell Humorix is, but its stock is showing disturbing
signs of irrational exuberance." Ironically, most other
tech stocks plummeted during the day, sending the NASDAQ
down 5.12%.  Some analysts are speculating that many
investors dumped all of their tech stocks in order to
purchase vast quantities of hot Humorix stock.

Needless to say, the Humorix staff is quite jubilant about
the success of the IPO.  Jon Splatz went and bought a new
car, not realizing until later that he can't cash in his
FAUX shares for six months.  Other Humorix staffers are
currently holding a huge party and will probably be
plastered through next week.

Not everybody is happy about the IPO, however, especially
those who didn't participate.  Jason McDuff, one of the
people who received our special invitation letter to
purchase 200 shares of FAUX stock via E*Raid.com, has sent
in a bomb threat.  

He said in the threat, "The letter I received was nothing
more than a bait-and-switch scam and spam. I opened an
E*Raid account, wired $2,000 to it, and signed up for the
IPO using the code number given in my 'special invitation'.
I was refused!  E*Raid said I had to have a net worth of $1
million to participate in a 'high-risk' IPO.  Bullshit.  It
was all a scam to get me to open an account.  Humorix
should be called Scamorix. You people make me sick, and
unless you give in to my demands, I'll blow up Humorix
World Headquarters!"

The FBI is tracking down Jason McDuff, but they haven't had
much luck so far.  One FBI agent said, "If we could monitor
non-military public computer networks we could find and
arrest this would-be domestic terrorist. Write your
Congressman!  We need the ability to spy on network
transmissions!  Civilian use of encryption should be
illegal!"  When we told the investigator that the bomb
threat was sent to us via snail mail, he responded, "So
then we need to monitor first-class mail!  Write your
Congressman!  The FBI should be able to open up mail at
random so we can fight terrorism and crime and protect the
children!"

We don't have much faith that law enforcement will catch
the McDuff.  If his threats continue we'll just send him
the $15,000 he demands.  $15K is, after all, a drop in the
bucket compared to the vast fortune we've just acquired. 
Not that we're bragging or anything.

All of the capital raised in the IPO will be used to offer
new services and features at the Humorix PORTAL website. 
Some of the new features we are launching include:


Humorix Contest '99
-------------------

As a promotional gimmick we are holding a contest with such
prizes as:

- a lifetime @i-want-a-website.com email alias
- a guided tour of Humorix World Headquarters
- an original copy of three never-published Humorix
  articles.
- a $19.95 credit at Humorix's new E-Commerce Shop.

To enter, send an email containing your name, email
address, postal address, Social Security Number or
equivalent, birthday, shoe size, bank account number, fast
food preference, ISP password, and PGP private key. 
Winners will be picked at random from the entries that we
receive. 


HumorXChange
------------

HumorXChange is an innovative system allowing people to
produce humor material in exchange for cold, hard cash*. 
Humor patrons will offer bounties to humorists who create a
desired piece of humor material (a fake news article poking
fun at ESR, a "Microsoft Acquires..." joke, a Jon Katz
parody, etc.). This "Open Humor" exchange system is similar
to projects like CoSource and SourceXChange.

Watch next week for a press release containing more details
about this exciting new program and information about
signing up to beta-test the system.

*Note: When we say "cold, hard cash", we mean "credits to
buy Humorix merchandise".


PortalMaker 1.0
---------------

The Humorix Software Development Labs has created
PortalMaker(tm), a set of Perl scripts that can help you
create your own Linux portal website in under 10 minutes. 
Armed with PortalMaker(tm) and Humorix's Linux Portal
Mini-HOWTO[2], you can effortlessly establish your own
portal and instantly become wealthy.*

The Regular Version is available for US$19.95 from
Humorix's new E-commerce site.  The Deluxe Version, which
includes documentation, is available for the trivial cost
of only US$39.95.

*Note: The PortalMaker End User License Agreement prohibits
you from using the software to create a portal website that
could potentially compete with Humorix in any way.


Humorix Community
-----------------

We have plans to offer several free community enriching features
at our portal website, including:

- Free web-based email and URL redirection at your choice
  of domains: linuxzealot.org, linuxlonghair.org,
  linuxfreak.org, flamingzealot.org,
  bill-gates-is-satan.org, invest-in-FAUX.com,
  portal-portal-portal.com, tanstaafl.org, or
  i-hate-winmodems.org.

- Free instant messenger software and service via Humorix's
  new proprietary InstaHumorix(tm) protocol.   

- Free access to our NNTP server which features such
  newsgroups as slashdot.addiction.twelve.steps,
  bob-metcalfe.sucks.ether, humorix.rocks,
  humorix.stock.investment.tips,
  kde-vs-gnome.flame.flame.flame, and
  penguin.mating.habits.

- Free "Flame Your Congressman" feature allowing you to
  speak out against the latest bonehead bill that's been
  discussed on Slashdot.

- Free online auctions where you can buy or sell domain
  names, low-numbered Slashdot accounts, overpriced
  shrinkwrapped Red Hat products, "Honk If You Hate
  Microsoft" bumper stickers, and other merchandise.


Keep your eyes peeled for more Humorix PORTAL features that
will be announced in the coming weeks.  And don't forget to
invest in our stock!


[1] http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=99/07/28/1317203
[2] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/may99.shtml#Portal-HOWTO

---

James "Millionaire" 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/
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