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Date:   Wed, 01 Sep 1999 18:53:37 -0500
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Treaty of Helsinki Signed

HELSINKI, FINLAND -- A cease-fire in the flame war between
Linux and FreeBSD has been reached.  A group of two dozen
Linux and FreeBSD zealots met in Helsinki to ratify a
treaty bringing a temporary end to the hostile fighting
between both camps.  "Today is a good day for peace," one
observer noted.  "Now both sides can lay down their
keyboards and quit flaming the opposing side on Usenet and
Slashdot."

The cease-fire is a response to the sudden increase in
fighting that has occured over the past two weeks.  The
Slashdot server became a victim of the cross-fire this week
when thousands of Anonymous Cowards and Geek Zealots posted
inflammatory comments that amounted to, "My OS is better
than your OS!" Many nerds, suffering withdrawl symptoms
when the Slashdot site slowed to a crawl, demanded that the
bickering stop.

"I can't take it anymore!  It takes two minutes to download
the Slashdot homepage -- assuming the site is actually
online.  I must have my 'News for Nerds' now!  I realize
that Slashdot is being migrated to a load-balanced system,
but I'm not sure if that will help.  Thousands of crusaders
posting flames in this petty holy war will bring down any
website no matter how cosmic the configuration. The
fighting must stop," one Anonymous Coward ranted.

Indeed, with the Treaty of Helsinki, the fighting and
flaming has stopped.  But for how long is the big
question.  History is not on the side of those who want
peace.

Last month's Treaty of Holland, an agreement between three
dozen Anonymous Cowards and Rob Malda, doesn't seem to be
going anywhere. Under the agreement, the ACs would agree
not to post any more First Post! (or Second Post!, or 348th
Post!) comments.  While the quantity of these posts
subsided for a few weeks, they seem to be coming back.  The
Army of Anonymous Cowards is not easily controlled.

---

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.geo.uu.nl Thu Sep  9 02:55:20 1999
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Date:   Wed, 08 Sep 1999 19:56:54 -0500
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Subject: [humorix] We Need A Geek Telethon! [long]
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We Need A Geek Telethon!
Jon Splatz, Humorix Pundit and Social Commentator
September 8, 1999

I had the strangest dream last night.  Usually I dream
about being assimilated by the Microsoft Borg, but last
night was different. I dreamt of a Geek Telethon
broadcasted on network TV to raise money for geek
interests.  After giving this idea some thought, it
actually seems half-way reasonable: every other
disadvantaged group has a telethon. Why not geeks?

My dream went something like this:

----

ANNOUNCER: Liiivvveee from Silicon Valley... it's the first
annual Geek Grok telethon, featuring such geek stars as
Eric S. Raymond, Linus Torvalds, Alan Cox, and Larry Wall!
For the next 24 hours, we'll be raising money for America's
beleaguered geek community.  Annnndddd noooooooooowww....
the hosts of this year's telethon, Mr. Eric "Bazaar"
Raymond and Larry "Postmodern" Wall!

ESR: Welcome, everybody!  You might be wondering why this
network has pre-empted amateur women's golf to bring you
this telethon.  Indeed, you might be wondering just what a
geek is, and why they are a disadvantaged group worthy of a
24 hour telethon.  In this zeroth hour of our broadcast, we
hope to answer these questions and -- of course -- get
those phones ringing!

LW: To make a contribution, you can call (877)-YES-GEEK,
send email to pledges at geekthon dot org, or visit our
secure website at aitch-tee-tee-pee colon slash slash
double-u double-u double-u dot geekthon dot org. Behind me
is our Geek Pledge Board; it currently shows zero, but by
the end of today we hope it's at $1E6 or more!

ESR: Before we get underway, I'd like to introduce Eric
Jones, a disadvantaged member of the geek community who has
been forced to live in a homeless shelter. Eric?  Come on
out here and tell us about yourself...

JONES: Well, I'm a consultant for a Bay Area corporation. 
Due to the housing crisis, I've been forced to sleep in a
shelter.

ESR: How much do you make?

JONES: Over $100,000 a year.

LW: Wow!  And you still can't afford housing or rent?

JONES: That's right.  Prices are through the roof around
here, and  with my salary I can't even afford a treehouse
or outhouse.  I'm forced to live in a run-down homeless
shelter along with other homeless geeks and executives.  

ESR: That sounds terrible, Eric.

JONES: It is, Eric.  It really is.

ESR: Hopefully with this telethon we'll be able to raise
money to fund new shelters for disadvantaged geeks like
Eric here.  We also have plans for a Silicon Valley
Terraforming Initiative in which several square miles of
Pacific Ocean will be turned into usuable land for building
housing and apartments for geeks.  

LW: However, we can't do these things without your help. 
Eric and thousands of geeks and Silicon Valley denizens are
counting on _you_ to come through and help end this social
injustice.  

(Brief pause)

ESR: Do I here a phone ringing?  That must be our first
caller!  Let's go and say hello.

(Picks up the phone) Hello?  This is Eric Raymond, co-host
of the Geek Grok '99 telethon.  Do you wish to make a
pledge?

CALLER: Hell no!  I'm Bob Farrow of Gluckstadt,
Mississippi, and I think this entire telethon is a
horrible, evil joke!

ESR: (worried) What?

CALLER: Giving money to nerds with six-figure incomes?  I
can't believe my local TV affiliate is carrying this
nonsense... I can't believe I've bothered to call! 
Meanwhile, schools around here can't afford textbooks more
recent than 1960 and I'm living in a trailer with my wife
and mother-in-law...

ESR: (hangs up the phone) Sorry, but we seem to be
experiencing technical difficulties...

LW: I suppose now is a good time to bring out our musical
talent... 

(The Geek Chorus comes on stage and sings such songs as
"The Bluescreen Blues", "I've Got Two Tickets To Linux
Expo", "Geeks Can't Get No R-E-S-P-E-C-T", and "Pick On
Somebody Your Own IQ".)

LW: Let's look at the pledge board, shall we?  $500? 
That's all?  C'mon people... $500 is barely enough to
afford a shrinkwrapped box of Red Hat Linux, much less
enough to end the social injustices and hardships that
geeks face nationwide!  

ESR: This telethon isn't just about helping disenfranchised
geeks. We're also here for the betterment of mankind
through our research into finding a Cure for Windows.

Each day, millions of man-hours are wasted due to design
flaws in Microsoft Windows.  Each day, millions of dollars
are sent by business and individuals like yourself into a
huge black hole known as "Microsoft" for exorbitantly
priced software products that should be free.

But don't worry.  We've almost found a Cure for Windows. 
Geeks worldwide have toiled endlessly for the past eight
years working on a replacement operating system called
Linux.  It's almost ready.  Now we need to convince the
world to use our creation and eliminate the virus known as
Windows.

I'd like to introduce you to Linus Torvalds, the mastermind
behind Linux and the man striving to innoculate the world
against Windows.

LT: (wearing a "World domination. Fast!" T-shirt) Hello!

ESR: Tell us a little about yourself.

LT: Well, many people worship me as a god... Other than
that, I have a small job at a start-up firm called
Transmeta where we're designing a next-generation CPU
architecture that can exec... um, well, I've said too much
already.  Pesky Non-Disclosure Agreements, you know.

ESR: Linus here is going to do a little demonstration of
how his operating system compares with Windows 98.  We're
going to need some volunteers from the audience... anybody
with some experience with Windows?  Raise your hands...
okay, you, you, you, and you, c'mon on down here!

(Rob Malda, Miguel de Icaza, Tom Christensen, and Trae
McCombs, pretending not to be geeks, step forward)

LT: For the record, I've never met any of these people. 
This is not rigged.  Have you all used Windows before?

(All four nod their heads.)

LT: Good.  Tove, could you bring out those Windows boxes? 
Thank you. While she's doing that, why don't you guys
introduce yourselves.

MALDA: I work at a, um, uh, a Taco Bell restaurant in
Holland, Michigan, where I _slash_ prices and typically
don't wear pants.

ICAZA: (with Mexican accent) I'm an antiques and
collectibles dealer that specializes in garden gnomes.

TOM: I'm a, um, pearl reseller.

TRAE: I do graphic design.

LT: Okay.  You four volunteers are going to play a game
called "Crash that Box!" The first person who can cause
Windows 98 to display a fatal error message wins.  

TRAE: That sounds too easy...

(The "volunteers" sit down and start hacking.)

ESR: While these volunteers are busy crashing Windows, let
me point out that anybody who pledges over $25 will receive
a free CD-ROM with Debian Linux along with a booklet about
getting started with the system...

(At this point Malda's computer shows the Blue Screen of
Death, causing the audience to laugh hysterically)

MALDA: I didn't do anything... When the screensaver
activated, the system crashed by itself!  What do I win? 
What do I win?

ESR: Let me just reiterate that this demo was not rigged in
any way... Windows really is that fragile!

LT: That's right.  Now, this other machine here is running
Linux. Rob, could you come over here and type 'uptime' at
the prompt and hit ENTER?

ESR: Look at that!  This machine has been online
continuously for 243 days!

(Camera zoom in on the screen, and then pans to an excited
audience shouting "Ooooh!" and "Ahhhh!")

LT: (smiling) And that concludes this demonstration.

(Phones start ringing off the hook.)

ESR: Listen!  That's the sound of dozens of people donating
money to help fight injustices against the geek nation and
to help finance Linux world dominat... er, Linux world
acceptance.  Let's keep those phones ringing!

LW: Building a Cure for Windows isn't the only task that
geekdom is confronted with.  Geeks everywhere are faced
with poor working conditions and discrimination by the rest
of the population.  These injustices must be stopped... and
they can, with YOUR pledge!

ESR: That's right, Larry.  Geeks suffer discrimination,
ridicule, and bullying at school, work... well, at just
about every aspect of life. With us right now are a group
of geeks that have suffered these injustices. Meet Eric
Sloan, Eric Wiederkind, and Erik Dorfman.

LW: Eric Sloans, we'll start with you.  What kind of trauma
did you have to put up with?

SLOAN: I was the Head Geek in high school... the entire
school computer system was held together by duct tape, I
mean Perl scripts that I had written...

LW: Cool!

SLOAN: ...Anyways, as a result I was the target of the
so-called Jock Rockers, members of the football team who
thought they were all going to be NFL players.  If I had a
dollar for every wedgie I got... Oh, man.  Even the
teachers hated me... the gym teacher broke into laughter
anytime I tried to do a pull-up.

ESR: Oh, that sound horrible!  They made you do pull-ups?!?

SLOAN: Well, now that I've graduated I'm having the last
laugh.  The football captain knocked-up two girlfriends and
is now working at McDonalds, meanwhile my Internet start-up
just had its IPO and I'm a millionaire.  Oh, and the P.E.
teacher was fired after it was revealed that his high
school diploma was forged.

ESR: You still had to suffer.  I can't... I mean... this
just really, really upsets me!  Geeks suffering at the
hands of idiots... What is this world coming too?  This is
the key reason why I'm the founder of the "Geeks with Guns"
movement...

LW: Aw, geez, not again!  Could you save the GWG spiel for
later, when we're _not_ on the air?  Quickly moving on...
Eric Wiederkind, tell us about your experiences trying to
get a job.

WIEDERKIND: I was trying to switch into a different career
from computer programming.  Programming for money sucks...
you have to deal with PHBs, 16 hour days, and spending the
night in your cubicle half of the time to avoid the Commute
>From Hell.  

ESR: Poor working conditions... That's an injustice all
geeks must face.  (To the camera) Listen folks, five cents
out of every dollar you donate will go to the newly formed
Geek Guild, a labor union and trade group devoted to
improving working conditions in Cubicle Farms.  It's time
to fight back against the Suits.

Anyways, please continue, Eric...

WIEDERKIND: Well, like you say, I didn't want to deal with
that injustice anymore... I minored in Journalism of all
things, so I tried to switch into a job as an IT pundit. 
You'd think they'd welcome a geek like me with open arms,
but they didn't.

Ziff-Davis wouldn't even give me an interview.  I was "too
qualified" they said.  Apparently my technical acumen was
too much for their organization, which employs Jesse Berst
and the ilk.

It gets worse.  I tried to get an entry-level reporting job
for a local-yokel paper.  After the interview they gave me
a "skills test": I had to compose an article using
Microsoft Word 97.  Since I've never touched a Windows box,
I had no clue how to use it.  When I botched the test, the
personnel manager spouted, "Your resume said you were a
computer programmer.  Obviously you're a liar.  Get out of
my office now!"

After several more unsuccessful attempts to land jobs at
firms with obvious anti-geek prejudices, I gave up and went
back into computer programming.  I'm back in a cubicle..."

ESR: (shakes head) What a tragic story.  Geek oppression is
something that cannot be tolerated.

Alright, moving on... Erik Dorfman, what's your story?

DORFMAN: Everybody keeps blaming me for the Y2K problem,
the Melissa Virus, Windows crashes... you name it.  When
somebody finds out you're a bona fide geek, they start
bugging you about computer problems. I frequently hear
things like, "Why can't you geeks make Windows work
right?", "What kind of idiot writes a program that can't
handle the year 2000?", "Geeks are evil, all they do is
write viruses", and "The Internet is the spawn of Satan".

I'm afraid to admit I have extensive computing experience. 
When somebody asks what kind of job I have, I always lie. 
>From my experience, admitting that you're a geek is an
invitation to disaster.

LW: I know, I know.  I sometimes say that I'm the founder
of a Perl harvesting company instead of admitting that I'm
the founder of the Perl programming language.  

ESR: This is tragic.  We can't live in a world like this. 
We need _your_ donations to fight social oppression and
ignorance against geekdom...


---

The dream abruptly ended at this point when a cockroach ran
across my face, causing me to awaken.  My apartment complex
barely meets city codes, and it shows.  It's supposed to be
fumigated next week, but I figure the roaches will be back
within a month.  Hopefully sales of my newly released book,
"Business @ the Speed of Windows" will allow me to move to
a somewhat more upscale apartment.  

Nevertheless, the above transcript is a good indication of
how successful a Geek telethon could be.  Complaining about
geek oppression on Slashdot isn't going to accomplish
anything (except maybe raise your "karma" points). It's
time to take action.  

What do you think?  Write me at jonsplatz@i-want-a-website.com

-
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.geo.uu.nl Thu Sep  9 15:08:25 1999
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Subject: Sv: [humorix] We Need A Geek Telethon! [long]
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please take me away from your maillist
-----Oprindelig meddelelse-----
Fra: James Baughn <jbaughn@ldd.net>
Til: humorix@humbolt.geo.uu.nl <humorix@humbolt.geo.uu.nl>
Dato: 9. september 1999 02:55
Emne: [humorix] We Need A Geek Telethon! [long]


>We Need A Geek Telethon!
>Jon Splatz, Humorix Pundit and Social Commentator
>September 8, 1999
>
>I had the strangest dream last night.  Usually I dream
>about being assimilated by the Microsoft Borg, but last
>night was different. I dreamt of a Geek Telethon
>broadcasted on network TV to raise money for geek
>interests.  After giving this idea some thought, it
>actually seems half-way reasonable: every other
>disadvantaged group has a telethon. Why not geeks?
>
>My dream went something like this:
>
>----
>
>ANNOUNCER: Liiivvveee from Silicon Valley... it's the first
>annual Geek Grok telethon, featuring such geek stars as
>Eric S. Raymond, Linus Torvalds, Alan Cox, and Larry Wall!
>For the next 24 hours, we'll be raising money for America's
>beleaguered geek community.  Annnndddd noooooooooowww....
>the hosts of this year's telethon, Mr. Eric "Bazaar"
>Raymond and Larry "Postmodern" Wall!
>
>ESR: Welcome, everybody!  You might be wondering why this
>network has pre-empted amateur women's golf to bring you
>this telethon.  Indeed, you might be wondering just what a
>geek is, and why they are a disadvantaged group worthy of a
>24 hour telethon.  In this zeroth hour of our broadcast, we
>hope to answer these questions and -- of course -- get
>those phones ringing!
>
>LW: To make a contribution, you can call (877)-YES-GEEK,
>send email to pledges at geekthon dot org, or visit our
>secure website at aitch-tee-tee-pee colon slash slash
>double-u double-u double-u dot geekthon dot org. Behind me
>is our Geek Pledge Board; it currently shows zero, but by
>the end of today we hope it's at $1E6 or more!
>
>ESR: Before we get underway, I'd like to introduce Eric
>Jones, a disadvantaged member of the geek community who has
>been forced to live in a homeless shelter. Eric?  Come on
>out here and tell us about yourself...
>
>JONES: Well, I'm a consultant for a Bay Area corporation. 
>Due to the housing crisis, I've been forced to sleep in a
>shelter.
>
>ESR: How much do you make?
>
>JONES: Over $100,000 a year.
>
>LW: Wow!  And you still can't afford housing or rent?
>
>JONES: That's right.  Prices are through the roof around
>here, and  with my salary I can't even afford a treehouse
>or outhouse.  I'm forced to live in a run-down homeless
>shelter along with other homeless geeks and executives.  
>
>ESR: That sounds terrible, Eric.
>
>JONES: It is, Eric.  It really is.
>
>ESR: Hopefully with this telethon we'll be able to raise
>money to fund new shelters for disadvantaged geeks like
>Eric here.  We also have plans for a Silicon Valley
>Terraforming Initiative in which several square miles of
>Pacific Ocean will be turned into usuable land for building
>housing and apartments for geeks.  
>
>LW: However, we can't do these things without your help. 
>Eric and thousands of geeks and Silicon Valley denizens are
>counting on _you_ to come through and help end this social
>injustice.  
>
>(Brief pause)
>
>ESR: Do I here a phone ringing?  That must be our first
>caller!  Let's go and say hello.
>
>(Picks up the phone) Hello?  This is Eric Raymond, co-host
>of the Geek Grok '99 telethon.  Do you wish to make a
>pledge?
>
>CALLER: Hell no!  I'm Bob Farrow of Gluckstadt,
>Mississippi, and I think this entire telethon is a
>horrible, evil joke!
>
>ESR: (worried) What?
>
>CALLER: Giving money to nerds with six-figure incomes?  I
>can't believe my local TV affiliate is carrying this
>nonsense... I can't believe I've bothered to call! 
>Meanwhile, schools around here can't afford textbooks more
>recent than 1960 and I'm living in a trailer with my wife
>and mother-in-law...
>
>ESR: (hangs up the phone) Sorry, but we seem to be
>experiencing technical difficulties...
>
>LW: I suppose now is a good time to bring out our musical
>talent... 
>
>(The Geek Chorus comes on stage and sings such songs as
>"The Bluescreen Blues", "I've Got Two Tickets To Linux
>Expo", "Geeks Can't Get No R-E-S-P-E-C-T", and "Pick On
>Somebody Your Own IQ".)
>
>LW: Let's look at the pledge board, shall we?  $500? 
>That's all?  C'mon people... $500 is barely enough to
>afford a shrinkwrapped box of Red Hat Linux, much less
>enough to end the social injustices and hardships that
>geeks face nationwide!  
>
>ESR: This telethon isn't just about helping disenfranchised
>geeks. We're also here for the betterment of mankind
>through our research into finding a Cure for Windows.
>
>Each day, millions of man-hours are wasted due to design
>flaws in Microsoft Windows.  Each day, millions of dollars
>are sent by business and individuals like yourself into a
>huge black hole known as "Microsoft" for exorbitantly
>priced software products that should be free.
>
>But don't worry.  We've almost found a Cure for Windows. 
>Geeks worldwide have toiled endlessly for the past eight
>years working on a replacement operating system called
>Linux.  It's almost ready.  Now we need to convince the
>world to use our creation and eliminate the virus known as
>Windows.
>
>I'd like to introduce you to Linus Torvalds, the mastermind
>behind Linux and the man striving to innoculate the world
>against Windows.
>
>LT: (wearing a "World domination. Fast!" T-shirt) Hello!
>
>ESR: Tell us a little about yourself.
>
>LT: Well, many people worship me as a god... Other than
>that, I have a small job at a start-up firm called
>Transmeta where we're designing a next-generation CPU
>architecture that can exec... um, well, I've said too much
>already.  Pesky Non-Disclosure Agreements, you know.
>
>ESR: Linus here is going to do a little demonstration of
>how his operating system compares with Windows 98.  We're
>going to need some volunteers from the audience... anybody
>with some experience with Windows?  Raise your hands...
>okay, you, you, you, and you, c'mon on down here!
>
>(Rob Malda, Miguel de Icaza, Tom Christensen, and Trae
>McCombs, pretending not to be geeks, step forward)
>
>LT: For the record, I've never met any of these people. 
>This is not rigged.  Have you all used Windows before?
>
>(All four nod their heads.)
>
>LT: Good.  Tove, could you bring out those Windows boxes? 
>Thank you. While she's doing that, why don't you guys
>introduce yourselves.
>
>MALDA: I work at a, um, uh, a Taco Bell restaurant in
>Holland, Michigan, where I _slash_ prices and typically
>don't wear pants.
>
>ICAZA: (with Mexican accent) I'm an antiques and
>collectibles dealer that specializes in garden gnomes.
>
>TOM: I'm a, um, pearl reseller.
>
>TRAE: I do graphic design.
>
>LT: Okay.  You four volunteers are going to play a game
>called "Crash that Box!" The first person who can cause
>Windows 98 to display a fatal error message wins.  
>
>TRAE: That sounds too easy...
>
>(The "volunteers" sit down and start hacking.)
>
>ESR: While these volunteers are busy crashing Windows, let
>me point out that anybody who pledges over $25 will receive
>a free CD-ROM with Debian Linux along with a booklet about
>getting started with the system...
>
>(At this point Malda's computer shows the Blue Screen of
>Death, causing the audience to laugh hysterically)
>
>MALDA: I didn't do anything... When the screensaver
>activated, the system crashed by itself!  What do I win? 
>What do I win?
>
>ESR: Let me just reiterate that this demo was not rigged in
>any way... Windows really is that fragile!
>
>LT: That's right.  Now, this other machine here is running
>Linux. Rob, could you come over here and type 'uptime' at
>the prompt and hit ENTER?
>
>ESR: Look at that!  This machine has been online
>continuously for 243 days!
>
>(Camera zoom in on the screen, and then pans to an excited
>audience shouting "Ooooh!" and "Ahhhh!")
>
>LT: (smiling) And that concludes this demonstration.
>
>(Phones start ringing off the hook.)
>
>ESR: Listen!  That's the sound of dozens of people donating
>money to help fight injustices against the geek nation and
>to help finance Linux world dominat... er, Linux world
>acceptance.  Let's keep those phones ringing!
>
>LW: Building a Cure for Windows isn't the only task that
>geekdom is confronted with.  Geeks everywhere are faced
>with poor working conditions and discrimination by the rest
>of the population.  These injustices must be stopped... and
>they can, with YOUR pledge!
>
>ESR: That's right, Larry.  Geeks suffer discrimination,
>ridicule, and bullying at school, work... well, at just
>about every aspect of life. With us right now are a group
>of geeks that have suffered these injustices. Meet Eric
>Sloan, Eric Wiederkind, and Erik Dorfman.
>
>LW: Eric Sloans, we'll start with you.  What kind of trauma
>did you have to put up with?
>
>SLOAN: I was the Head Geek in high school... the entire
>school computer system was held together by duct tape, I
>mean Perl scripts that I had written...
>
>LW: Cool!
>
>SLOAN: ...Anyways, as a result I was the target of the
>so-called Jock Rockers, members of the football team who
>thought they were all going to be NFL players.  If I had a
>dollar for every wedgie I got... Oh, man.  Even the
>teachers hated me... the gym teacher broke into laughter
>anytime I tried to do a pull-up.
>
>ESR: Oh, that sound horrible!  They made you do pull-ups?!?
>
>SLOAN: Well, now that I've graduated I'm having the last
>laugh.  The football captain knocked-up two girlfriends and
>is now working at McDonalds, meanwhile my Internet start-up
>just had its IPO and I'm a millionaire.  Oh, and the P.E.
>teacher was fired after it was revealed that his high
>school diploma was forged.
>
>ESR: You still had to suffer.  I can't... I mean... this
>just really, really upsets me!  Geeks suffering at the
>hands of idiots... What is this world coming too?  This is
>the key reason why I'm the founder of the "Geeks with Guns"
>movement...
>
>LW: Aw, geez, not again!  Could you save the GWG spiel for
>later, when we're _not_ on the air?  Quickly moving on...
>Eric Wiederkind, tell us about your experiences trying to
>get a job.
>
>WIEDERKIND: I was trying to switch into a different career
>from computer programming.  Programming for money sucks...
>you have to deal with PHBs, 16 hour days, and spending the
>night in your cubicle half of the time to avoid the Commute
>>From Hell.  
>
>ESR: Poor working conditions... That's an injustice all
>geeks must face.  (To the camera) Listen folks, five cents
>out of every dollar you donate will go to the newly formed
>Geek Guild, a labor union and trade group devoted to
>improving working conditions in Cubicle Farms.  It's time
>to fight back against the Suits.
>
>Anyways, please continue, Eric...
>
>WIEDERKIND: Well, like you say, I didn't want to deal with
>that injustice anymore... I minored in Journalism of all
>things, so I tried to switch into a job as an IT pundit. 
>You'd think they'd welcome a geek like me with open arms,
>but they didn't.
>
>Ziff-Davis wouldn't even give me an interview.  I was "too
>qualified" they said.  Apparently my technical acumen was
>too much for their organization, which employs Jesse Berst
>and the ilk.
>
>It gets worse.  I tried to get an entry-level reporting job
>for a local-yokel paper.  After the interview they gave me
>a "skills test": I had to compose an article using
>Microsoft Word 97.  Since I've never touched a Windows box,
>I had no clue how to use it.  When I botched the test, the
>personnel manager spouted, "Your resume said you were a
>computer programmer.  Obviously you're a liar.  Get out of
>my office now!"
>
>After several more unsuccessful attempts to land jobs at
>firms with obvious anti-geek prejudices, I gave up and went
>back into computer programming.  I'm back in a cubicle..."
>
>ESR: (shakes head) What a tragic story.  Geek oppression is
>something that cannot be tolerated.
>
>Alright, moving on... Erik Dorfman, what's your story?
>
>DORFMAN: Everybody keeps blaming me for the Y2K problem,
>the Melissa Virus, Windows crashes... you name it.  When
>somebody finds out you're a bona fide geek, they start
>bugging you about computer problems. I frequently hear
>things like, "Why can't you geeks make Windows work
>right?", "What kind of idiot writes a program that can't
>handle the year 2000?", "Geeks are evil, all they do is
>write viruses", and "The Internet is the spawn of Satan".
>
>I'm afraid to admit I have extensive computing experience. 
>When somebody asks what kind of job I have, I always lie. 
>>From my experience, admitting that you're a geek is an
>invitation to disaster.
>
>LW: I know, I know.  I sometimes say that I'm the founder
>of a Perl harvesting company instead of admitting that I'm
>the founder of the Perl programming language.  
>
>ESR: This is tragic.  We can't live in a world like this. 
>We need _your_ donations to fight social oppression and
>ignorance against geekdom...
>
>
>---
>
>The dream abruptly ended at this point when a cockroach ran
>across my face, causing me to awaken.  My apartment complex
>barely meets city codes, and it shows.  It's supposed to be
>fumigated next week, but I figure the roaches will be back
>within a month.  Hopefully sales of my newly released book,
>"Business @ the Speed of Windows" will allow me to move to
>a somewhat more upscale apartment.  
>
>Nevertheless, the above transcript is a good indication of
>how successful a Geek telethon could be.  Complaining about
>geek oppression on Slashdot isn't going to accomplish
>anything (except maybe raise your "karma" points). It's
>time to take action.  
>
>What do you think?  Write me at jonsplatz@i-want-a-website.com
>
>-
>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/

-
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.geo.uu.nl Tue Sep 14 03:09:25 1999
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Date:   Mon, 13 Sep 1999 19:45:39 -0500
From:   James Baughn <jbaughn@ldd.net>
Organization: http://i-want-a-website.com
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Turn Karma Into Cash
September 13, 1999

Taco Boy's latest duct-tape-and-bailing-wire Perl hack on
the Slashdot codebase involving "karma" and
"MetaModeration" has opened a golden opportunity for
entrepreneurs to buy and sell used Slashdot accounts. 
Several Dotheads with low-numbered accounts and high karma
values have placed their accounts up for auction at eBay in
the hopes to get-rich-quick.

"Why not?" asked "Captain Dothead", a Slashdot regular
auctioning off account number 176.  "After weeks of
painstaking work, I've been able to increase my karma value
to astronomical levels.  If I can reap a few hundred
dollars from the deal, I'll be able to establish my own
Linux portal website (cheesy-linux-portal.com, perhaps?),
and within six months I'll have an IPO and become a
millionaire.  It worked for you guys at Humorix, right?"

Some Slashdot addicts are viewing the new moderation system
as a game, much like a role-playing world in which players
spend time crafting their characters and abilities. 
"Accumulating karma points is fun," the holder of account
#15,623 said.  "I don't care about posting insightful or
interesting comments... all I'm interested in is posting
comments that are guaranteed to be moderated up to a 5 with
as little effort as possible.  I've got a bet with a friend
that I can improve my karma to 25 point by the end of the
week... I know I'm going to win, unless CmdrTaco starts
mucking with the system again..."

One "DotBayHead" (a newly coined term describing a combined
Slashdot and eBay addict) has uploaded a "Slashdot Karma
mini-HOWTO" to the LDP.  This document contains numerous
strategies for increasing the property value (karma) of a
user account, including:

1. Use reverse pyschology.  Adding the tagline "Go ahead
and moderate this post down" to your posts will typically
cause the moderators to boost your rating.

2. Subliminal messages can be very effective.  Inserting
the phrase "You _WILL_ boost my karma points" as an HTML
comment has been known to be very effective.

3. Make fun of Bill Gates.  Make fun of Microsoft.  Make
fun of Windows. Repeat as necessary.

4. Gratuitous Microsoft bashing is a guaranteed karma
booster.  Did the featured link crash as the result of the
Slashdot Effect?  Is it running Windows NT and IIS?  Point
it out!  On average, "such-and-such.com is running
Microsoft crapware" posts rank 14.5% higher than other
non-Microsoft-bashing comments.

5. Post a "Top Ten List".  It doesn't have to be funny:
studies have indicated that a moderator will automatically
mark a post as "Funny" upon seeing the words "Top Ten List"
before actually reading the rest of it.

6. Prove that the article is a hoax.  This method is
becoming increasingly more difficult as "roblimo" actually
does some fact checking now; however, CmdrTaco is still
known to post hoaxes or wild rumors occasionally that can
be discredited.

7. Mention Neil Stephenson.  Some "Cryptonomicon" fan will
instantly boost your post's score, even if your comment is
off-topic.

...

If that isn't enough, our Vast Spy Network(tm) reports that
a spammer is already broadcasting "Get Rich Quick from
Slashdot.org!" messages.  "You too can make $50,000 per
month EASY by creating and selling Slashdot user accounts,"
the advertisement claims.  "A low-numbered Slashdot account
with 30+ karma points is easily worth $250 on eBay... What
are you waiting for?  Sign up TODAY for our KARMA KASH
KOLLECTOR KIT for only $49.95 by calling (877)..."

---

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/
Web site:     http://www.i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/

From owner-humorix@humbolt.geo.uu.nl Wed Sep 15 03:30:57 1999
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Date:   Tue, 14 Sep 1999 19:18:52 -0500
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*Patents Pending
Mr. Noah Morals, Official Humorix Lawyer
September 14, 1999

I love the US Patent & Trademark Office.  Their policy of
accepting all applications for software patents ensures
that lawyers like me have an endless supply of customers. 
It's quite simple:

Software patents + American legal system = Financial
independence for lawyers

So, I was quite ecstatic when James Baughn asked me about
the possibility of securing some patents for Humorix.  "No
problem!" I said. Two weeks later, and all of the paperwork
along with the um, necessary, ah...  fees (bribes) has been
sent to the USPTO.

Some of the patents that Humorix now has a claim on
include:

- The distribution of hypertext-based syndicated humor and
fake news content across a world-wide medium.

- The act of writing self-referential, fictional humor
material in lieu of real fake news.

- The act of employing self-referential, meta-humor about
self-referential humor.

- The act of composing meta-meta-humor material containing
infinite levels of recursion and self-referentialism.

- The creation of a software application[1] that simulates
the content of a world-wide online resource by employing a
pseudo-random number generator.

- The establishment of a world-wide online resource (a.k.a.
"portal") containing advertisements, hype, and marketing
gimmicks scattered among minimal anchor content stolen or
syndicated from other outlets.

- The publication of fictional patent claims under the
byline of a fictional lawyer personae.

- The construction of a three dimensional object formed by
bending a flexible material in such a way that all points
are of equal radial distance from a center point. (some of
you may want to call this a "wheel", however, in our patent
claim, this is a TEP, "threespace equidistance paradigm".)

- The art of broadcasting huge volumes of unsolicited
commercial messages via an electronic mail medium to
destinations world wide.  (We here at Humorix don't
actually employ this, but this patent could be a useful
mallet for banging evil spammers on the head with.  Instead
of sending out 'You're a winner!' scams, spammers who
violate this patent (all of them) will be receiving 'You're
a defendant!' meatspace letters.)

If these patent applications are accepted (and they will be
since I have several connections in the USPTO), Humorix may
apply to register trademarks like "Humorix", "Vast Spy
Network",  "Linux Humor", "Portal", "World Domination",
"Humorix World Headquarters", "Dothead", and "Neural
Implant From the Future". When it comes to intellectual
property, you can never snatch^H^H^H^H^H^Hacquire enough.


[1] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/jul99.shtml#Slashsim

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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@humbolt.geo.uu.nl Sat Sep 18 02:37:03 1999
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Date:   Fri, 17 Sep 1999 19:41:38 -0500
From:   James Baughn <jbaughn@ldd.net>
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The Great Portal War
September 17, 1999

In its IPO prospectus, Andover.Net warns:

"Some members of the Open Source community have criticized
the commercialization of the Open Source movement. This
type of negative reaction, if widely shared by our
visitors, developers or the rest of the Open Source
community, could harm our reputation and diminish the
Andover.Net brand. Our business, results of operations and
financial condition could suffer."

This is no longer an idle threat.  For some people, the
announced Initial Public Offering of Andover stock is the
last straw.  The Great Portal War of 1999 has begun.

Eric Rembrandt, a Linux kernel hacker, is the leader of a
growing anti-Andover, anti-Slashdot, anti-commercialization
faction.  "It's time we return to our non-profit roots and
not be subverted by evil Wall Street," he said.  His
faction has created a Free Portal Foundation and launched 
the so-called GAS Project (GAS Ain't Slashdot).  

The goal of the FPF and GAS is to maintain a network of
portal websites similar in content to Andover.Net offerings
but different in ideology.  "All GAS  portals will be
licensed under the GAS General Portal License," Rembrandt
explained.  "This license will prohibit anybody from making
any profit on GAS content under any conditions whatsoever."

Work is already underway on "Dot Org Slash", a Slashdot
alternative focusing on "Gossip for Geeks" but without any
advertisements, user accounts, moderation, Star Wars hype,
Jon Katz editorials, or dumb spelling or grammatical
errors.  

Another GAS initiative is "Colonel Panic", a non-profit
Linux humor site allowing Bazaar-style user submission of
articles.  Obviously this is a direct competitor to
Humorix.  Said one GAS Project member, "Humorix sucks.  The
site never was very good, but it really went downhill after
they sold-out to Wall Street and Madison Avenue suits with
their much-hyped IPO.  We plan on having real, non-profit
Linux humor, not excessive Microsoft bashing designed to
attract more eyeballs."

Other portals the GAS Project has its targets locked on 
include several "dot coms" (or as one radical GAS militant
says, "dot cons"): linux.com, redhat.com, linuxworld.com,
and linuxtoday.com.  "Doesn't it seem ironic that these
sites provide proprietary content about a non-proprietary
operating system?" a FPF charter member asks.  "It would be
like Microsoft releasing the full API specs to Windows 2000
online under the OpenContent License.

The backers of the Free Portal Foundation aren't the only
people upset over the Andover.Net IPO.  Richard M. Stallman
wrote in a recent Usenet post, "I'm rather irritated... I
just checked their IPO prospectus.  The terms 'Open Source'
and 'Linux' are used 93 and 128 times, respectively. 
Meanwhile, the terms 'Free Software' and 'GNU/Linux' are
used zero times.  This is intolerable..."

We've heard rumors that a group of disgruntled Anonymous
Cowards plan to initiate a FPDOSA (First Post Denial of
Service Attack) in the weeks leading up to the IPO.  One AC
said, "We've had it.  We're fighting back against The Man
(Rob Malda) and his legion of AC oppressors.  Right before
the IPO we're going to bombard Slashdot with thousands of
First Posts on each story, bringing the Slashdot servers to
their knees.  The technical unreliability will make
investors think twice about investing in Andover.Net, and
hopefully the stock will collapse.  Wall Street hasn't yet
faced the raw power of the Anonymous Coward!" 

Due to SEC regulations, Rob Malda, Patrick Lentz, and Bruce
A. Twickler were all unavailable for comment at press
time.  Humorix's stock (Nasdaq: FAUX) fell sharply from 2
1/4 to 1 1/32 when the GAS Project announced the competing
Colonel Panic website, prompting several firms to downgrade
Humorix from "SELL NOW" to "YOU'RE A FOOL IF YOU INVEST IN
THIS" status.

---

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.geo.uu.nl Sun Sep 19 03:37:17 1999
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Linux Ported To Zangelding
September 18, 1999

According to a Usenet post on alt.linux.zangelding, a group
of Linux hackers have successfully ported Linux to
Zangelding after six months of effort.  "It was quite a
difficult endeavor," said one Zangelding Linux programmer. 
"Zangelding is very, very cool, but it's a wee bit hard to
program for.  Not as bad as an Intel 8088 with 64KB of RAM,
though."

Version 1.0 of the full Zangelding Linux (Zanix)
distribution should be available for download next week. 
Zanix will include Zangelding-enhanced versions of Netscape
4.61, The Gimp, and StarOffice.  El Cheapo*Bytes is
expected to offer Zanix bundled with a "Zangelding for
Dummies" book for US$14.95.  In addition, a GNU/HURD port
(code-named ZangHURDing) and a FreeBSD port (FreeZang) are
underway and should be available before Y2K.

Zangelding is expected to become a US$2.3 billion industry
by the end of the year.  Zangelding consultants are
demanding salaries of over US$100,000 per year. "I've never
seen anything like it," said Eric Hokes, CEO of Zangelding
Dot Com, a Zangelding consulting firm.  "We're signing
dozens of Zangelding consulting and support contracts with
companies like General Motors and Wal-Mart every day.  Now
that Linux is Zangelding Compatible(tm), I'm expecting
profits to soar even more. Our IPO next month is set to
yield $125 million."

As a sign of Zangelding's growing popularity, nearly 500
people showed up at the first meeting of the Silicon Valley
Zangelding Users Group yesterday.  Newly elected SVZUG
President Bob Van Gelder gave a keynote speech, "Just What
The Heck Is Zangelding?", in which he explained,
"Zangelding is a revolutioary Open Source,
trans-dimensional, energy-efficient, meta-physical,
post-post-modern, buzzword-compliant paradigm built on
post-Einsteinian physics, the Griffin-Smith-Kerblutz
multi-hypertext retrieval algorithms, the Herzen-Farrow
higher-order sub-transform of the Mandelbrot Fractal, and
Greenian meta-temporal analysis."

Zangelding is a relatively new concept that you may not be
aware of, so we at Humorix have done some research and
collected the following Web resources that might prove
helpful in explaining more about Zangelding:

- LDP's Zangelding mini-HOWTO
[http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Zangelding/], explains how
to set up Zangelding and install the Zanix distro.  (This
document was not online at press time, but is expected to
be completed soon).

- ZangDot [http://zangdot.hokes.org], a "News for
Zangelders" website based on the Slashdot codebase 

- "Get Rich Quick from Zangelding"
[http://www.spam-sucks.org/samples/zangelding.html], a spam
email sent to millions of people by a multi-level marketing
firm called "ZanGOLD, Inc."

- Zangelding Success Stories
[http://www.corporate-productivity.con/zangelding99/success.html],
a collection of case studies on how Zangelding has improved
productivity and reduced costs at such companies as
McDonalds, Northwest Airlines, and Exxon.

- An Ad-Hoc Study of Greenian Meta-Temporal Analysis
[http://www.umr.edu/~jbradshaw/meta-temp/index.htm], a
doctoral thesis written by James Bradshaw of the University
of Missouri-Rolla about the mathematical underpinnings of
the Zangelding universe.  (Page was unavailable at press
time due to a server upgrade.)

- Zangelding, A Way to a Better Life
[http://www.ofw.fi/pajanet/pajalaiset6/markokov/zang/], a
personal Zangelding fan page by Marko Kovanen

- The Official Zangelding Homepage
[http://www.jyu.fi/~juhtolv/zangelding/], supposedly the
official home of Zangelding.  However, you'd think that the
people behind such a revolutionary paradigm as Zangelding
could create a more professional looking page.

---

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@humbolt.geo.uu.nl Tue Sep 21 01:24:25 1999
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Update: We'll See You In Court
N. O. Morals, Official Humorix Lawyer

Today is a good day.  Humorix has received a bark letter
from Microsoft threatening to file a lawsuit over our
recent patent claims. I'm hoping this will lead to a long,
drawn-out lawsuit involving motions, counter-motions,
counter-counter-motions, and, best of all, a ton of legal
fees for me and my law firm.  I may be the butt of every
lawyer joke ever told, but the huge amount of money I rake
in makes it all worth it.

I've attached a copy of the bark letter from Microsoft:

---

Dear Mr. Morals, et al:

We have just reviewed your recently acquired software
patents.  Some of these appear to infringe on previously
acquired Microsoft patents.  In light of this, we may be
forced to file a lawsuit unless Humorix immediately
withdraws the offending patents and purchases 1 million
copies of Windows 2000 [http://www.ms-windows-2000.com] to
reimburse our attorney fees.

In particular, the following Humorix patent is a blatant
violation of Microsoft intellectual property:

     * The distribution of hypertext-based syndicated humor
       and fake news content across a world-wide medium.

Microsoft has announced the release of Windows 2000 for
1999, and publically proclaimed Windows NT 4.0 and Windows
98 to be relatively bugfree and stable on hypertext-based
systems across world-wide media. Our claims are obviously
both humor and fake news. You are obviously trying to steal
our ideas.

In addition, the following Humorix patent is void because
Microsoft has held prior art in this field since 1995. 
We're referring to the Microsoft Network:

     * The establishment of a world-wide online resource
       (a.k.a. "portal") containing advertisements, hype,
       and marketing gimmicks scattered among minimal
       anchor content stolen or syndicated from other
       outlets. 

Finally, Microsoft has held the following patent for the
past decade, one that Humorix is clearly in violation of:

     * The concept of requesting and receiving patents for
       ideas that are so ridiculously obvious that no sane
       person would ever consider the possibility of
       patenting them.

Thank you for your attention.

Signed, 

C. A. Pitalist
Chairman, Microsoft Legal Department

Pat N. Twar, Esq.
Deputy Under-Secretary, Patent Protection Division,
Microsoft Legal Department

P. A. Pertrail
Microsoft Lawyer #523

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From owner-humorix@humbolt.geo.uu.nl Wed Sep 22 23:41:57 1999
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Let's Crack That Box
September 22, 1999

HOUSTON, TX -- Much has been said about the "Crack This
Box!" publicity stunts[1] held by Microsoft, LinuxPPC, and
now PC Week. However, we have just learned that another
box-cracking competition was held last Friday in
conjunction with a Linux 8th birthday[2] celebration in
Texas.

VA Linux supplied the Linux boxes, while Gateway provided
the Windows NT boxes.  Both boxes featured
triple-corrugated deluxe cardboard construction, however
the Windows NT boxes did not perform as well as the Linux
boxes during the competition.

In the first event, called "Windows Drag-N-Drop", two boxes
were dragged to the tenth floor of an apartment building
and then dropped out of the window.  After hitting the
concrete, the boxes were inspected by a team of judges for
external cracks, deformities, and other performance
issues.  The VA Linux box was the clear winner.

The outcome of the second event was much different.  Two
boxes were each surrounded by a brick wall (what one judge
called a "firewall"), with two teams competing against each
other to remotely damage the boxes. The anti-Linux team was
able to breach a hole in the wall and toss in a carton of
fireworks, which promptly incinerated the VA Linux box. 
The Gateway/Windows NT box was unscathed.

Said one Linux box-cracker, "This test proves that Linux
boxes are far less secure that Windows NT".  This remark
led to a flame war, with a group of irate Linux zealots
screaming, "All this test proves is that the person who
built the firewall is an idiot!"  One participant later
added, "If the test had continued much longer, the Windows
NT box probably would have spontaneously combusted in the
sun anyways."

The third and final event, however, was quite conclusive:
VA Linux boxes are stronger.  Two boxes were each turned
upside down and then weights were added one by one until
the boxes collapsed under the demand.  The Linux box was
able to handle twice the load that the Windows box could.  

"This competition shows that Linux boxes are more secure,
reliable, and robust.  The next time I need to send a
package, I'll make sure I use a box from VA Linux."

Not all were happy with the competition.  "This is absurd!  To come
to the conclusion that Linux boxes are superior based on some
silly tests conducted by drunk Linux advocates is beyond belief," one
judge said (he hasn't been invited to the 9th birthday celebration next
year).

One inebriated participant slurred, "This box-cracking
competition was almost as much fun as the mouse-slinging event[3] at
Linux Kongress '99!"

[1] http://www.vision25.demon.co.uk/prog/linuxbirthday.html
[2] http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=99/09/20/1411244
[3] http://linuxtoday.com/story.php3?sn=9543

---

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

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From owner-humorix@humbolt.geo.uu.nl Fri Sep 24 03:42:06 1999
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Office 2005 To Be Available Before Office 2003
John Elfrink
September 23, 1999

REDMOND, WA -- In a move that has been declared
"unfortunate but necessary", Microsoft today announced that
its productivity suite Office 2003 will again have its
shipping date pushed back 3 months. This puts the shipping
date on Office 2003 later than the estimated release of
2005. 

"It's really not that big a deal," a spokesman for
Microsoft said at a press conference today. "From the very
beginning of the Office 2003 project in the mid 90's we
have known that its shipping date would be in 2004. That
has not changed nor do we expect it to change." 
Nevertheless, Microsoft must take care if it plans to keep
the release date in 2004 because today's announcement
places the release date for mid-December of that year. 

While this move has been expected for some time, it did
cause much discussion among industry experts. It was an
anonymous user on the Internet that first pointed out that
the new shipping date would be after the November 2004 date
that Office 2005 will be available for beta testing in. 

The spokesman defended the beta test, saying, "It's
important to Microsoft to keep the release date for Office
2005 on schedule. In order to do this we need feedback from
the users as early as possible telling us what improvements
over Office 2003 they most liked." In order for the
feedback on Office 2005 to be collected, analyzed, and
implemented the estimated release date of Office 2005 must
be eight months before the shipping date. 

The obvious difficulty in this is that there is no way for
the beta testing to show improvements over Office 2003 if
Office 2003 is not yet in use. To work around this problem
Microsoft has announced that a special beta-testing team is
being put together. 

"Because the release date for Office 2003 is still 30 days
before the shipping date there will be a short window of
opportunity for special high profile users to get Office
2003 a month before it is available to the public at
large," the spokesman explained. The special beta-testing
team will be part of that special high profile user group. 

Craniates for the group are being selected currently.
Training for the group will begin before year's end based
on the advanced projection from the beta test. Once the
beta test for Office 2003 is released to the public the
special group will already be training on the production
version. Once the production version of Office 2003 is
released to the public the special group will be fully
trained in its use and ready to beta test Office 2005. 

"Our estimates of the projection of the beta testing of the
pre-release of the release of Office 2005 will go hand in
hand with the post shipping release's projected estimate of
Office 2003. The final release shipping of Office 2005 will
implement our projection of what the beta testing group
will estimate since a full estimate is not projected to be
done in time," said the spokesman to a perplexed audience. 


UPDATE from the Editor:

Just as this article was going to press, a member of our
Vast Spy Network(tm) informed us of the major new feature
that is planned for Office 2003... a Dancing Billionaire
Office Assistant.

Our informant sent us a preliminary screenshot showing a
character resembling Bill Gates dancing on an Excel
spreadsheet.  The new Office Assistant will, according to
our source:

* Walk around the screen while wads of cash fall out of his
  bulging pockets.

* Stomp on bugs that will occasionally crawl across the
  screen while saying "You didn't see that."

* Erase any text that is negative towards Microsoft or Bill
  Gates.

* Insert trademark symbols next to words like "Microsoft",
  "windows", and "internet" in your document.

* Respond with "This feature requires Microsoft Office 2003
  Plus Pack! available for $129.95 at your neighborhood
  Microsoft Store" if you attempt to access the Help menu.

* Randomly insert Microsoft advertisements in your
  documents.

Stay tuned for future updates about this rapidly unfolding
situation.


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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.geo.uu.nl Fri Sep 24 03:43:38 1999
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Update: The Legal Battle Continues
Noah Morals, Official Humorix Lawyer
September 23, 1999

I can't believe the good fortune I keep getting.   Humorix
is now firmly embroiled in a lengthy legal battle with
Microsoft, which will net me a fortune in legal fees. I'll
be able to buy my own tropical island within a year if this
continues.  It's good to be a lawyer.

Regular Humorix readers (both of you) know that Humorix and
Microsoft have been exchanging legal notices for the past
week. In response to our last article, the Microsoft legal
department sent us this letter:

===

Dear Mr. Morals, et al,

We have noticed you published a copy of our friendly note
(referred to as "bark letter" by you) on your web server.

Since this note contains important strategies to be used in
our upcoming lawsuits as well as some internal Microsoft
marketing strategies (such as the mission charter for MSN),
we demand that you remove it immediately.

Also we would like you to know that any further
communication between us will automatically fall under the
Microsoft GPL (Grossly Private License), meaning:

* By opening the envelope, you agree to these terms. If you
  do not agree to the terms, return the letter unopened to
  your local post office stating you disagree with the
  license, and you may or may not get the postage back.

* You may read the letter only on one desk, and make at
  maximum one copy for safety purposes only. If you need
  another copy, want to read it on another desk, or want to
  give a copy to someone else, you need to buy another
  license from the Microsoft licensing department at a
  nominal fee of US$899.99.

* There is a 90 hours readability warranty. If you cannot
  read the mail after 90 hours [starting from writing, not
  receiving], it is your fault.

* If you find a typing mistake, or spelling or grammar
  errors, there is no need whatsoever to report them. 
  Using Microsoft Internet Explorer 5.0 with ActiveX
  enabled, visit letterupgrade.microsoft.com to download a
  patch for the letter.

* You agree not to disassemble (i.e. rip up) or in any
  other way reverse engineer (i.e. use ink killers to
  separate ink from paper) the letter.

Thank you for your attention.

Signed,

C. A. Pitalist
Chairman, Microsoft Legal Department

Pat N. Twar, Esq.
Deputy Under-Secretary, Patent Protection Division,
Microsoft Legal Dept.

427 of 1437
Microsoft Lawyer #427

===

In response to this, I, Mr. Noah Morals representing
Humorix, have sent the following counter-letter:

===

Dear Mr. Pitalist, et al:

Your previous letter indicates that you have not read the
terms of the Humorix ClosedHumor Public License.  This is
not our problem.

The terms of the License are as follows:

* By opening Port 80 of the Humorix website, you agree to
  these terms. If you do not agree to the terms, return the
  electrons you have received and immediately close your
  browser.

* We reserve the right to publish any and all
  correspondence we receive, even if said correspondence
  contains valuable trade secrets.  [Again, that's not our
  problem - N. O. M.]

* You (the "Supplicant") agree to refrain from filing any
  legal action against Humorix World Domination, Inc. until
  the End of Time or until Linux achieves Total World
  Domination, whichever comes first.    

* You agree to purchase at least ten (10) shares of Humorix
  stock (Nasdaq: FAUX) within one (1) week and to hold said
  shares for at least one (1) year.

* We are not responsible in any way if you encounter any
  problems (i.e. Blue Screen of Death) as the result of
  viewing the Humorix website with any Microsoft product
  (including, but not limited to, Windows 95, Windows 98,
  Windows 98 Second Edition, Windows NT 3.51, Windows 4.0,
  Windows 2000 beta, Windows CE, Internet Explorer, or
  Bob).  Moreover, we are not responsible if you suffer any
  eye strain or damage as the result of reading this fine
  print.

We regret to inform you that, by the terms of this license,
the complaints mentioned in your previous correspondence
are null and void.  As stated before, that's not our
problem.

Sincerely,

Mr. Noah Morals, 
Official Humorix Lawyer

Mr. F. L. Amer, Jr., 
Intern for the Lowe & Morals Law Firm

P.S. Humorix shares are still available.  Contact the newly
hired Humorix Investor Relations Liason, Mr. G. E. Trich,
for details.

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From owner-humorix@humbolt.geo.uu.nl Fri Sep 24 03:44:42 1999
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Date:   Thu, 23 Sep 1999 18:45:45 -0500
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Subject: [humorix] Running With Pointers Considered Harmful...
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Running With Pointers Considered Harmful...
M.L. Pluspluss, Humorix Programming Columnist
September 23, 1999

I have recently encountered some of the great works of
Computer Science discussing the danger of such ideas as the
"goto" statement (one article I categorically reject),
"unstructured" programming, and Microsoft COM interfaces. 
Yet in my recent foray into the reference works of our
industry, I failed to encounter any articles discussing a
key issue that has led to tragedy after tragedy.

This, as you who have attended some of my early design
presentations must know, is the issue of running with
pointers.  Now I know that many of your mothers repeated
over and over, "Don't run with scissors, you will put your
eye out!"  But how many of you ever had a parent or a peer,
let alone a Computer Science professor, point out the
danger of running with pointers?

I'm sure you must all be familiar with the case of Harry
Bumgartner, a programmer who worked at Eliant,  the premier
maker of check register software for the Timex Sinclair. 
One sunny morning, Mr. Bumgartner was presenting his new
algorithm for calculating the deduction factor of a haircut
in determining how work-related grooming expenses could be
tabulated for tax purposes, when a young James B. Broley,
thinking it humorous to rush into the conference room
brandishing a fine birch pointer like a madman, suddenly
put both of Mr. Bumgartner's eyes out. 

Fortunately for Harry, he had suffered an attack of Cerebro
Hepto-axial-cyto-mitochondrial-hytotic-miosis while serving
with the Army in the Grenada operation in the mid 1980s and
had lost vision in both eyes, so no serious harm was done.

Unfortunately for young Mr. Broley, his little prank cost
him his job.  He was recently sighted working the
drive-thru window for an In-and-Out Burger in Fresno, CA.

Yet, this is not the the most horrific case I can make for
the danger of running with pointers.  There is always the
case of Jane M. Doe (not her real pseudonym) of Los
Angelis, Missouri.

Ms. Doe kindly consented to a brief interview for this
public safety piece.

PLUSPLUSS:  Ms. Doe, if that is your real name, [At this
point the guest became very belligerent], can you tell us,
in your own words, if they are your own words [Now the
guest began searching through her purse for, I was to find
out later, a large gun] just how you came to suffer your
disabling accident.

DOE:  Look, I don't have to put up with this.  I have a
publicist, an agent, and have even chosen the actress that
will play me in the upcoming ABC mini-series, "Lost at the
Point!" (remember there is an  exclamation point at the
end). [She was now brandishing a gun in my direction].

PLUSPLUSS:  Well certainly, I'm all ears about this new
venture that your "misfortune" has led you too."

DOE:  [very angry now] Look, it's unsupported wannabe
journalists like you working for self-proclaimed humor
portals that are responsible for my predicament.  I have
half a mind to call my trainer David in to break your geeky
butt in half.  Oh David, this man is bothering me.  Would
you please dispose of him?

PLUSPLUSS:  [breathing hard with gaps between words, as if
running] Thanks for... your time... Ms. Doe.  I certainly
hope you... find a way to... spend all your... "damages"
efficiently... ouch, thorns...

As you can see from that excerpt recorded while I was
running... I mean leaving Ms. Doe's compound, her encounter
with a pointer was nothing less than shattering to her
moral sense and willingness to talk with legitimate
journalists.

I have now demonstrated the personal consequences of
running with pointers (be they nice birch ones or even
poorly made Korean pine) but let me now propose a safer
alternative:

We must, as professional programmers, adopt the laser
pointer as the standard pointer for all presentations, for
these reasons:

1.  In a word, efficiency.  The laser uses a battery to
provide a brilliant red spot.  (Note: Looking at the light
coming from the pointer's "business" end can result in
blindness.  You have been warned.) It is easier to see in a
darkened room than even the famous birch pointer used by
programmer Gerald M. Plotsnick.  

2.  More importantly, The laser pointer will not destroy
one's eye if one accidently falls on it [Editor: Actually
M.L., if one happens to fall on the pointer, it could (at
least theoretically) get jammed into the eye socket. [M.L.:
but I wasn't talking about that!  I was talking about the
pointy part]].

3.  There are very few ways to hurt one's self with a laser
pointer [Editor: Well, they could shine it in their eyes or
something; or maybe try to pick their nose with it.  [ML:
Well, I was assuming they weren't stupid!]].

5.  Perhaps, most importantly, laser pointers help ensure
correctness in the presentation, thus reducing useless
questions and comments on the presenter's style.  Using
laser pointers guarantees that the presenter knows what he
is pointing at.  So often with other pointer technologies,
the presenter is able to apply the pointer to any item on
the screen.  With the laser pointer, the user must decide
where it actually points if it is to have any meaning at
all.  This guarantees that the presenter will always pay
attention to where the pointer is directed, unless he just
doesn't give a damn.

6.  More scalable.  Due to limitations on lengths and the
structural strength of wooden pointers, traditional
pointers do not scale well to large presentations.  As the
size of the screen increases, so must the size of the
pointer increase, until such a point that the pointer is
either too limber and flexible to accurately point out the
detail the presenter wishes or it is too heavy for the
presenter to wield requiring some additional implementation
technology such as a robot to actually wield the telephone
pole sized pointer.

I believe that I have presented a very clear case
supporting the need for all programmers to switch to laser
pointers.  I will be presenting this paper to the ACM when
I get the chance and I believe that it is inevitable that
the advantages of a laser pointer based system will
supercede the current approach of using wooden
technology.   Clearly this provides safety advantages that
can't be underestimated.  But additionally, all programmers
who adopt this position will know that they are adopting a
proven system that is more efficient and scalable than the
current "wooden" system most presenters currently use.


-
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.geo.uu.nl Sat Sep 25 02:12:25 1999
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Date:   Fri, 24 Sep 1999 19:17:16 -0500
From:   James Baughn <jbaughn@ldd.net>
Organization: http://i-want-a-website.com
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Subject: [humorix] Ask Humorix: Do-It-Yourself IPO
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Ask Humorix: Do-It-Yourself IPO
September 24, 1999

Anonymous Brave Person writes, "I've been watching with
much amusement as companies have announced IPOs and made
millions -- or billions -- of dollars even though they
haven't turned a profit.  How can a "company" like
LinuxOne[1] issue stock worth $24 million when their sole
product is still in beta?  More importantly, is it possible
for _ME_ to have my own IPO?"

The Humorix Oracle replies,

Yes, you too can become a billionaire by suckering Wall
Street investors enamored with Internet and Open Source
stocks into buying stock in your fly-by-night operation.  

A Do-It-Yourself IPO is not that difficult.  Here's 7 easy
steps:

1. Invent some kind of product.  Typically this will fall
into one of two categories: a new Linux distro based on
Slackware, Debian, or Red Hat, or yet another content-free
Linux portal website.

Creating a new distro is not that difficult.  Just take an
existing one and add a few touches, making sure to issue a
global s/Red Hat/Your Distro Name command.  Translating an
existing distro into a new language is also a possibility. 
For instance, Linux has made only limited headway into the
following ripe markets:

* Babylonian
* Hittite
* Ancient Egyptian (hieroglyphics may be a challenge,
  though)
* Pig Latin (this may be the strongest type of encryption
  allowed by the DOJ in the near future)
* Microspeak (former Microsoft employees probably don't
  want to use Windows all of their lives)
* Mayan
* Cherokee
* Cyrillic (to take advantage of the booming Russian
  economy)
* Redneck
* Klingon (it's a wonder this hasn't been done yet)
* Binary (nothing but 1's and 0's)
* Wingdings

Or, if your Research & Development budget is tight, you may
elect to create a Linux portal website as instructed in
Humorix's Linux Portal mini-HOWTO[2].

2. If you are selling a Linux distro or other product,
create a website hyping it.  Obtain a domain name
containing "linux" (assuming all of them haven't been taken
yet).   We recommend that you don't create your site using
any Microsoft software, however this isn't an absolute
rule.  The recent flurry[3] of Linux press releases begging
to be run through the Demoroniser proves that investors
aren't really concerned with whether your Linux company
actually uses Linux.

3. Set up a physical location (in other words, a
brick-and-mortar place in meatspace).  This doesn't need to
be any more elaborate than a basement; however, a more
formal location may come in handy if any Venture
Capitalists[4] drop by.

4. Incorporate.  Find a couple of friends (preferably one
with legal experience) to help you form a legal
corporation. The S-1 filings of other IPO-bound companies
often contain sample corporate bylaws and financial reports
that you can steal and modify for your own use.

5. Obtain and fill out the necessary IPO paperwork with the
SEC.  As mentioned before, you can cut-n-paste content from
the S-1 filings of other companies.  For example, almost
every tech company has "We might get sued by Microsoft" and
"The Internet might collapse" as possible risk factors, so
you should too.  To save money, be sure to
"self-underwrite" your IPO and not mess with an expensive
Wall Street firm.

6. Send out buzzword-laden press releases over the wires
trumpeting your IPO and whatever product you've finally
released (if any).  Don't mention the fact that your
corporation consists of only you and a few buddies who have
no clue how to run a business.  Again, you can copy and
alter other company's press releases for your own use (this
is what Open Source is all about).

7. Play by the SEC's rules until the Big Day when your IPO
happens.  At that point you'll be able to join the
Billionaire's Club.  And remember: you've "earned" it!

[1] http://linuxtoday.com/story.php3?sn=10391
[2] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/may99.shtml#Portal-HOWTO
[3] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/aug99.shtml#Demoronise
[4] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/mar99.shtml#VC-Attack


---

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.geo.uu.nl Mon Sep 27 23:02:32 1999
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Date:   Mon, 27 Sep 1999 16:06:06 -0500
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Subject: [humorix] What Do Al Gore And Linus Torvalds Have In Common?
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What Do Al Gore And Linus Torvalds Have In Common?
September 27, 1999

...They are both the target of lawsuits filed last Friday.
Al Gore, the self-proclaimed "inventor" of the Internet, is
now a defendant in a lawsuit claiming that he is liable for
the Internet gambling addiction the plaintiffs have
suffered.  Linus Torvalds, the Linux Head Honcho, is
embroiled in another lawsuit over mental problems caused by
severe Linux addiction.

A representative for the law firm of Dewey, Cheetam, &
Howe, which is pursuing the Al Gore case, said, "Mr. Gore
made it quite clear in an interview[1] that, while serving
in the US Congress, he 'took the initiative in creating the
Internet.'  Moreover, our clients have suffered from
day-trading addiction made possible by Mr. Gore's
invention. This gambling addiction has led to broken
families, bankruptcies, and immeasurable mental anguish. 
Al Gore must be held responsible."

One legal observer Humorix interviewed says that the case
has strong backing.  "If the State builds a highway that
contains dangerous potholes, and somebody is hurt when
their car is swallowed by one, the State is liable. 
Likewise, if a private citizen like Mr. Gore builds an
Information Superhighway containing dangerous elements, and
a group of people are hurt as a result, then Gore is
liable. It's just that simple..."

He added, "Heck, if somebody can sue over Pokemon
addiction[2], then Internet addiction should be a piece of
cake."

Dewey, Cheetam, & Howe is also pursuing the Linus Torvalds
lawsuit. Said Mr. Dewey, head attorney for the law firm,
"Our clients have a severe addiction to the Linux operating
system that Mr. (or should I say Dr.?) Linus Torvalds
created.  He must be held liable."

Court documents filed by Mr. Dewer enumerate the ways that
his five clients, aged 16 to 43, have become addicted to
Linux:

* Each has spent, on average, $7,542 per year on upgraded
  hardware and Internet access (one installed a fractional
  T1 to run a Linux FTP server) to satisfy their addiction.

* All spend at least 2 hours per day (including weekends)
  surfing Slashdot alone.  LinuxToday and other Linux
  portals account for 1.5 hours.  

* All have purchased several hundred shares of Red Hat and
  Corel stock. Said one plaintiff, "I have an overwhelming
  urge to invest in Andover, LinuxOne, and VA Linux when
  they come available, but I'm almost broke. I'll have to
  eat less or something to afford it."

* They obsessively download the latest kernel versions
  (including all Alan Cox ac-patches) and compile them. 
  "The only new kernel I haven't downloaded in the past
  year is 2.0.38," one litigant said.

* The youngest client, a high school student, got in
  trouble at school for installing Linux on a Windows 98
  box in the lab.

* None of them can take a vacation for any extended period
  of time because they suffer Linux withdrawl victims.  "I
  had a nervous breakdown in Hawaii," said one client. 
  "Thankfully somebody in our tour group had a laptop with
  wireless Net access and I was able to get my fix."

* The most addicted client, Mr. Linn Icks, was given the
  Linux Advocate Of The Year Award[3] last month by
  Humorix.

* One client is divorced as a direct result of his
  addiction. His wife said, "It's either me or your
  [expletive] operating system", to which he responded,
  "That's easy.  I'll take Linux."  None of the others have
  dated in the last three years.

* Two of the addicts were fired at work from obsessively
  browsing Slashdot and LinuxToday during office hours. 
  Both are employed in "food services" (read: McDonalds),
  although they hope to land a Linux-related job when some
  company that's actually heard of Linux moves into their
  regions.

In addition to pursuing monetary damages, the plaintiffs
want the court to issue an injunction against Mr. Torvalds
from releasing any more kernel patches until he
incorporates anti-addiction features into the operating
system.  According to court documents, they want the Linux
kernel to, among other things, "periodically halt,
displaying a 'go outside' message that will force the user
to step away from their machine and go outside and get some
fresh air."

Al Gore and Linus Torvalds were unavailable for comment at
press time. As a result of the impending lawsuits, Red Hat
stock dropped 5 1/2 points today, and Al Gore's approval
rating slid 1.25% according to a poll conducted by the
"Bureaucracy Blurb", a DC-based newspaper.

[1] http://www.wired.com/news/news/politics/story/18390.html
[2] http://slashdot.org/articles/99/09/25/1751219.shtml
[3] http://i-want-a-website.com/about-linux/aug99.shtml#Advocacy-Award

---

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.geo.uu.nl Thu Sep 30 05:02:56 1999
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Date:   Wed, 29 Sep 1999 22:06:51 -0500
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Subject: [humorix] The Coming Lawyerclysm
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The Coming Lawyerclysm
Jon Splatz, Humorix Pundit & Social Commentator
September 29, 1999

There are hordes of serious-minded people who insist that
the legal system is driving us towards a Lawyerclysm, when
humanity becomes overwhelmed as it tries and fails to cope
with the increasing complexity and absurdity of laws and
legal arguments.

Even now, nobody can really keep up, and only a few can
even fake it. Everyone is frantic, stressed, tethered,
broke or worn out trying to manage. We are bombarded by
patents, and copyrights, and bonehead laws, and lawsuits we
certainly do not need or understand, that move more quickly
and do more unpleasant things than we want, that we can
barely grasp, let alone deal with.

The complaints and alarms are piling up. 

Author James Keite in "Speedier" complains that the
judicial system is forcing everything to move too quickly.
In his new collection of essays, Arthur Z. Lark writes "I
have seen the future and it's patented." 

The typical twenty-first-century person's day, he predicts,
will include: "Checking email, phone, and fax to see if any
legal notices have arrived; skimming the news to keep track
of new laws, regulations, and rules that were enacted;
conferring with overpriced lawyers about pending lawsuits;
attending court either in person or via closed-circuit
holographic projection; talking with insurance adjustors to
reduce future liabilities; exploring the Microsoft HyperWeb
for tips on how to beat the IRS (12 million tax laws and
counting)..."

And that's just the tip of the iceberg.

Anti-Lawyer Patrick Buyer goes further, warning in his
books that lawyers are destroying the world. He wants us to
kill all the lawyers to save the planet -- and ourselves. 
In his apocalyptic new dirge "Staring Into The Gavel,"
author Bob Labeller proclaims that western civilization
itself is coming to an end. 

Believe me, these predictions are not bullshit.  The
ongoing legal battle between Humorix and Microsoft is proof
of this proposition.  

You've no doubt been following the exchange of legal
verbiage between the two parties over the last few weeks.
It gets worse.  Here's the certified letter that arrived
from the bowels of the Microsoft Empire earlier today:

---

Dear Mr. Morals, et al,

Your challenging of the Microsoft GPL (Grossly Private
License) by referring to the Humorix ClosedHumor Public
License is not valid, because we in no way agreed to this
license.

     * By opening Port 80 of the Humorix website, you agree
       to these terms. If you do not agree to the terms,
       return the electrons you have received and
       immediately close your browser.

We did not open port 80 of your website. We have accessed
your website through www-proxy1307.aol.com, so by your own
terms, AOL agreed to the Humorix ClosedHumor Public
License. Microsoft is not bound to any agreements AOL made
with you or anyone else.

Even if we had accessed your port 80 directly, your license
would be invalid, because we could not read it before
accessing port 80. You, on the other hand, you can read the
Microsoft GPL (Grossly Private License) without opening the
envelope: remove the stamp and use a microscope with a
magnification factor of at least thousand (1000) where the
stamp was.

Also, I consider myself forced to point out that your
license violates another Microsoft patent.

     * You agree to purchase at least ten (10) shares of
       Humorix stock (Nasdaq: FAUX) within one (1) week and
       to hold said shares for at least one (1) year.

Microsoft owns a patent on "the concept of using one
product to force people to use another product". Previous
usage includes putting Internet Explorer in Windows, the
fact that WindowsUpdate.microsoft.com cannot be accessed
with Netscape, and our placing of MSN icons on the desktop
of all computer users.

If you are a member of the Microsoft PBN (Patent Builder
Network), you can check all Microsoft-owned patents online
via the Microsoft Network (IE required).  To sign up for a
PBN account, you need to be a MSCL (Microsoft Certified
Lawyer). Membership is $50,000 p.a., with a free trial
period of twelve (12) seconds.

Thank you for your attention.

Signed,

C. A. Pitalist
Chairman, Microsoft Legal Department

Pat N. Twar, Esq.
Deputy Under-Secretary, Patent Protection Division,
Microsoft Legal Dept.

T. H. Eft
Under-Sub-Lawyer, Microsoft Patents & Innovations
Department

---

This is sickening.  But not as bad as the reply that Mr.
Noah Morals, Humorix lawyer, just sent back:

---

Dear Microsoft Legal Department,

Thank you for reporting the bug in the Humorix ClosedHumor
Public License.  My legal assistants have prepared an
upgrade -- version 1.1 -- that fixes this and other known
issues, and adds new features and usability enhancements. 
The text of the upgraded license is 1.2 MB in length.

The upgraded license states, "You may not read, copy,
distribute, disseminate, laugh at, or modify any Humorix
content unless you have accepted the terms of this
License.  Any usage of Humorix material without accepting
this License is illegal and will be prosecuted as 'portal
piracy'.  If you decline to accept this License, (a)
immediately delete any Humorix material you may have
inadvertantly downloaded, and (b) reboot your computer.

We must inform you that Humorix has just applied for -- and
received -- the following patent:

     * The construction of a device that enables the user
       to fully read the contents of a folded paper
       container [envelope] without breaking the seal on
       said container.

We have used such a device extensively at Humorix; indeed,
we just used it to read your previous correspondence
without opening the envelope, which means that we have not
accepted your poorly-worded Grossly Private License. 
Sorry... thanks for playing.

Finally, after extensive research we have uncovered that
Microsoft's patent claim on "the concept of using one
product to force people to use another product" in null and
void.  We have found extensive prior art in this field.  

For instance, McDonalds has used hamburgers to force people
to buy French fries for the past several decades.  The
question "Do you want fries with that?" is an obvious
implementation of this concept.  In addition, gun
manufacturers have employed this concept to force consumers
to buy ammunition, scopes, targets, and gun safes.  Humorix
is not in violation of this patent, which has clearly been
a part of the public domain since the dawn of Capitalism. 
As stated before: Sorry... thanks for playing.

Thank you for your time.

Sincerely,

Mr. Noah Morals, 
Official Humorix Lawyer

Ms. Ava Rice,
Secretary for the Lowe & Morals Law Firm

---

The two lawyers focus on trivial, picayune details that are
completely irrelevant to the original conflict (a patent on
portal websites). And yet these two parties are arguing
about every tiny detail as if it's a life or death
struggle.  Mr. Morals acts as if he _wants_ Microsoft to
swoop down and file the Mother Of All Lawsuits against
Humorix.

This is insane.  If this trend of rampant lawyerism
continues, every person in the western world will spend
every waking moment engaged in a struggle against opposing
lawyers.  The ancient Romans had colisseums for gladiator
fights; 21st century America will have courtrooms for
fight-to-the-death legal battles.

We're headed for a Lawyerclysm (I just made this term up),
a catastrophic collision between people, lawyers, judges,
politicians, and the so-called judicial system. We won't be
consumed by evil aliens or runaway nanotech machines, as
sci-fi futurists have long predicted. Instead, all progress
and evolution will stop as we find ourselves sinking into
the quicksand of the Paperwork Age, where the lawyer's pen
is mightier than the sword.

That leaves most of us holding the bag, confronted with two
noxious choices: to fall back to an anarchistic State of
Nature, or to attend law school and hope to become a bona
fide lawyercrat and participate in the runaway LawyerBinge.

Write me at jonsplatz@i-want-a-website.com

-
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/

