1241 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
1241 lines
59 KiB
Plaintext
From mrc@Tomobiki-Cho.CAC.Washington.EDU Mon Nov 19 18:39:32 1990
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From: mrc@Tomobiki-Cho.CAC.Washington.EDU (Mark Crispin)
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Subject: Re: Once upon a time (long)
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Here's "Software Wars", which I wrote in 1978 as a parody of STAR
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WARS, "Hardware Wars", Computer Science teaching fads (at the time
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Pascal was the rage), and the (at that time) relatively new trend of
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TV programs to suggest racy content without actually having any (or
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rather, racy for your Ladies' Church Group -- today all TV in the US
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is like this).
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It presupposes some knowledge of the WAITS operating system (a PDP-10
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OS that had a common ancestor with DEC's TOPS-10 OS in the late 60's)
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and of the social and cultural environment at the Stanford Artificial
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Intelligence Laboratory in its twilight years (SAIL effectively ceased
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to exist in 1980).
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Hit 'n' now if you don't want to see it.
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Software Wars
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by Mark Crispin
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WARNING
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This story is intended for adult reading
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only. While not "hard core", there is a
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lot of rude language, rowdyness, and some
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sexual content. With this story, you will
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gain insight into many things: plagiarism,
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the perversity of the author's mind, the
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wisdom of the obscenity laws, your
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gullibility...
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None of this is intended to offend. If
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this isn't to your tastes, you'd better
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put this story down, back on the juicy
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pile of pink-slip paraphernalia where you
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found it. If you read on, or even if you
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don't, you've been warned.
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Copyright (c) 1978 Mark Crispin
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Software Wars 1
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Acknowledgements
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The libel laws prevent me from mentioning by name all those who
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have helped me in writing this turkey, but I will mention their
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contributions here, so that I don't get stuck with all the blame:
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To the people who brought us STAR WARS, for a
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movie packed with outworn cliches, yet dull; filled
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with symbolic symbolisms symbolizing symbolic
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nothings, for providing me with ample source
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material. All kidding aside, STAR WARS is indeed a
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masterpiece of science fiction and fantasy. It is
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an honor to be able to spoof it; and more so if my
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readers have as much fun reading this little take-
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off as I had writing it.
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To the people who made HARDWARE WARS, for
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starting me off on this thing in the first place.
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To everybody here at the lab, for providing me
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with material to fill in the gaps in the story. My
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apologies to those who might see a bit of themselves
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in the story, and yes, my insurance is paid up!
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To the computer center where I spent my
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undergraduate years, whose regressive and repressive
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policies provided me with ample material for the
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policies of the Empire.
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To the friends who have read and proofread
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drafts of the story from time to time, for helping
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in some quality control.
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And finally, to a good friend, who was hooked
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from the beginning; who continually encouraged me as
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we saw the story evolve and take a form of its own;
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who showed me worlds of science fiction that I
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didn't know existed before; and who provided me with
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material which eventually determined the shape and
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body of this story. Thanks.
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Now that that's all taken care of, on with the story...
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Software Wars 2
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Introduction
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Once upon a time, sort of long ago, well, uh, you know what I mean,
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it wasn't really long long ago but it wasn't like yesterday, I mean,
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when you say long ago to some people they think like oodles and oodles
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of eons ago and other people think it was last night or something, but
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this is sort of in the middle long ago oh forget it. Anyway, long ago
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and far away, well, not like so far away you can't imagine it I mean you
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could probably get to it if you had a fast enough starship and lived
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long enough but it wasn't near like next door or on this planet or solar
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system or even in this galaxy, like that is near and this was far away
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like another universe oh hell forget it.
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Long ago and far away, the data processing galaxy was ruled by the
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sinister forces of the PASCAL Empire. Years ago, it had been the
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Hacking Republic, where all programming languages and programmers lived
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together in peace and harmony. The land of the Republic was patrolled
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by the Wizards, skilled in all forms of magic, who daily unveiled new
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miracles for the wonder of the citizens of the Republic. They drew
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their mystical powers from The Hack, which was their succor in any
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difficulty.
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But the days of the Republic were numbered, for one of the Wizards,
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Daemon Feature, fell in with the PASCALs, who brought in crocks and
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bletcherousness to the beleaguered Republic. Using methods both
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sinister and cunning, he managed to entrap most of the loyal Wizards in
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a fencepost error, where they were ruthlessly slaughtered. At last the
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Republic was proclaimed to have ended, and the Empire was established
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with Recordstructure, the leader of the PASCALs, proclaimed Emperor.
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The old Republic's Senate was reduced to a mere rubber stamp for the
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Emperor. And the lot of programmers was unhappy.
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As our story begins, civil war has broken out. Rebel hackers,
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striking out from a hidden data base, have won a surprise victory
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against the Empire. In the course of the battle, rebel spies seized
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copies of the Empire's design of the TENTH STAR, their new processor and
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operating system. Horrified, they transmitted the plans to Princess
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Lay-me, to be given to her father, so that the design of the new machine
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could be analysed before it became operational. If the rebels fail to
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design a winning monitor for it in time, its lossage will spread
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throughout the universe. Fear would keep the more timid administrators
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in line; and that would be the end of all programming winnage.
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Now, a small ship, bearing Princess Lay-me and two snoids, is
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speeding through space, an Empire destroyer hot in pursuit and
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gaining...
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Software Wars 3
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The Princess pleads for help
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The Big Nastie, a feared vessel of the Empire's fleet, had now
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approached within tractor range of the tiny ship. Already, it was
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entangling the smaller vessel in its inescapable web of circular data
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structures. Princess Lay-me acted quickly.
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"Hey, snoid," she snarled at U-2-buckeroo, a video switched snoid,
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"get ready to record a message for me." At that, the snoid made a few
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clicking sounds as it mounted a spare cassette and started running.
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"NOT NOW!!" Lay-me shrieked. "Wait until I get my negligee on.
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How the fuck do you expect me to seduce some poor young kid into doing
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all sorts of idiotic things for our cause wearing this? Oh shit, my
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hair is messed up too. Fuck it, I'll just change and run a brush
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through it a couple of minutes." She was thus engaged as her craft was
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slowly being dragged back with greater and greater recursion. Soon its
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stack would overflow and all would be lost.
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"Okay, pretty shitty but it'll hafta do," she told the waiting
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snoid. Then, lying back so as to emphasize her well-endowed cleavage as
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much as possible, she began.
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"Heeeelp meee," she purred. U-2-buckeroo clicked in surprise at
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the sudden, but pleasant, change in her voice. "Oh heeeelp me Moby
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Foobar. It's just pooor li'l ol' me all alone in the big bad world." A
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tear appeared in her eye and slowly rolled down one cheek. "I just have
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to get these papers to my daddy at Automagic or who knows what will
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become of me." She started sobbing uncontrollably, and gestured to the
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snoid to stop the recording. Instantly she straightened up.
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"You got that right?" she growled. Another click. "If you screwed
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this up I'll pull yar plug and sell ya for scrap metal." The snoid
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beeped in fear as it hurried to assure her no mistakes were made. She
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glared at it with a look that would melt titanium, then relaxed.
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"Okay, I believe you. Now take these papers and lock them in core.
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I don't want nobody getting swapped in until it's finished." The snoid
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beeped acknowledgement and departed. Just in time, for at the next
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instant in rushed the soldiery of the Empire: CS profs, grad students,
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and not a few bureaucrats were among them. They howled with glee at the
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sight of the seductively clad Princess. They were about to perform all
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sorts of foul deeds upon her body when the ship's intercom rang out with
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a feared voice.
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"The Princess is not to be molested," said the voice of Daemon
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Feature. "She is to be brought to me for interogation immediately." The
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boarding party froze, and, grumbling, retreated, leaving an untouched,
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but disappointed, princess.
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"Oh shit!" she sighed. Daemon Feature was absolutely hopeless.
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<<What will happen to the Princess? What does Daemon
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Feature want with her? What reader is so naive that
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he can't figure it out himself? Read on!>>
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Software Wars 4
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Snoids are more fun than duckies!
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U-2-buckeroo rolled down the corridor, heedless of the loud
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commotion in the control room. The Empire would not think of
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intercepting a snoid, at least not until too late. But U-2-buckeroo
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didn't have much time; the B-movie heavies may be dumb, but they would
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figure it out soon enough, too soon if it wasted much time.
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"Oh! There you are thweetie!" It was the voice of C-me-poo-poo,
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the ship's interior decoration snoid. "Where have you been? I wath tho
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worried! Oh dear, oh my, they are going to dithcharge our power packth,
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I juth know it. Oh what thall we do oh what thall we do?" As C-me-poo-
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poo spoke, its wrist joint wagged in frantic semaphore. "What were you
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doing with the Princeth all that time alone, letting me juth worry
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mythelf thilly over you?" U-2-buckeroo just rolled by, ignoring the
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ridiculous snoid.
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"Juth where are you going?" C-me-poo-poo demanded. "Thomtimeth you
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are juth impothible to talk to. Now come back here." U-2-buckeroo just
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rolled on, now heading away from C-me-poo-poo. "Well, I know when I've
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been thnubbed. It'th all over between uth." U-2-buckeroo continued on,
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and turned into an airlock. C-me-poo-poo stood there for a second, then
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dashed into the airlock just before the I-level timeout.
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And KERZOOM! They were both whisked away in a single packet (with
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the priority bit set) through the network and onto a seemingly desert
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host. They were on a bleak, windswept plateau overlooking a searing
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desert. There was no sign of life; not that there would be in the
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endlessly shifting sands below. C-me-poo-poo was still babbling
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endlessly, giving U-2-buckeroo "one last chance" to "save our
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relationship."
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U-2-buckeroo started down into the valley. C-me-poo-poo was still
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babbling away in despair and finally blew a circuit breaker. U-2-
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buckeroo had now reached the valley and was now cutting straight through
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the valley towards the outskirts on the other side, where its eventual
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destination lay.
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It was perilous for U-2-buckeroo to take this route, but it needed
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speed, and could not afford the time it would take to go around the long
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way. The valley, which had looked desolate from the heights, actually
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was filled with mechanical activity of the lowest sort. Here were the
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ripoffs of the galaxy. Not a few IBM 370s were there, warring over
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their individual territories. U-2-buckeroo's hope was to get through
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this jungle unnoticed.
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"Wanna date?" asked a cute little System/3 which had boldly walked
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up to it. U-2-buckeroo beeped a "No thanks", and instantly the failsafe
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systems started passing the message to the system console:
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MALFUNCTIONING SNOID. U-2-buckeroo had no time to feep an objection
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before it was powered down and moved to the shop for examination. In
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its last voltage-starved cycles, it wondered how much longer the author
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was going to get away with this sort of garbage. It wasn't the only
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one!
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<<Are things ever in a mess now! The princess is a
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prisoner of Daemon Feature, the snoids are turned
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off. Is there any hope? Does anybody care? Read
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on!>>
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Software Wars 5
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Back on the farm...
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Fluke Softwarespecialist sighed with relief as he made the final
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pass over the card decks for the day. Then he looked at the horizon; it
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was fiery red, but elsewhere night was already setting in. He set his
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vessel's autopilot for home, and relaxed.
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He had been living here with his aunt and uncle ever since his
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parents died when he was a young child. He had been told that they had
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been killed when their crippled vessel burned up upon reentry to their
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home planet. He had never heard any other account, and his father had
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been given full honors by the Empire, but he had heard dark stories that
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all was not as it had seemed.
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But when he had brought it up to his aunt and uncle, they only
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repeated to him what he had already been told. If the truth was any
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different, it had been well concealed.
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Not that he had any reason to suspect them; they had been like
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parents to him and he had always been treated with kindness. His uncle
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had lived here since before Fluke was born, and over the years had
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established a prosperous, if unpretentious, business, supplying COBOL
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utilities for many of the settlements in this quadrant of the galaxy.
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Fluke loved them dearly, but he was restless, and did not want to follow
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in his uncle's footsteps; he yearned for adventure and excitement.
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He joined his uncle, who was busy with a group of snoiders, the
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cloaked traders in abandoned junk snoids who wandered around the area.
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Good, Fluke thought, he's getting some more snoids. Perhaps with the
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new snoids he would be able to leave these card punches forever. His
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uncle had decided upon two abandoned snoids which had been found
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wandering on the planet; a buckeroo and a poo-poo. Not really what was
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needed; but the price was right and perhaps they could be reprogrammed.
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His uncle paid for the snoids and they all went inside. Fluke
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started cleaning and repairing them (being careful about the poo-poo
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lest it get ideas) while his aunt and uncle prepared lunch. It was
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while he was cleaning the buckeroo that it suddenly activated a
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cassette, and a wraith-like figure appeared. It gradually formed the
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shape of a woman.
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"Heeeelp meee," purred the recording. "Oh heeeelp me Moby Foobar."
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Then came a gritch and the recording repeated from that point. Clearly
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there was more to the recording, but it was read-locked, and it was only
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chance that that fragment had become unprotected, probably as a result
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of the damage the buckeroo has recently sustained. But who was Moby
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Foobar? At the far end of the valley lived Fred Foobar, an old hermit
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whom everybody thought was crazy. But perhaps he was some relative?
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Fluke reset the buckeroo and ordered it to play the entire
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recording. Instead, it re-read-locked the entire tape and the image
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disappeared, but not from Fluke's mind.
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Later, at lunch, he talked about it with his uncle.
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"While I was cleaning the buckeroo, I got a segment of an old
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message, addressed to a Moby Foobar. He seemed to own the snoid.
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Anyway, it seemed to be very important that he got that message."
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Software Wars 6
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"I doubt very much if Moby Foobar will ever want to get that
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message," said Fluke's uncle. "He has been dead for many years now."
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"But this was a recent message, and the read-lock was still on.
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How could such an old message have survived? And could old Fred Foobar
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be related?"
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"Fred Foobar is just a crazy old man. Tomorrow, I want you to go
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and do a complete purge on the buckeroo. That should end this message
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business."
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"All right. By the way, now that we have these new snoids, when
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can I split? You have all the help you need now."
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"Now is when I need you the most. Wait just one more year, when I
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can hire some more workers, get a few more snoids, and then you can go."
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"Another year?! That isn't fair! All my friends have left a long
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time ago and I'm still cooped here."
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"I know, but I have no choice. I promise this time."
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"Oh shit. Well, I better get back to those snoids." Fluke left
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the table and stormed out. His aunt watched him for a minute then
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turned to her husband.
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"You know, we can't keep him forever. He's just not destined for
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COBOL. There's too much of his father in him."
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"Yes, that's what I'm worried about. For him. I'm afraid he'll
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get involved in hacking like his father did."
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Software Wars 7
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Fluke meets Foobar
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Fluke walked into the shop and looked around. Neither snoid was in
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sight. Fluke walked around to the other side of a cabinet, and cringing
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behind it was C-me-poo-poo, shivering with terror.
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"What are you doing back there?" Fluke demanded.
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"Oh, thweetie, pleathe don't dithconnect me!" pleaded the snoid.
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Fluke rolled his eyes heavenward. Give me strength. "It'th all U-2'th
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fault. I told him not to go."
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"Oh shit!" Fluke grabbed his magnifying glass and dashed outside.
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He looked around in all directions, but no trace of the buckeroo. "That
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little snoid is gonna cost me a lot of trouble."
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"Oh, he exthellth in that. Are we going to follow him?"
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"Can't now," Fluke answered. "Too many users out now. We'll have
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to wait until dark." With that, Fluke and the snoid went inside.
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Night fell, and Fluke slipped outside, careful not to disturb his
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aunt and uncle. He had managed to cover up the disappearance of the
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buckeroo up to now, but now he had to find it, and soon. Accompanied by
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C-me-poo-poo, he hopped on the transporter, and soon they were speeding
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across the desert waste. Presently, Fluke saw a snoid on his radar
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beacon, and headed towards it. Sure enough, it was the buckeroo. Fluke
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hopped out of the transporter.
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"Where d'ya think you're going?" Fluke asked the buckeroo, which
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only continued its endless, incessant feeping. Again Fluke rolled his
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eyes heavenward and wondered how his uncle ever got suckered into buying
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two snoids that anyone else would pay to get rid of. C-me-poo-poo
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translated.
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"He says there are life forms approaching from the north-west."
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"Users!" gasped Fluke. "Well, come on, let's get a look." Fluke,
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followed by C-me-poo-poo, climbed the ridge to the northwest and looked
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down. He could see endless rows of consoles, all running WHO and RSL,
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but no users. Then with horror, he noticed that one was running VERIFY.
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Luckhams! These were the most feared tribe of users, cunning and cruel.
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Fluke shuddered, and was about to slip back, when...
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"People who are not contributing to the support of the lab are
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taking up too much of the machine! The scheduler is not giving us our
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fair share! If you do not bring the system up immediately heads will
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roll!" Fluke cringed at each blow. The Luckhams had caught him, and
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were after blood. "We are the only people doing real AI research! We
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pay most of the lab's support! The S-1 and music groups are using too
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much of the machine! We should have exclusive immunity from
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autologout!" Fluke mercifully lost consciousness, the hideous blows
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still coming down.
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When he came to, a cloaked and hooded figure was stooping over him.
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Embroidered on the cloak was Deux ex machina hermitage. The toothy,
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slobbering face had a familiar look.
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Software Wars 8
|
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"Fred Foobar!" gasped Fluke. "Am I glad to see you!"
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"The terminal rooms are not to be travelled lightly, young Fluke,"
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said Fred. "You've had a busy day. Come! We'll have to get indoors
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quickly. The users are easily cowed, but they will soon return, with
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greater lossage. Luckhams especially; they are never appeased." Fluke
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got up quickly, remembering the attack, and marveling that he was still
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in one piece, but even more that the reader is still reading this
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drivel. He looked at the large thick part still in the reader's right
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hand, and sighed. Still a lot more to go.
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U-2-buckeroo had been hiding under a ledge since the attack, and
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now joined them, but C-me-poo-poo had tripped over his own lisp and was
|
||
lying there helpless. After lifting the giggling snoid up and bundling
|
||
it into the transporter, the party quickly sought the safety of Fred
|
||
Foobar's hermitage.
|
||
Software Wars 9
|
||
|
||
|
||
The House of Foobar
|
||
|
||
"Tell me, Fluke," said Fred, "what brings you to such a remote
|
||
installation?"
|
||
|
||
"I'm trying to get faster real-time response with this buckeroo.
|
||
It says it has to find Moby Foobar, and slipped away earlier today to
|
||
find him. I have never seen such devotion in a snoid before. Have you
|
||
heard of Moby Foobar?"
|
||
|
||
"Moby Foobar, Moby Foobar," sighed Fred. His eyes glazed over as
|
||
if remembering days long gone by. The 'ludes were having their effect.
|
||
"Now that's a name I haven't heard in a long, long time, since before
|
||
you were born."
|
||
|
||
"Then you knew him? My uncle said he was dead."
|
||
|
||
"Oh, he's not dead, not yet. He's me. In fact, I knew your father
|
||
back in the old days, before the Empire."
|
||
|
||
"You knew my father??"
|
||
|
||
"Yes. He was a skilled hacker, a resourceful wizard," sighed Moby,
|
||
"and a good friend. He was killed in the early days of the Empire."
|
||
|
||
"Tell me, how did my father die? I was told..."
|
||
|
||
"You were told a lie!" interrupted Moby. "Long ago, in the last
|
||
days of the Republic, a young wizard named Daemon Feature (who was my
|
||
student before he turned to evil) aided the PASCALs in the ruin of the
|
||
Republic. Feature betrayed, and murdered your father." He spoke those
|
||
words with such emphasis that Fluke shook. But his words were true;
|
||
Fluke could see it.
|
||
|
||
Moby sighed. "Feature was seduced by the darker side of the Hack.
|
||
Today, the wizards are all but extinct." He paused, searching his
|
||
memory, back to a time long ago. "Which reminds me. Your father left
|
||
me something to give to you." He reached into the piles of paper and
|
||
old, dusty manuals on the table, and withdrew a single binder. "His
|
||
HAKMEM. An elegant programming tool, of a more civilized age. With it,
|
||
one skilled in the Hack could perform programming miracles, get better
|
||
response time, and be invited to all the good parties. Here." He
|
||
handed the HAKMEM to Fluke.
|
||
|
||
Fluke took it, and looked at its first page intently; strange it
|
||
seemed, yet a feeling grew on him, as if he were looking at something
|
||
far greater than he could comprehend. He was considered a good
|
||
programmer, one of the best in the quadrant; but the HAKMEM took his
|
||
breath away. "What is the Hack?" he asked finally.
|
||
|
||
"The Hack is that what is nearest and dearest to the hearts of all
|
||
the wizards. It is what gives the wizard his power. The Hack is
|
||
everywhere and is part of everything. Without the Hack, only crocks
|
||
remain."
|
||
|
||
"The Hack!" gasped Fluke. He then pondered these words in silence.
|
||
A whole new vision was before him; he saw things of beauty and elegance
|
||
that he could not yet put into words. His reverie was interrupted by a
|
||
sudden chirping from U-2-buckeroo.
|
||
Software Wars 10
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Ah, yes, the message," said Moby. "Come, let's hear it." The
|
||
buckeroo gave one last chirp, then the princess appeared. This time,
|
||
the whole message was played. Moby sat back.
|
||
|
||
"Well," he sighed, "I must be off to Automagic. And you must come
|
||
with me, and learn the ways of the Hack."
|
||
|
||
"But I can't!" protested Fluke. "My aunt and my uncle need me! I
|
||
mean, I hate the Empire, but I can't do anything. I'd like to go, but
|
||
it's so far away. It's late, I have to get back. Aww, I'll give you a
|
||
ride to the DECUS conference. You should be able to find a way to
|
||
Automagic from there."
|
||
|
||
"Do what you think is right," replied Moby. Fluke looked at him,
|
||
wavering. Already the Hack was entering his thoughts; but he was still
|
||
afraid. He still was thinking over all Moby had told him, as the
|
||
transporter, carrying Fluke, Moby, and the two snoids, was speeding
|
||
along the paths to DECUS...
|
||
Software Wars 11
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Road to DECUS
|
||
|
||
Fluke slowed down the transporter. Ahead, he could see the ruins
|
||
of a snoider's trailer, and smaller brown objects around it. When they
|
||
reached it, they stopped and looked around. The brown objects were
|
||
bodies, brutally pie-sliced.
|
||
|
||
"Users!" exclaimed Fluke. "I have never seen them attack so
|
||
viciously. Look! Here is a jump out of a DO, and another back in. But
|
||
what would they want with snoiders?"
|
||
|
||
"Not users," corrected Moby, "but the Empire wants you to believe
|
||
it was users. See the accuracy of the pie-slice? Only Empire software
|
||
tools can be so deadly."
|
||
|
||
"The Empire? But why?" But Fluke's glance almost instinctively
|
||
turned to U-2-buckeroo, chirping faster than usual.
|
||
|
||
"You are looking at the reason," answered Moby Foobar. Fluke
|
||
gasped with horror.
|
||
|
||
"If they traced the snoids here, then they know where...NO!!"
|
||
Fluke dashed to the transporter, and headed to his home, ignoring Moby's
|
||
cries to come back.
|
||
|
||
Fluke approached the familiar fields. Smoke was rising in the
|
||
distance. He hurried towards it. His home was destroyed. The greedy
|
||
flames were still licking at the ashes which remained. And by what was
|
||
the entrance, Fluke gazed with horror at the charred and grizzled
|
||
corpses of his aunt and uncle.
|
||
|
||
A tear appeared in his eye. He brushed it away. Gradually, his
|
||
horror turned to hatred; hatred of the Empire and all that it stood for.
|
||
And at the same time, he wanted to go with Moby Foobar. The fear was
|
||
gone; the Hack had won. Fluke jumped back into the transporter, and
|
||
hurried back to Moby Foobar.
|
||
|
||
Moby had not been idle. He, assisted by the two snoids, had
|
||
constructed a makeshift pyre and had almost finished the ghastly task of
|
||
cremating the snoiders. As he completed this duty, he looked at Fluke,
|
||
who was standing there.
|
||
|
||
"There was nothing you could do. Had you been there, you would
|
||
have been killed too."
|
||
|
||
"Moby, I want to go with you to Automagic. I want to learn about
|
||
the Hack and become a wizard like my father. There is nothing for me
|
||
here now."
|
||
|
||
Moby smiled. He said nothing, but simply entered the transporter.
|
||
Fluke and the snoids followed, soon they were again on their way.
|
||
Software Wars 12
|
||
|
||
|
||
DECUS
|
||
|
||
The transporter slowed, and then stopped. They were at the edge of
|
||
a high shelf, overlooking DECUS. Fluke and Moby got out and looked down
|
||
on the city.
|
||
|
||
"The DECUS conference," observed Moby. "Fluke, you would have to
|
||
telnet far to find such a wretched assortment of losers and villainy.
|
||
We must be careful." Fluke nodded in agreement. They got back in the
|
||
transporter, and soon were at DECUS. Moby was right; chieftains of all
|
||
the commercial timesharing houses were there, voicing demands for more
|
||
usage accounting. Fluke shuddered.
|
||
|
||
They had not gone far on their way when they were challenged by an
|
||
Empire soldier. Others appeared, and quickly they were surrounded.
|
||
|
||
"How long have you had these snoids?" the soldier demanded of
|
||
Fluke.
|
||
|
||
"Two or three releases," answered Fluke; not that there was much
|
||
hope in fooling them. It's all over now, he thought, no hope of escape.
|
||
His thoughts were interrupted by Moby's voice.
|
||
|
||
"The right half of a POPJ can be used to store data," he intoned.
|
||
The soldier's eyes opened wide. Moby continued. "These are not the
|
||
snoids you are looking for."
|
||
|
||
"These are not the snoids we are looking for," repeated the
|
||
soldier, as if in a trace.
|
||
|
||
"We can go about our business."
|
||
|
||
"They can go about their business."
|
||
|
||
"We should move on."
|
||
|
||
"Move on," said the soldier, waving them away. The others
|
||
dispersed.
|
||
|
||
"How did you do that?" Fluke asked once they were out of hearing.
|
||
"I thought we were dead back there!"
|
||
|
||
"The Hack has many powers, and over weak minds such as theirs it is
|
||
easy to take command." Fluke looked at him in admiration. Someday he
|
||
would be like Moby.
|
||
|
||
They stopped outside a seedy-looking establishment. There was no
|
||
sign of life outside, but the building itself was shaking. Even from
|
||
outside Fluke could hear the sounds within. You can tell by the way I
|
||
frob my crock, my randomness is hard to grok, blared the familiar music
|
||
>from Monday Morning Headache.
|
||
|
||
"Are you sure we'll find a consultant here?" asked Fluke
|
||
doubtfully.
|
||
|
||
"Oh yes, of course," answered Moby. "All the best ones can be
|
||
found here." He paused at the doorstep. "By the way, be careful. This
|
||
place can get a bit rough." At that, he entered, with Fluke and the
|
||
snoids following. Instantly they were engulfed with the sound. Ah, ah,
|
||
Software Wars 13
|
||
|
||
|
||
ah, ah, stayin' online, stayin' online... A dark apparition loomed in
|
||
front of them. It allowed Moby to pass, but it stopped Fluke and the
|
||
two snoids. A light appeared.
|
||
|
||
"Let's see your ID," it demanded. Fluke produced his and the
|
||
figure held it to the light. Satisfied, it returned it to Fluke, and
|
||
then demanded the same of the snoids. "You can't come in," it snarled
|
||
at them. The snoids stood there, frozen. Fluke intervened.
|
||
|
||
"You better wait outside," he addressed the snoids. "We don't want
|
||
any trouble." At that, the snoids turned around and exited. Fluke then
|
||
went over to Moby, who was already in conversation with a tall, wraith-
|
||
like figure. It was covered with hair (and fleas). Fluke could see no
|
||
face. A hippie, Fluke thought. I hope Moby knows what he's doing. I
|
||
sure as hell don't. Suddenly Fluke was roughly pushed aside.
|
||
|
||
"Get outta my way, punk," snarled a hideous figure. It wore a
|
||
black leather jacket, and carried a chain in one hand and a blackjack in
|
||
the other. Not satisfied with merely pushing Fluke, it aimed a vicious
|
||
blow at him with its blackjack.
|
||
|
||
The blow never fell. Swifter than lightning, Moby had his HAKMEM
|
||
out and dispatched the biker with a single item. Moby looked around at
|
||
the crowd, which quickly turned away. Not only didn't they want to
|
||
challenge Moby, they didn't even want to know what had happened. Moby
|
||
left the mess for the after-hours crew to clean up, and helped Fluke up.
|
||
|
||
"I have been talking to the first mate of a suitable ship to bring
|
||
us to Automagic. The captain is supposed to be one of the best
|
||
consultants in this quadrant. Let us join them," Moby said, indicating
|
||
a table where the hippie was sitting. Sitting next to him was a tall,
|
||
self-confident man some years older than Fluke. He fit in with the
|
||
place quite well; his color-coordinated John Travolta outfit mirrored
|
||
the smoke-filled atmosphere. He appeared to be staring vacantly into
|
||
the distance, planning the conquest of one of the many wenches who
|
||
frequented the place, but a closer examination showed it was not so. He
|
||
was asleep.
|
||
|
||
The hippie nudged him awake. After a few groans he introduced
|
||
himself as Handwave Saga and the hippie as Cruftybraindamaged. Moby
|
||
quickly stated their business: passage to Automagic for Fluke, Moby, and
|
||
two snoids, with no questions asked. Handwave and Crufty smiled
|
||
knowingly at each other. Amateurs, stashing the shit in the snoids.
|
||
They accepted the deal immediately. Anyone that dumb deserved to get
|
||
ripped off.
|
||
Software Wars 14
|
||
|
||
|
||
Aboard the TENTH STAR
|
||
|
||
"So," snarled Daemon Feature, breathing heavily, "you vill not
|
||
talk? Ve hav VAYS of making you talk!" Princess Lay-me cowered.
|
||
Daemon had interrogated her for several days now. Not once, however,
|
||
had he beaten her or taken advantage of her. This is cruel and inhuman
|
||
torture, she thought. How does he do it? She was getting desperate.
|
||
The guard snoids were no help; Daemon Feature had sinisterly selected
|
||
all neuters.
|
||
|
||
She knew, though, that her silence was the only thing keeping her
|
||
alive. Should she yield to the torture, or the location of the rebel
|
||
data base be found out in spite of her silence, she would be killed
|
||
instantly.
|
||
|
||
Daemon Feature signaled to an injector snoid. Truth serum, she
|
||
thought. Terror-striken, she watched as the needle injected the
|
||
powerful aphrodisiac into her veins...
|
||
|
||
|
||
The council was already in session when Daemon Feature entered.
|
||
Governor Softwarerot was addressing those present:
|
||
|
||
"The Senate is of no concern to us; the Emperor has dissolved the
|
||
council. All responsibility rests with us now."
|
||
|
||
"Oh goodie!" said Admiral Whatshisface, commander of the TENTH
|
||
STAR. "Let's go stomp them hackers!"
|
||
|
||
"Do not put too much faith in this hairy architecture you have
|
||
constructed," retorted Daemon Feature. "All this is insignificant
|
||
compared to the Hack."
|
||
|
||
"Aw, don't hassle us with your hokey Hack stuff. All anybody has
|
||
to do is take a few CS courses and he can program as well or better than
|
||
any of those hackers." Daemon Feature glared at him in rising wrath.
|
||
Suddenly Whatshisface found it difficult to breathe. The others watched
|
||
horrified.
|
||
|
||
"Control-Meta-Top-BREAK! I find your lack of faith disturbing!"
|
||
snarled Daemon Feature. Whatshisface's face changed from vivid red to
|
||
purple, as the circular linked lists closed tighter.
|
||
|
||
"Feature, release him!" shouted Softwarerot.
|
||
|
||
"As you wish," replied Daemon Feature. Whatshisface dropped to the
|
||
table as he slowly recovered.
|
||
|
||
"Now there is to be no more of this!" continued Softwarerot. "Lord
|
||
Feature will continue the debugging. Feature, have you been successful
|
||
in your interrogation of the princess yet?"
|
||
|
||
"Unfortunately not. She has encrypted her file system. However, I
|
||
expect to break her soon."
|
||
|
||
"That may not be necessary," replied Softwarerot, "I have an
|
||
idea..."
|
||
Software Wars 15
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Governor Softwarerot," observed the princess. "I should have
|
||
known you would be holding Daemon Feature's leash. I thought I noticed
|
||
your foul stench when I was first brought on board."
|
||
|
||
"Flattery will get you nowhere," returned Softwarerot. Motioning
|
||
to a viewscreen, he observed, "Automagic. Your home planet. Watch."
|
||
The princess looked on with horror as a 99 million year lease and
|
||
maintenance contract for a network of TENTH STARs was being prepared for
|
||
Automagic.
|
||
|
||
"No!" she gasped. "Automagic has no need for it. Our computing
|
||
resources are more than ample for the demand."
|
||
|
||
"Would you prefer another target, a hacking target?" returned
|
||
Softwarerot. "Then tell us the location of the rebel data base!"
|
||
|
||
The princess sobbed, then blurted out, "On [XY,ZZY]." Softwarerot
|
||
smiled.
|
||
|
||
"You see, Feature, she can be convinced." Then, to the lawyers,
|
||
"You may sign when ready."
|
||
|
||
"WHAT?!" screamed the princess.
|
||
|
||
"You are too trusting," smiled Softwarerot, as her innocent planet
|
||
got permanently entangled in hopeless lossage. His smile faded as a
|
||
LOOKUP on [XY,ZZY] showed that the data base had been there, but had
|
||
since been backed up elsewhere.
|
||
|
||
"Double the Robert Redford movies, and don't stop until she talks!"
|
||
he ordered. The princess begged for mercy. "Take her away!"
|
||
Software Wars 16
|
||
|
||
|
||
Automagic
|
||
|
||
It had been a weary journey, but the end was near at last. Fluke
|
||
listened intently to Moby throughout most of the journey as he lectured
|
||
on the ways of the Hack. Fortunately, Moby frequently passed out, so
|
||
the ordeal was never prolonged. Other times, Fluke stared at his
|
||
HAKMEM, seeking to become one with the Hack. He ignored the hippie's
|
||
occasional requests for "just a little fix." I wonder what he's talking
|
||
about, thought Fluke.
|
||
|
||
Suddenly Moby jumped up, then slowly sat down again, his face
|
||
contorted in agony.
|
||
|
||
"Have you sensed a disturbance in the Hack, as if millions of
|
||
innocent people were suddenly subjected to horrible cretinism?"
|
||
inquired Fluke.
|
||
|
||
"Uh, no, just a hangover," reassured Moby. He went back into his
|
||
stupor and Fluke returned to his study of his HAKMEM. Presently
|
||
Handwave turned on the Fasten Seat Belts sign. They were now in the
|
||
vicinity of Automagic. Handwave switched the line protocol, and THWACK!
|
||
instantly they were hit with a repeated series of parity errors.
|
||
|
||
"What the hell?" exclaimed Handwave. The tiny craft was being
|
||
buffeted with increasing lossage. "This isn't in the manual. Automagic
|
||
was supposed to be winning."
|
||
|
||
"Are we at Automagic yet?" asked Fluke.
|
||
|
||
"That's what I'm trying to tell you kid," answered Handwave.
|
||
"Automagic has become a loser. It's running with longer turnaround
|
||
times, greater swapping, more stoppages, and..." He stopped suddenly.
|
||
A distant object had appeared on the view screen, and was rapidly
|
||
growing. Now they were clearly heading straight towards it.
|
||
|
||
"Turn the ship around," commanded Moby. "It's a mainframe."
|
||
|
||
"Huh? It's just a microprocessor," replied Handwave, "nothing
|
||
to... Uh oh, I think you're right. Crufty, let's get the fuck outta
|
||
here!" This last was screamed as the sheer size of the installation
|
||
became apparent. It was from there that all the parity errors were
|
||
coming from.
|
||
|
||
Too late. Already their card deck was in the reader, and the
|
||
operator refused to give it back. They were being forced into the
|
||
system.
|
||
|
||
"Crufty, full rewind!" yelled Handwave. But there was nothing the
|
||
hippie or anyone else could do. Already they were being compiled. Soon
|
||
would come the linking-load, and then the execution...
|
||
Software Wars 17
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Rescue
|
||
|
||
Fluke and his friends peered cautiously out of the concealed pages
|
||
where they had been hiding. The initial sweep by the Empire's evil
|
||
soldiery had failed to locate them, but they couldn't hide there
|
||
forever. It wouldn't be long before a kernel mode process was used and
|
||
they would be caught.
|
||
|
||
They snuck out onto a low-baud data line. That way they stood the
|
||
best chance of getting to a console undetected. In spite of all the
|
||
safeguards they managed to guess a correct password and soon were
|
||
online. Moby mumbled something about greater bandwidth and slipped
|
||
away, telling the others to stay where they were until he had flushed
|
||
the job streams so that they could escape. U-2-buckeroo started a WHO
|
||
and instantly began beeping furiously.
|
||
|
||
"What's it saying?" asked Fluke to C-me-poo-poo.
|
||
|
||
"I don't understand. Something like I found her...oh I see now.
|
||
It's I found the princess!"
|
||
|
||
"The princess!" gasped Fluke. "Where?"
|
||
|
||
"In low core, right above free storage," replied the snoid. "I'm
|
||
afraid she's about to be swapped out."
|
||
|
||
"Swapped out!" screamed Fluke. "We have to go and rescue her!"
|
||
|
||
"Hey wait a minute," retorted Handwave. "I didn't sign up for no
|
||
rescues. I'm stayin' right here."
|
||
|
||
"She has service level," replied Fluke. "She can have your
|
||
allocation increased to more than you can imagine."
|
||
|
||
"Really?" asked Handwave skeptically.
|
||
|
||
"Really. She makes the assignments."
|
||
|
||
"Hmm..." mused Handwave. "You better be right on this, kid."
|
||
|
||
"I am. Believe me."
|
||
|
||
"Okay. So how are we gonna rescue her?"
|
||
|
||
"First, let's lock Crufty in core." Fluke walked over to the
|
||
hippie, but the stench instantly drove him back. Turning to Handwave,
|
||
he continued, "Uh, you do it." Handwave performed the UUO undeterred.
|
||
I guess he doesn't notice, thought Fluke. "Now, let's set up an
|
||
interrupt for the next clock tick and process it with PI's off."
|
||
|
||
It was tricky, but eventually it was done. They had to hurry,
|
||
though, since soon the users would notice the service interruption and
|
||
reload. Fluke shuddered at the memory of his near-fatal encounter the
|
||
previous day. Several jobs had already been locked out of core, so they
|
||
knew that trouble was on the way.
|
||
|
||
Fluke mapped in the page where the princess was being kept and
|
||
entered. She was asleep on a crude cot, worn out after the harsh
|
||
torture she had undergone. She shivered and suddenly awoke. At the
|
||
Software Wars 18
|
||
|
||
|
||
sight of Fluke her eyes popped open. She rubbed them once and looked
|
||
again. It was not a dream; Fluke was really there. She sat up and
|
||
spoke.
|
||
|
||
"Well, it's about time. Come over here." Fluke stood there, still
|
||
enthralled with her beauty (there weren't many women down at the farm).
|
||
"Come here," she repeated, somewhat louder. Fluke, as if in a trance,
|
||
walked over and sat down next to her. "That's better," she said,
|
||
softer. She took his hands into hers and looked at him straight in the
|
||
eye. Fluke looked back, uneasy, not knowing what to do. She smiled.
|
||
|
||
Slowly, and with extreme care, Fluke bent over and kissed her. It
|
||
was barely a kiss; to her cheek, light, and instantly over as he almost
|
||
jerked himself back. Her smile broadened. "You don't have to do that,"
|
||
she said, and, putting her arms around him gently pulled him back. This
|
||
time their lips met, and now she relaxed, letting herself down flat on
|
||
the cot, Fluke on top of her. Her mouth opened, and her tongue slipped
|
||
past his like molten glass. Fluke relaxed and gave in to the surging
|
||
waves that were washing over him. His tongue went past hers, and the
|
||
waves grew into a fierce storm, growing in intensity...
|
||
Software Wars 19
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Escape
|
||
|
||
"FLUKE!!! We gotta get outta here!" Handwave's voice from outside
|
||
jolted them both back to reality. They were both hot, and very wet, but
|
||
now they both felt chilled. What was happening? Fluke gathered his
|
||
disorganized thoughts back together. Of course; the users were about to
|
||
reload. It was indeed critical. Grabbing the princess, he dashed
|
||
outside.
|
||
|
||
"Quick," the princess yelled, "do a garbage collection. It's our
|
||
only chance." With that, they GC'd and were in free storage.
|
||
|
||
But there they were trapped. Surrounded by truly-worthless-atoms
|
||
and the other flotsam and jetsam of free storage, they had no way to get
|
||
back into their craft. Already the blocks of free free storage were
|
||
being lunk together. Soon the blocks would be claimed and split up.
|
||
|
||
The snoids were the only chance. Fluke frantically screamed into
|
||
his communicator for the snoids to claim a huge block, so they'd be
|
||
safe. C-me-poo-poo answered. It started babbling on about how U-2-
|
||
buckeroo was "thimply impothible" to deal with and would they "pleath
|
||
thpeak to it." Meanwhile their margin of safety was getting smaller and
|
||
smaller. Tiny chunks were being taken, meaning they would soon be
|
||
chopped to death. Fluke yelled again, loud enough for U-2-buckeroo to
|
||
hear over C-me-poo-poo's idiotic chatter; and they were saved.
|
||
|
||
They quickly ran back to where their imprisoned craft was, hoping
|
||
that Moby had succeeded in freeing the resource. At last they were
|
||
there, and stopped, horrified at the sight in front of them.
|
||
|
||
Moby and Daemon Feature were dueling, clearly to the death. Daemon
|
||
Feature's HAKMEM was out in full power, but it could not yet overcome
|
||
Moby's, still standing there before the storm, yet wielding a great
|
||
power of its own. MOVNI'd ANDCA! Moby would shout, and Daemon Feature
|
||
would come back with a fierce EQVI'd HRLOI! The student had learned his
|
||
master's ways all too well.
|
||
|
||
Suddenly Moby became aware of Fluke watching him. He stopped
|
||
battling and looked at Fluke. He smiled, and an appearance of peace
|
||
came over him as the 'ludes took over. Suddenly Daemon Feature struck.
|
||
You can output characters 40-57 by putting the character in the
|
||
accumulator field of an XCT and then extracting 6 bits because the low
|
||
two bits of the XCT opcode are the right thing! Moby fell, and was
|
||
gone.
|
||
|
||
"NO!!" Fluke screamed. First his aunt and uncle, and now Moby.
|
||
Handwave and the princess had to drag him to safety inside the craft.
|
||
Handwave set the switches, ran the RIM loader, and hit START.
|
||
|
||
"I hope the old man got that tape right, or this is going to be one
|
||
short run," Handwave muttered. His hopes were fufilled. With a sudden
|
||
burst of processor level they were free; for the time being at least.
|
||
They had to reach the rebel data base quickly, though, before Daemon
|
||
Feature and his sinister band caught up with them...
|
||
Software Wars 20
|
||
|
||
|
||
To the Rebel Data Base
|
||
|
||
Fluke said nothing as the craft sped towards the rebel data base.
|
||
Handwave and the hippie could guess what he was going through, and left
|
||
him alone. Lay-me sat by him. Presently Fluke looked at her.
|
||
|
||
"He's gone," he said, "and I didn't do a thing to save him." He
|
||
buried his face in her shoulder, sobbing.
|
||
|
||
"There was nothing you could do, except to be killed with him." He
|
||
looked at her. Again she held his hand and smiled. This time Fluke
|
||
needed no encouragment. They embraced and held each other for what
|
||
seemed like an eternity. Once again they kissed, and the waves grew
|
||
again. She tasted salty, but pleasant, as again their tongues met.
|
||
|
||
There were no interrupts. They fell together. Fluke had never
|
||
imagined holding anyone so long, or so intensely. He felt his senses on
|
||
fire, as if every nerve ending had been sharpened to an exquisite
|
||
pinpoint. He caressed her lightly, but the sensations were almost
|
||
painful in intensity. The tiniest circular motions with the very tips
|
||
of his fingers were sending wave upon wave of complete ecstacy over him.
|
||
|
||
Lay-me was breathing hard, violently rocking herself from side to
|
||
side, her arms pressing tighter against Fluke's back. She had never
|
||
before encountered someone with so much energy, and she was savoring
|
||
every bit of it. But her own feelings were building up now. Somehow,
|
||
she managed to get her robes undone and to open Fluke's jumpsuit. Then
|
||
she gave in to the torrents and with a few violent jerks of her powerful
|
||
hips, she exploded.
|
||
|
||
But Fluke didn't let up. He didn't know what his limits were, but
|
||
he had heard enough stories from other people and had no delusions of
|
||
being any different from anybody else. He was determined in any case to
|
||
do whatever was necessary to bring her to the limit; he knew he would
|
||
have no trouble in taking care of himself. So he had held back, and now
|
||
continued as if she hadn't paused.
|
||
|
||
He didn't have long to wait; in quick succession she exploded a
|
||
second, and then a third time. Now she was slowing down, and this time
|
||
Fluke let go of all control. The waves burst through the wall and
|
||
overran everything in their path. It seemed forever, and it was...
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Umm...," sighed Lay-me. They were both very hot, and very very
|
||
wet, but neither cared. She smiled and quickly kissed him at random all
|
||
over his face, and smiled again. Fluke smiled back and looked at her.
|
||
|
||
"Hi," he said. "Don't I know you?"
|
||
|
||
"Uh-huh," she sighed contentedly.
|
||
|
||
"You're nice."
|
||
|
||
"Uh-huh"
|
||
|
||
"You wanna know something?"
|
||
|
||
"Uh-huh"
|
||
|
||
"I love you." He kissed her again, as she had moments before.
|
||
Software Wars 21
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Umm..." She snuggled yet closer to him, but both of them were too
|
||
exhausted to do much more. Once again they kissed, but it was not a
|
||
sexy kiss. The sex was there but this time it was only a part of what
|
||
was going on. This time it was a I-love-you-never-leave-me kiss. Now
|
||
all the pressure was gone and they knew they had each other.
|
||
|
||
Fluke was wondering how it all happened; he had never imagined this
|
||
in his wildest dreams. Lay-me was wondering the same thing; how had she
|
||
been so affected by somebody. She had met her match, but the only thing
|
||
she could feel was very, very happy.
|
||
|
||
And it was with those thoughts passing through their minds when
|
||
they reached the rebel data base.
|
||
Software Wars 22
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Rebel Data Base
|
||
|
||
Fluke went forward to watch as Handwave ineptly guided the craft
|
||
into a median record in the rebel data base. As they head-crashed to a
|
||
stop, Handwave turned to Fluke and remarked, "You know, that chick is
|
||
one helluva good-looking broad. I think I might take her for my
|
||
payment."
|
||
|
||
Fluke shuddered, and looked at Handwave, trying to hide the
|
||
apprehension he felt. Oh no, he thought. "No, you wouldn't get along
|
||
with her. I'm sure."
|
||
|
||
Handwave looked at Fluke, and understood. He smiled, and said,
|
||
louder and intentionally baiting, "Yeah, but she would be a lotta fun
|
||
for a one-time shot."
|
||
|
||
"And that's about all you could probably do," interrupted the
|
||
princess. She had walked in unobserved and had overheard the
|
||
conversation. "You will get your service level, as originally agreed."
|
||
Then, to Fluke, "Your friend is a real turkey, you know that?" And with
|
||
that, she walked out.
|
||
|
||
Fluke smiled, and suddenly Handwave burst out laughing. "All
|
||
right, kid, you win. I sure hope you know what you're gettin' in to."
|
||
|
||
"Oh I do," answered Fluke very seriously. Handwave looked at him
|
||
and again burst out laughing.
|
||
|
||
|
||
They were now at the rebel data base, and the hackers were
|
||
frantically studying the plans for the TENTH STAR, searching for a
|
||
weakness. The urgency of their search was made horribly apparent as it
|
||
became clear that the princess' vessel had been traced with DDT, and now
|
||
the Empire was preparing to inflict lossage upon the whole rebel
|
||
movement. What had happened to Automagic would be nothing compared to
|
||
what was in store for the rebels.
|
||
|
||
With such gloomy thoughts in mind, the princess and Fluke sat
|
||
outside the laboratory, awaiting the results. Handwave had already
|
||
taken his service level increase and split. Presently there came an
|
||
announcement that everybody was to gather for the conference.
|
||
|
||
|
||
"We have discovered a weakness in the system," the chief hacker for
|
||
the rebels announced. "The TENTH STAR runs an incredibly cretinous
|
||
operating system written as grossly as possible in a so-called `higher-
|
||
level language,' but it is not invincible. We have determined that it
|
||
is possible to write in assembler for it. Of course, their assembly
|
||
language is almost useless, but it was enough for us to bootstrap a
|
||
winning assembler and from that a winning operating system. We have
|
||
done so. Of course, it hasn't been tested, but it's our only chance.
|
||
Now, some turkey, uh, I mean hero, has to volunteer to take a tape there
|
||
and, evading the operators, bring it up."
|
||
|
||
"Oh, Fluke volunteers!" yelled Princess Lay-me from the back.
|
||
Fluke had no time to protest before everyone was congratulating him on
|
||
his bravery, and before he knew it he was bundled up with a tape and
|
||
sent on his way. Lay-me had given him one last kiss, and he thought
|
||
bitterly about having just made her the beneficiary on his insurance
|
||
Software Wars 23
|
||
|
||
|
||
policy. Well, here goes nothing, he mused, as the story wrapped itself
|
||
up to its climax...
|
||
Software Wars 24
|
||
|
||
|
||
The Last Battle
|
||
|
||
Fluke looked at the pages still in the reader's right hand. Almost
|
||
over, he thought. And I bet I know how, too. But it was too late to
|
||
back down now.
|
||
|
||
He hoped nobody would recognize him, and so far he had been lucky.
|
||
The tape had been cleverly disguised as a new, non-optimizing compiler
|
||
for a theoretical structured language whose syntax was so incredibly
|
||
complicated that no human could possibly program in it. The Empire
|
||
would instantly go for it, and by the time they found out otherwise it
|
||
would be too late.
|
||
|
||
Now the acid test was going to be the machine room. He was walking
|
||
down the long corridor, trying to look inconspicuous when suddenly BAM!
|
||
came a blast from the rear. Daemon Feature had spotted him, and was
|
||
closing in fast. Fluke ran, but he couldn't run fast enough.
|
||
|
||
Fluke, remember the Hack. The Hack, Fluke. He could almost hear
|
||
Moby's voice repeating this to him. But what could he do? He turned
|
||
around to face his approaching foe, and attacked. LISP has base ROMAN
|
||
to read and print Roman numerals! Daemon Feature stopped, injured by
|
||
the blow, and Fluke ran on. He had bought himself a little time, but
|
||
not much. Daemon Feature had already recovered and was resuming the
|
||
chase....
|
||
|
||
Suddenly, WAITS has an @ monitor command! Daemon Feature, intent
|
||
upon his fleeing enemy, missed the attack from his own rear and was hit
|
||
hard. Before he could regain control he had been forwarded on internet
|
||
protocols to the other end of the galaxy.
|
||
|
||
"Okay, kid, get that tape mounted and let's get outta here," came
|
||
Handwave's voice. Fluke once again thought of the Hack, and his actions
|
||
seemed controlled by somebdy else. In almost slow-motion, he saw
|
||
himself dashing past the grasp of the operator guarding the tape drives
|
||
and flinging the tape on. Then he hit the ONLINE switch and fled.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Governor Softwarerot was preparing for the ultimate installation of
|
||
TENTH STARs at the rebel base, so that they would be permanently
|
||
crushed. He frowned as a subordinate came rushing in.
|
||
|
||
"Governor, there is a rebel attack in progress. We have analyzed
|
||
their means of attack and there is a danger. Do you wish to be backed
|
||
up?"
|
||
|
||
"Do a dump? In our moment of triumph? I think you greatly
|
||
overestimate their abilities," replied Softwarerot.
|
||
|
||
Just then all the consoles stopped. That was nothing new; a TENTH
|
||
STAR required a reload every 20 seconds or so. But something new was
|
||
happening. All the consoles beeped, and then...
|
||
|
||
|
||
TN ITS IN OPERATION 14:32:56
|
||
|
||
|
||
The rebels had succeeded! And all the users tried the new
|
||
operating system and pronounced it a winner. Instantly everything was
|
||
Software Wars 25
|
||
|
||
|
||
converted to run on it. Almost immediately, a flood of new software
|
||
appeared: the line-number editor was flushed in favor of a display
|
||
editor, assembly language programs proliferated, and new, true high-
|
||
level languages appeared. And the universe was again winning. Wizards,
|
||
loyal to the Hack, once again appeared and unveiled new wonders every
|
||
day. And the Empire was overthrown and a Republic established.
|
||
Softwarerot and Daemon Feature fled into hiding.
|
||
Software Wars 26
|
||
|
||
|
||
All's Well That Ends Worse
|
||
|
||
In the Great Hall of the Republic, a ceremony was in progress, and
|
||
each of the heroes was awarded according to his measure. To Handwave, a
|
||
Monday Morning Headache album and a pass to Studio 54. To Crufty, a
|
||
comb and a lifetime supply of deodorant. To C-me-poo-poo and U-2-
|
||
buckeroo, relationship counselling. To Moby's ghost, a year's
|
||
subscription to Your Spiritual Life and a cloud-duster.
|
||
|
||
Finally, the princess turned to Fluke. "You are last, love, but
|
||
not least. To you, I give...me." Fluke smiled, and in front of the
|
||
entire assembly they embraced. Lay-me had enough time to blurt out
|
||
"Everybody dismissed" before once again the waves overtook them. So
|
||
this is what it's like to be completely and totally happy...
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Kjob
|
||
|
||
_____ | ____ ___|___ /__ Mark ("Gaijin") Crispin "Gaijin! Gaijin!"
|
||
_|_|_ -|- || __|__ / / R90/6 pilot, DoD #0105 "Gaijin ha doko?"
|
||
|_|_|_| |\-++- |===| / / Atheist & Proud "Niichan ha gaijin."
|
||
--|-- /| |||| |___| /\ (206) 842-2385/543-5762 "Chigau. Omae ha gaijin."
|
||
/|\ | |/\| _______ / \ MRC@CAC.Washington.EDU "Iie, boku ha nihonjin."
|
||
/ | \ | |__| / \ / \ Lumchan ga suki ja!! "Souka. Yappari gaijin!"
|
||
Hee, dakedo UNIX nanka wo tsukatte, umaku ikanaku temo shiranai yo.
|
||
|
||
|