1256 lines
46 KiB
Plaintext
1256 lines
46 KiB
Plaintext
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R a N d O m A c C e S s H u M o R RAH! RAH!
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Volume 0 Number 7 April 1993
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A rag-tag collection of fugitive humor, some of which
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is vaguely related to the BBS/Online System world.
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Editor: Dave Bealer
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Member of the Digital Publishing Association
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Copyright 1993 Dave Bealer, All Rights Reserved
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Random Access Humor is an irregular production of:
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VaporWare Communications
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32768 Infinite Loop
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Sillycon Valley, CA. 80486-DX2
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USA, Earth, Sol System, Milky Way
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WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING! WARNING!
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The "look and feel" of Random Access Humor has been specifically
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earmarked, spindled and polygraphed. Anyone who attempts to copy
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this look and feel without express written consent of the publisher
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will be fed to rabid radioactive hamsters by our Security Director,
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Vinnie "The Knife" Calamari.
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TABLE OF INCONTINENCE:
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About Vaporware Communications.....................................01
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Editorial - Swan Song..............................................01
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Lettuce to the Editor..............................................02
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The Truth Behind Protocol Negotiation..............................03
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As the Hard Drive Turns - Pt. 3....................................07
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Bugs: A Genus & Specious...........................................09
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DaffyNitions (C)...................................................12
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RAH Humor Review: Ranch and Cattle South BBS.......................15
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Grunged Glossary...................................................16
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Taglines Seen Around the Nets......................................17
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Masthead - Submission Information.................................A-1
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RAH Distribution System...........................................A-2
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Random Access Humor Page 1 April 1993
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About Vaporware Communications
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VaporWare Communications is an operating division of VaporWare
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Corporation, a public corporation. Stock Ticker Symbol: SUKR
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VaporWare Corporate Officers:
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|
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Luther Lecks
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President, Chief Egomaniac Officer
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Dorian Debacle, M.B.A. Gabriel Escargot
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V.P., Operations V.P., Customer Service
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Pav Bhaji, M.Tax.(Avoidance) Carlos Goebbels
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V.P., Finance V.P., Political Correctness
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Kung Pao Har Hoo, M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc. F.A.C.S, C.P.A., S.P.C.A.,
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Y.M.C.A., L.E.D., Q.E.D., op. cit., et al.
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V.P., Research & Development
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Editorial - Swan Song
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by Dave Bealer
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It just couldn't last folks. Like all those television shows that
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you loved as a kid and were cancelled, so RAH is ending before its
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time.
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The simple truth is that I have run out of time: the time required to
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write the humor, edit the humor, layout the magazine and get it
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distributed each month now take up more than the sum total of my
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spare time. I'd really like to give up going to work each day, but
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my employer has threatened to stop paying my salary if I do that.
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This may be an unfair attitude on my employer's part, but there's no
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changing his mind.
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I briefly considered going from a monthly publication schedule to a
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bi-monthly, or even quarterly, schedule. No. You wouldn't want
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that. It's monthly or nothing!
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Besides, it was getting to be no fun anymore. Regular writers were
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abandoning RAH, and no new writers were silly enough to sign on as
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replacements. I'm beginning to burn out. I just wasn't cut out to
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be a consistent writer. I'm running out of ideas.
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It's not entirely my fault, though. The whole BBS/Online system
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industry is getting boring. Everyone gets along with everyone else.
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Multi-Tech and Hayes settled their lawsuit. Heck, even their modems
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are willing to talk to each other. Sysops are friendly and willing
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to help. Moderators don't yell at novice users who enter requests
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for adult access on the MegaWeenie BBS in the International Bible
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Study echo. Twits are actually figuring out how to work and play
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well with others. Computer nerds are even willing to share their
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pocket protectors.
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All this mass niceness in the BBS/Online world leaves me with just
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one last thing to say to you:
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Random Access Humor Page 2 April 1993
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April Fool!
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Editorial - The Real McCoy
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by Dave Bealer
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Ah, come on. You didn't really think RAH would end so soon, did ya?
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Sheesh! You people sure are gullible. You probably believe that the
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discount furniture store down the street really has been "Going Out
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of Business" for the last 17 years. I don't care when you're reading
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this...it was April Fool's Day when this issue was released.
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Actually, things have been going very well. We picked up our first
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RAH Gateway system in Europe. Ed Bakker and Raymond van der Holst,
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the sysops of Datanet BBS in Voorschoten, Netherlands, are silly
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people. Silly enough to make a trans-Atlantic call to pick up RAH
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each month at their own expense. Datanet is a Remote Access board
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running a V.32bis modem. FidoNet> 2:281/101; BBS telephone number:
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31-71-617784.
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You may have noticed that this month's issue of RAH has a different
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file naming convention than all seven previous issues. This was done
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merely to annoy you. No, actually it was done so that the filenames
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will sort into their correct order. RAH9304.ZIP sorts correctly by
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both month and year, whereas RAH0493.ZIP sorts by month only. Why
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sysops are obsessed with sorting their file directories is beyond me.
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I prefer listing files in the order they were received. But several
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people have suggested this change to me, so it must be important to
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many of you. Since I don't really care one way or another, I'm going
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along with the gag. Back issues will be available in *both formats*
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here at TPN. Future issues will only be available in the new format.
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The Complete ODS Directory at the back of each issue is now listed
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alphabetically by state/province/country. No insult is meant to
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anyone by the fact that countries are not listed separately. The
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point is to have the distributor list use as little space in the
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magazine as possible, while still listing all official sites in a
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meaningful way. I want to remind everyone that official RAH sites
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are not meant to be exclusive distribution sites, but consistent
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sites where readers can always find the current issue of RAH.
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This month that highly acclaimed series, "As the Hard Drive Turns,"
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returns for its third installment after a four month hiatus. Rob
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Novak refuses to adequately explain his absence. When questioned, he
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mumbled something about a llama, Tibet and a can of Spam. It this
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case we determined that ignorance is the better part of sanity and
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inquired no further. {RAH}
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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>>>> Lettuce to the Editor <<<<
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Sorry, no lettuce this month. Both Florida and California have been
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hit by powerful storms lately and the crops have been damaged. We
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may have some artificial lettuce ready by next month. If readers
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send us some letters, this may prove unnecessary. See masthead for
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e-mail addresses. {RAH}
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Random Access Humor Page 3 April 1993
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The Truth Behind Protocol Negotiation
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by Dave Bealer
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Modern high speed modems are capable of transmitting data at
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amazingly fast rates. The overall efficiency of these transfers is
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often less than optimal, especially for small transfers (under 100K).
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The reason for this is the time the modems spend negotiating the
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link, which must occur before actual data transfer can begin. In the
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case of V.32bis modems, it can actually take longer for the modems to
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perform the protocol negotiation than for the file transfer itself to
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complete.
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The technical wizards at Industrial Smoke and Mirrors (the research
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arm of Vaporware Corporation) have developed a diagnostic tool which
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will translate certain types of analog data signals into something
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almost, but not quite, resembling English. The following is the
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transcript of an actual protocol negotiation session between two high
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speed modems as translated by the new device, the Jabberwonker.
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On the actual tape produced by the Jabberwonker, the calling modem
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sounds like Charles Emerson Winchester III (CEW3) and the answering
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modem sounds like Chico Marx (CM). Dr. Hoo discounts this as
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irrelevant. In any event Random Access Humor is proud to present,
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for the first time anywhere, a look into what actually goes on when
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two high speed modems negotiate a connection.
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{begin transcript}
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Ring
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<click>
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CM: Ello?
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CEW3: Hello. I am here to deliver a letter.
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CM: A setter?
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CEW3: No, a letter.
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CM: What kind of setter?
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CEW3: No...not a setter. A letter.
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CM: Is it an Irish Setter? We don' allow no pets 'round here.
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CEW3: It is NOT a setter. It is a letter. L, E, T, T...
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CM: "Tea? Hang on."
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CEW3: This is not about tea. Sir? Sir?...
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CM: To someone else at his end, "You order any tea?" The
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non-committal honk of a horn can be heard in the background.
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Random Access Humor Page 4 April 1993
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CEW3: ...Sir?
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CM: Nah, we didn't order no tea.
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CEW3 (Beginning to lose his patience): This is not about tea, you
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Mediterranean moron! I am trying to deliver a letter.
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CM: A letter?
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CEW3: Yes!
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CM: Well, why you no say so?
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CEW3: I...
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CM: It's very confusing when you talk about dogs and tea if you
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want to deliver a letter.
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CEW3: I never...
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CM: I don't have time to waste talkin' to you about tea and dogs.
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CEW3: Will you please shut up about the tea and dogs.
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CM: S'OK by me. You the one wanted to talk about tea and dogs.
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CEW3: I did not!
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CM: I got no time to waste talkin' about them anyway.
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CEW3: Will you please shut up and take this letter?
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CM: Oh, I can't take that letter.
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CEW3: Why not?
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CM: I'm not allowed to take no letters.
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CEW3: WHY NOT?
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CM: It's against union rules.
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CEW3 (in exasperation): What union?
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CM: The Letter Takers Union.
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CEW3 (in utter disbelief): The Letter Takers Union?
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CM: Yeah, that's right. You no wanna mess with dose guys.
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CEW3: I am not trying to mess with anyone. I...
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CM: Oh...those guys are tough! You no wanna mess with them.
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Random Access Humor Page 5 April 1993
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CEW3: Will you *please* listen to me very carefully. I just want to
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deliver a letter. I don't care who takes it.
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CM: I can't take it. The union guy sittin' here would mess me
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up if I did that.
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CEW3: Someone from the union is there right now?
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CM: Yeah. There's always someone from the union here.
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CEW3: May I speak with him?
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CM: No.
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CEW3 (incensed): No?
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CM: No.
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CEW3 (increasingly incensed): Why not?
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CM: He can no talk.
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CEW3 (stunned): What?
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CM: I said, "He can no talk." What'sa matter? You got somethin'
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against handicapped people?
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CEW3: No! I merely...
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CM: You gonna have trouble with the union if you no respect
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handicapped people.
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CEW3: Listen. I never said I did not respect handicapped people.
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I just want someone to take...this...stupid...letter so I can
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go about my business. Can the union member there take the
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letter from me?
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CM: I dunno. Let me check.
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{Muffled talking and honking are heard in the background.}
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CM: Are you sure you wanna talk to da union member?
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CEW3: Yes! Well...can he hear?
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CM: Of course he can hear! What you think, the union is dumb or
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somethin'?
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CEW3 (deliberately): In the interest of expediency I'll reserve
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comment. Please put him on the line now.
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CM: OK, if you're sure...
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CEW3 (furiously): Yes! Put him on the line now, please!
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Random Access Humor Page 6 April 1993
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CM: Alright, you hang on.
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CEW3: Very well.
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<several seconds pass>
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CEW3: Hello?
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Honk.
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CEW3: Are you ready to take the letter?
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Honk.
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CEW3: Does that mean "yes?"
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Honk.
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CEW3 (slowly, deliberately): Please honk twice if you are ready to
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take the letter.
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Honk. Honk.
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CEW3: Good.
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The sender tries to hand the letter to the union member.
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CEW3: Hey, what is that you put in my hand?
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The sender tries to hand the letter to the union member.
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CEW3: What? Is that your knee? Stop that!
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Honk. Honk.
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CEW3 (infuriated): Will you please stop fooling around and
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take this letter.
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Honk. Honk.
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The sender tries to hand the letter to the union member.
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The union member takes the letter from the sender.
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The sender drops the union member's knee in disgust.
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CEW3: Thank God! Goodbye.
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Honk.
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<Click>
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No Carrier
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Random Access Humor Page 7 April 1993
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Perspiring, the sender enters the delivery in his log book.
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CEW3: What!?
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CEW3 (apoplectically): No! I have a package for that address too!
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Aaaaaaaahhhhhhhhh!
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{end of transcript, mercifully}
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Certain respected members of the scientific community remain
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skeptical about the validity, usefulness and sanity of both the
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Jabberwonker and Dr. Hoo. Meanwhile the good doctor, in his quiet,
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inscrutable way, predicts a bright future for the device. {RAH}
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=================
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Dave Bealer is a thirty-something mainframe systems programmer who
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works with CICS, MVS and all manner of nasty acronyms at one of the
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largest heavy metal shops on the East Coast. He shares a waterfront
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townhome in Pasadena, MD. with two cats who annoy him endlessly as he
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writes and goes slowly insane. Internet: dbealer@access.digex.com
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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"As the Hard Drive Turns - Pt. 3"
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by Rob Novak (SysOp Outside the Wall)
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1:261/1093@fidonet.org
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WHY DOESN'T THIS &#*^*@ THING WORK?!?!?!
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I've asked myself that question many times over.
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I'm a SysOp. I'm not ashamed to admit it. As a matter of fact, I'm
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rather proud of it in a warped, twisted sort of fashion.
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Warped... Twisted... two very appropriate words for any document
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discussing the habits of SysOps. After all, it's not everyday you
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get the opportunity to read about someone who's dedicated their
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entire life to maintaining a computer system that allows total
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strangers to abuse them. SysOps are nuts.
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To be a real BBS SysOp you have to have the patience of a saint, the
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brainpower of a classroom full of computer science majors, and the
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mental stability of Charles Manson. Here's a short list of things
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the average Joe SysOp has to contend with daily:
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1.) Configuration files longer than War and Peace - most BBS software
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is configured by the use of extremely long text files that tell the
|
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program where to find its data, what parameters to use by default,
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where to find the restroom, and how to make julienne potatoes. For
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instance:
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%
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%
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Log C:\BBS\BBORED.LOG
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%
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%
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Screen Mode COLOR
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%
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Random Access Humor Page 8 April 1993
|
||
|
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%
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Luncheon Meat SPAM
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%
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%
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.....etc.
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2.) Programs written by people consuming way too much caffeine and
|
||
staying up too late at night. Usually come with instructions
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totalling about 3 incomplete sentences in length. If used correctly
|
||
(5% of the time) will perform some nifty feat you won't be able to
|
||
live without. If used incorrectly (95% of the time) your system gets
|
||
trashed.
|
||
|
||
3.) Users asking for more files - You could have 4 CD-ROM drives with
|
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21,000 files online and there will still be someone who leaves a
|
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message containing the line: "cood u get sum moor filez pleez im
|
||
runing out of stuff 2 download"
|
||
|
||
4.) 254.3 batch files - Batch files are a series of instructions for
|
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the operating system to carry out sequentially. Most SysOps have to
|
||
write batch files to re-start their software after a user logs off
|
||
the system, and to provide for running maintenance programs.
|
||
Invariably, the batch file will crash the moment the SysOp walks out
|
||
the door for a week's vacation. There are loads of different batch
|
||
files for every possible function the SysOp wishes to perform.
|
||
There's a file to run the BBS, to run maintenance manually, to run
|
||
fix-it programs when something goes wrong, to de-frag the disk
|
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drives, to clean between the SysOp's toes, and to remove unsightly
|
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body hair.
|
||
|
||
5.) People who find new and inventive ways of making things not work.
|
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J. Random User gets a new modem, brings it home, plugs it in and
|
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turns it on. He proceeds to throw the instruction manual into the
|
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desk drawer (still in shrink-wrap), start up his terminal program
|
||
(still using the configuration for his old modem), and call into a
|
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hapless SysOp's bulletin board. When things don't work correctly, J.
|
||
Random User tries to remedy the problem by suggesting to the SysOp
|
||
that something must be wrong with the bulletin board system, and the
|
||
SysOp should check into it.
|
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Don't get me wrong. I'm not a curmudgeon. I'm a SysOp. There's a
|
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difference. A curmudgeon will shun those things that get on his/her
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nerves. A SysOp not only tolerates those things, but constantly
|
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seeks out new ways to make life irritating for him/herself.
|
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Take it easy on us, ok?
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Next Time - "Chat Mode" {RAH}
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||
=================
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||
Rob has been running OTW since August 27th, 1990. His parents deny
|
||
any liability for his mental state. You can reach him at Fidonet
|
||
node 1:261/1093.0, on Outside the Wall (410)665-1855, or via Internet
|
||
as Rob.Novak@f1093.n261.z1.fidonet.org
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 9 April 1993
|
||
|
||
Bugs: A Genus & Specious
|
||
by Greg Borek
|
||
|
||
This is presented as a partial list of the hazards programmers
|
||
currently face. Hopefully this list will help you keep a weather eye
|
||
out for these pesky bugs. Latin names have been omitted because I
|
||
don't know any. By the way, none of these bugs have ever happened to
|
||
the author. I am just guessing.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bugs of Stupidity
|
||
- These bugs are only rumored and never actually occur. For example:
|
||
|
||
counter = 0;
|
||
while (pointer != NULL) {
|
||
counter++;
|
||
/* don't bother to do something as mundane as
|
||
pointer = pointer->next; */
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
While this loop produces very fast, tight code that really shows
|
||
off the muscle of the processor, watching the program run gives
|
||
insight into what infinity looks like on a finite-state machine.
|
||
|
||
- Or how about the gem:
|
||
char string_var[5];
|
||
|
||
for (i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
|
||
string_var[i] = something;
|
||
}
|
||
printf("%s\n", string_var);
|
||
|
||
Mathematically, this is fully equivalent to putting ten pounds of
|
||
'Clinton Campaign Promises' into a five pound bag. Additionally,
|
||
looking at
|
||
|
||
string_var[-1]
|
||
|
||
is legal and also good for random screen effects and interesting
|
||
directory structures, the kind usually only achieved with lemonade
|
||
poured into the computer somewhere.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Invisible Bugs in Plain Sight
|
||
- This includes the most common bug known - the "Cut & Paste" bug.
|
||
The most common variety of this bug is caused by copying a section
|
||
of code from one part of a program somewhere else and not changing
|
||
absolutely everything to the new environment. This is not always
|
||
the programmers fault, however: variables in code moved from one
|
||
place to another have been known to spontaneously revert to their
|
||
previous names out of a certain homesickness for the old code.
|
||
I do not feel the need to give an example of an instance of this
|
||
bug because there already is one in the piece of code you are
|
||
writing right now.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 10 April 1993
|
||
|
||
Please note that this insidious bug is not confined to the world of
|
||
programming; it is common anywhere there is a text editor that can
|
||
do "Cut & Paste". If, for example, while sending out a form letter
|
||
to your friends you neglect to change the salutation at the top,
|
||
you are bound cause profound confusion to all the recipients not
|
||
named Bob.
|
||
|
||
- This category also includes bugs in plain sight, like:
|
||
|
||
if (something_boolean) { /* This is a comment that
|
||
an_important_statement; has destroyed your program */
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
The fact that the important statement an_important_statement is in
|
||
fact never called because it is actually part of a comment can
|
||
cause extreme embarrassment (if anybody else sees it). A LINT
|
||
program won't find it - why should it? You're allowed to have
|
||
comments in your program (some people actually use comments inside
|
||
their programs to document them; go figure). The author certainly
|
||
never wasted 6 hours one night at college looking for this bug,
|
||
and his subsequent documentation skills do not reflect this.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bugs of "The Demo"
|
||
- This species includes showing a new feature to the boss:
|
||
"Hey, boss, I had an idea for a new feature. Come look at this.
|
||
If I call this up from here, ... hey, wait, that didn't happen
|
||
before. Shit. Well, imagine what it would look like if..."
|
||
|
||
- This involves code written at the last minute for a trade show
|
||
that usually require careful handling. This is typically only
|
||
communicated to the person doing the demo at the last possible
|
||
minute (for really magical results, wait until they are actually
|
||
boarding the plane). Here's an example:
|
||
|
||
"Alright I added this feature but only call the functions in this
|
||
particular order or kablooey. Got that? And no entering an
|
||
surprise data, just use this stuff like I gave you. OK? And don't
|
||
let the system sit idle too long or the timer will lock up the
|
||
computer. Oh, and, whatever you do, when you turn the network on,
|
||
turn this computer on last. Yeah, and if you're going to print
|
||
anything, turn the monitor off first, wait 3 seconds, then..."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bugs of Incomplete Understanding
|
||
- These are usually created from someone else's code. The other
|
||
person could be using this job to more closely approximate the
|
||
skills he claimed to have on his resume. Or, then again, the other
|
||
programmer could be a real egghead who communicates with the
|
||
computer directly (usually involving plugging some part of anatomy
|
||
into the bus). The following expression is the example of an
|
||
egghead bug:
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 11 April 1993
|
||
|
||
char ch;
|
||
|
||
if (ch & 0x20) {
|
||
...
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
What is this testing? Yes, that's right you're checking if ch is
|
||
equal to a space character. If you wasted time because of stuff
|
||
like this because some egghead figured this instruction would
|
||
operate in 90% of the CPU time
|
||
|
||
if (ch == ' ') {
|
||
...
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
takes to operate (which, by the way, everyone understands), you can
|
||
thank the gods and little fishes that you aren't smart enough to
|
||
code this badly.
|
||
|
||
- Some bugs are simply caused by insufficient knowledge. The
|
||
author's first C program involved an uninitialized pointer.
|
||
Although the program compiled and linked successfully, when run,
|
||
the program produced a "Bus error". The author was taken aback.
|
||
Had there been an unfortunate incident involving the computer, an
|
||
instrument of mass transit, and an incompetent driver making a wide
|
||
turn?
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bugs of Bad Judgment
|
||
- This includes taking on some projects at all. You simply just
|
||
should have known better; all of the warning signs were there, you
|
||
just missed them. The specifications confused Stephen Hawking.
|
||
The deadline was a date in the past. The platform they mentioned
|
||
was 286s but a dozen networked Cray's running nothing else comes a
|
||
little closer to the mark. Who is this Travelling Salesman guy,
|
||
anyway?
|
||
|
||
(Corollary for the Marketing department: Don't let programmers
|
||
alone with the clients. Programmers know that *ANYTHING* is
|
||
possible with a program and that it might actually be interesting
|
||
to try. They often overlook things like the feature in question
|
||
may be of use to only 2 or 3 people and would require as little as
|
||
245.7 man-years to complete.)
|
||
|
||
- You just can't read in 3 trillion records, and any attempt to get a
|
||
program to do this is as silly as it is tedious; besides, there
|
||
aren't three trillion different things in existence. (The author
|
||
feels quite confident in this belief but will accept concrete
|
||
evidence to the contrary.)
|
||
|
||
- The author would like to point out that this category of bug is is
|
||
actually a larger category of bugs that may include others. The
|
||
author does not sight any further examples of bugs of this type,
|
||
but this category does includes any code written or modified on
|
||
Monday mornings or Friday afternoons.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 12 April 1993
|
||
|
||
Bugs that are actually Not Your Fault (yes, they do in fact exist)
|
||
- This includes bugs created by incorrect documentation. We all know
|
||
illiterate people write documentation. No, it's true. The people
|
||
that write the documentation are programmer wanna-be's or "the-new-
|
||
guy-so-we-can-get-him-to-do-the-documentation-because-no-one-else-
|
||
wants-to", and in either case the person writing the documentation
|
||
is the least qualified person and does not understand what he is
|
||
explaining. It's no surprise when the parameters or return codes
|
||
are, well, misstated in the manual.
|
||
|
||
- "We need to demo this feature, all of the competitors at the show
|
||
already have it. Besides, it's already in the sales brochure. Get
|
||
this done for the show anyway you can". This sort of guidance from
|
||
the marketing department can lead to some creative solutions.
|
||
Johnson put something together with spit and chewing gum, fully
|
||
realizing that this is just a house of cards and he'll get back
|
||
to it some day and redo it properly... that is, until he has to
|
||
start the next phase after the show and you get tasked with adding
|
||
a module to the chewing gum (which has gotten quite hard by now)...
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bugs of Time Distortion
|
||
- This species of bug can actually take on the form of one of the
|
||
others listed here, but is far more evil. Unlike the form it is
|
||
mimicking, these bugs will cause the time required to complete a
|
||
project to be a huge multiple of the programmer's actual best
|
||
estimate. Although they are usually far more crafty and harder to
|
||
kill than normal bugs, they become obvious after important
|
||
deadlines have expired. {RAH}
|
||
=================
|
||
Greg Borek is a C programmer with a "Highway Helper" (OK, "Beltway
|
||
Bandit" - but don't tell his boss we told you) in Falls Church, VA.
|
||
He has previously been mistaken for a vampire. Netmail to: Greg
|
||
Borek at 1:261/1129. Internet: greg.borek@f1129.n261.z1.fidonet.org
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
DaffyNition TagLines (C)
|
||
compiled by Rob Nykvist (Theodore, AL)
|
||
|
||
Caesarean Section: A district in Rome...
|
||
|
||
Carpenter: A guy who nails down his agreement...
|
||
|
||
Cat: A small, furry beast resembling a meatloaf...
|
||
|
||
Catarrh: Stringed instrument...
|
||
|
||
Catastrophe: Award given to the cat with the cutest buns...
|
||
|
||
Catatonic: An aging cat in desperate need for Geritol...
|
||
|
||
Catchup: A hair ball...
|
||
|
||
Caterpillar: A soft scratching post for a kitten...
|
||
|
||
Catifornia: The sunshine State for cats...
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 13 April 1993
|
||
|
||
Catolick: A religiously clean kitty...
|
||
|
||
Cat Scan: Searching for kitty...
|
||
|
||
Catty: An afternoon gathering of gossips...
|
||
|
||
Cauterize: Made eye contact with her...
|
||
|
||
Chicloexdus: The route taken by a gumball to avoid capture...
|
||
|
||
Coincide: What you do when it starts to rain...
|
||
|
||
Chinese spy: A Peking Tom...
|
||
|
||
Cole's Law: Thinly sliced cabbage...
|
||
|
||
Colic: A sheep dog...
|
||
|
||
Coma: A punctuation mark...
|
||
|
||
Commentator: An average potato...
|
||
|
||
Congenital: Friendly...
|
||
|
||
Conservative: One who's too cowardly to fight, too fat to run...
|
||
|
||
Contraceptives: Devices to be used on all conceivable occasions...
|
||
|
||
Corduroy Pillows: Pillows that are making Headlines...
|
||
|
||
Corkscrew: The best thing with which to open a conversation...
|
||
|
||
Cosmetics: A womans' means to keep a man from reading between
|
||
lines...
|
||
|
||
Creative marketing: 15 doughnut shops next to 4 weight loss
|
||
clinics...
|
||
|
||
Cursor: An expert in four-letter words...
|
||
|
||
Cyber-Dog food: Kibbles and Bytes, and Bytes and Bytes...
|
||
|
||
Cyclic Redundancy Check: Two locks on the same bicycle... {RAH}
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Deadline for May - The deadline for articles, letters and other
|
||
silliness intended for the May issue of RAH is 4/24/93.
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Sound Byte:
|
||
|
||
I'd give my right arm to be ambidextrous.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 14 April 1993
|
||
|
||
<Advertisement>
|
||
|
||
Are you feeling rundown and fatigued?
|
||
Are you not feeling like yourself?
|
||
|
||
It has been determined that electromagnetic forces - EMFs - can have
|
||
unknown affects on the human body, perhaps causing various types of
|
||
illnesses and maladies.
|
||
|
||
If you work with or near computers or other types of electrical
|
||
equipment, you are at a risk of exposing yourself to high doses
|
||
of EMFs!!
|
||
|
||
BUT YOU DO NOT HAVE TO WORRY ANY MORE!!!
|
||
|
||
Introducing...
|
||
|
||
-=[ E M F - B L O C 2 0 0 0 ]=-
|
||
|
||
EMF-Bloc 2000 provides the protection you need against those harmful
|
||
electromagnetic forces! Just spray it on your skin in the morning
|
||
and our special formula will protect you all day!!
|
||
|
||
How much do you expect to pay for this protection??? Right now you
|
||
can receive your own 24 oz. bottle of EMC-Bloc for just $29.95!
|
||
|
||
So why wait? This product is not available in any store. Can you
|
||
afford to expose yourself any longer? To get your bottle of EMF-Bloc
|
||
2000 send check or money order to:
|
||
|
||
EMF-Bloc 2000
|
||
P. O. Box 1234
|
||
Chicago, IL 60601
|
||
|
||
or, have your major credit card handy and call:
|
||
|
||
1-800-IMA-DOPE
|
||
|
||
-=[ Another fine product of Dewey, Cheetum, and Howe Enterprises! ]=-
|
||
|
||
NOTE: This product still under FDA testing; has caused skin cancer
|
||
in laboratory animals.
|
||
=================
|
||
[Editor's Note: The preceding advertisement was provided by
|
||
Ray Koziel of Chicago, IL. FidoNet: 1:115/542]
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Wanted:
|
||
|
||
Non-commercial Internet site to offer Random Access Humor for
|
||
anonymous FTP. Ability to provide download count reports on a
|
||
monthly or quarterly basis preferred. For more information contact
|
||
the publisher, Dave Bealer, at: dbealer@access.digex.com
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 15 April 1993
|
||
|
||
RAH Humor Review:
|
||
|
||
Ranch and Cattle South Columbus, MS. (601) 328-6486
|
||
Lines: 1 BBS Software: Spitfire Modem: ZyXEL V.32bis
|
||
Sysop: Bob Beebe
|
||
|
||
Yes, this board does sport a funny name, but that may be part of the
|
||
point. R&C South identifies itself as an adult board immediately
|
||
upon logon. No unseemly material was seen during our brief
|
||
inspection tour. This board does feature the largest collection of
|
||
humorous (non-adult) text files seen outside of the large commercial
|
||
online systems.
|
||
|
||
R&C South has a combined focus on agriculture and humor. It boasts
|
||
of being, "The most Bizarre BBS in the World!" It is also the home
|
||
of the world's only on-line Faith Healing Duck. Users are invited to
|
||
see the Two-headed Cow .GIFs.
|
||
|
||
R&C South charges no fee and will accept no cash donations. Hardware
|
||
donations are accepted. The humor file collection is available for
|
||
download on the first call, after completing the rather extensive new
|
||
user survey. Many new R&C South users in the past have taken a less
|
||
than serious approach to answering the questions in the survey:
|
||
|
||
What type of system are you running?
|
||
Human body-usual chemical-electro reactions.
|
||
|
||
How are you involved in Agriculture?
|
||
I eat cows and chickens sometimes.
|
||
I breath oxygen the plants make.
|
||
I'm a duck.
|
||
Just looking for adult entertainment.
|
||
[this is Mississippi, after all - Ed.]
|
||
I've killed a lot of nice plants.
|
||
|
||
Are you a veteran?
|
||
Vet of putting up with my father who is one.
|
||
Not yet, but Bush is working on it.
|
||
|
||
Are you a vegetarian?
|
||
Only on days that don't end with 'Y'.
|
||
Depends on how close to payday it is.
|
||
Yuk.
|
||
|
||
Are you a vegetable?
|
||
I called here, didn't I!
|
||
Does couch potatoe count?
|
||
No - mineral.
|
||
|
||
Do you own a vegiematic food processor?
|
||
No, but I do have a turnip twaddler.
|
||
If it don't process data I ain't got one.
|
||
Is one required for this BBS?
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 16 April 1993
|
||
|
||
What is your shoe size?
|
||
Shoe?
|
||
DON'T WEAR'EM
|
||
[this is Mississippi, after all - Ed.]
|
||
|
||
Whats the difference between a Yam and a sweet potatoe?
|
||
I yam what I yam.
|
||
Yam is a Yankee sweet tater.
|
||
Yam is fruit, potatoe is vegie.
|
||
It's social security number.
|
||
Yams worry more about their looks.
|
||
|
||
Names and types of all your pets?
|
||
37 ft anaconda - Snuggles.
|
||
Bull - Pickles.
|
||
Wife - Cindy.
|
||
Invisible friend - Charlie
|
||
Husband - Eddie
|
||
Wildabeest - Luther.
|
||
Rattlesnake - Marcia.
|
||
Slug - Slimey.
|
||
Flea - Herbie.
|
||
Paramecium - Tooter.
|
||
|
||
Regarding these answers, Bob says it best:
|
||
|
||
(__)
|
||
(OO) What a crowd, What a crowd........
|
||
\/
|
||
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Grunged Glossary
|
||
by Dave Bealer
|
||
|
||
This month the Grunged Glossary takes a look at disk storage
|
||
measurements:
|
||
|
||
gigglebyte
|
||
- this short-lived and often contagious unit of storage is favored by
|
||
less serious users.
|
||
|
||
killerbyte
|
||
- this destructive type of storage has an excellent memory, but no
|
||
conscience.
|
||
|
||
metabyte
|
||
- this rather ethereal unit of storage is highly variable in size and
|
||
subject to much disagreement about its actual contents at any point
|
||
in time.
|
||
|
||
overbyte
|
||
- this deformed, usually malfunctioning memory location is an
|
||
orthodontist's dream come true.
|
||
|
||
terrorbyte
|
||
- the favored unit of storage in Steven King's personal computer.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page 17 April 1993
|
||
|
||
--- Taglines Seen Around the Nets
|
||
|
||
Alas poor Tagline! I knew it well...
|
||
|
||
Paranoid: someone who just figured out what's going on.
|
||
|
||
Columbus had a fourth ship - it sailed over the edge.
|
||
|
||
Mary had a little lamb. The doctor was surprised.
|
||
|
||
Yogi Bare was a Buddhist Nudist.
|
||
|
||
Witches use brooms because nature abhors a vacuum.
|
||
|
||
Surrender now - before I have to offer you better terms.
|
||
|
||
Forget everything, as one day everything will forget you.
|
||
|
||
Pain is inevitable. Misery, however, is an option.
|
||
|
||
MODEM: Modus Operandi Device for Evil Minds
|
||
|
||
It's not cute being this easy.
|
||
|
||
Shell to DOS...Come in Dos, do you copy? Shell to DOS...
|
||
|
||
Eagles fly, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines.
|
||
|
||
Glory is fleeting, but obscurity is forever.
|
||
|
||
Starfleet Academy has a drama department?
|
||
|
||
Childish game: one at which your spouse beats you.
|
||
|
||
Madness takes its toll; please have exact change.
|
||
|
||
You make ends meet...and they hate each other!
|
||
|
||
Don't play stupid with me, I'm better at it!
|
||
|
||
Let the meek inherit the Earth, I want the stars!
|
||
|
||
What was the best thing BEFORE sliced bread?
|
||
|
||
Syntax? Why not? They tax everything else!
|
||
|
||
If space is a vacuum, who changes the bags?
|
||
|
||
There are no ESC keys on prison PCs.
|
||
|
||
Please hold. A representative will annoy you shortly.
|
||
|
||
Impeach Clinton...and her husband!
|
||
|
||
Go ahead, jump. 100,000 lemmings can't be wrong.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page A-1 April 1993
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Masthead:
|
||
|
||
Editor & Publisher: Dave Bealer
|
||
|
||
Contributing Editors: Greg Borek, Rob Novak
|
||
|
||
Advertising Director: Ray Koziel
|
||
|
||
Contact: The Puffin's Nest BBS
|
||
FidoNet: 1:261/1129
|
||
BBS: (410) 437-3463 (1200-14400/V.32bis)
|
||
Internet: dbealer@access.digex.com
|
||
greg.borek@f1129.n261.z1.fidonet.org
|
||
Regular Mail: (Only if you have no other way to reach us!)
|
||
Random Access Humor
|
||
c/o Dave Bealer
|
||
P.O. Box 595
|
||
Pasadena, MD. 21122 USA
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor (RAH) is published monthly by Dave Bealer as a
|
||
disservice to the online community. Although the publisher's BBS may
|
||
be a part of one or more networks at any time, RAH is not affiliated
|
||
with any BBS network or online service. RAH is a compilation of
|
||
individual articles contributed by their authors. The contribution
|
||
of articles to this compilation does not diminish the rights of the
|
||
authors. The opinions expressed in RAH are those of the authors and
|
||
are not necessarily those of the publisher.
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor is Copyright 1993 Dave Bealer. All Rights
|
||
Reserved. Duplication and/or distribution is permitted for non-
|
||
commercial purposes only. RAH may not be distributed on diskette,
|
||
CD-ROM or in hardcopy form for a fee without express written
|
||
permission from the publisher. For any other use, contact the
|
||
publisher.
|
||
|
||
RAH may only be distributed in unaltered form. Online systems whose
|
||
users cannot access the original binary archive file may offer it for
|
||
viewing or download in text format, provided the original text is not
|
||
modified. Readers may produce hard copies of RAH or backup copies on
|
||
diskette for their own personal use only. RAH may not be distributed
|
||
in combination with any other publication or product.
|
||
|
||
Many of the brands and products mentioned in RAH are trademarks of
|
||
their respective owners.
|
||
|
||
Copies of the current issue of RAH may be obtained by manual download
|
||
or Wazoo/EMSI File Request from The Puffin's Nest BBS (FREQ: RAH), or
|
||
from various sites in several BBS networks. Back issues of RAH may
|
||
be obtained by download or file request from The Puffin's Nest BBS.
|
||
|
||
Article contributions to RAH are always welcome. All submissions
|
||
must be made electronically. File attach your article to a netmail
|
||
message to Dave Bealer at 1:261/1129. E-mail may also be sent via
|
||
Internet to: dbealer@access.digex.com
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page A-2 April 1993
|
||
|
||
Tagline and filler submissions may be made via e-mail. Article
|
||
submissions should be made via file. Submitted files must be plain
|
||
ASCII text files in normal MS-DOS file format: artname.RAH; where
|
||
artname is a descriptive file name and RAH is the mandatory
|
||
extension. Your text should be less than 70 columns across for
|
||
widest readability. If your article does not conform to these simple
|
||
specs, it may get lost or trashed. Also note that such imaginative
|
||
names as RAH.RAH might get overlaid by the blatherings of similarly
|
||
minded contributors. If your hardware is incapable of producing file
|
||
names in the proper format, you may send your article as one or more
|
||
e-mail messages. It will not be possible to make private responses
|
||
to any submissions or correspondence received.
|
||
|
||
The editors reserve the right to publish or not to publish any
|
||
submission as/when they see fit. The editors also reserve the right
|
||
to "edit", or modify any submission prior to publication. This last
|
||
right will rarely be used, typically only to correct spelling or
|
||
grammar misteaks that are not funny. RAH is a PG rated publication,
|
||
so keep it (mostly) clean.
|
||
|
||
RAH can accept only the following types of material for publication:
|
||
1) Any material in the public domain.
|
||
2) Material for which you own the copyright. If you wrote it
|
||
yourself, you are automatically the copyright holder.
|
||
3) Authorized agents for a copyright holder (typically an
|
||
organization) may submit material on behalf of that holder.
|
||
|
||
In writing jargon, RAH is deemed to be given "One Time Rights" to
|
||
anything submitted for publication unless otherwise noted in the
|
||
message accompanying the contribution. You still own the material,
|
||
and RAH will make no use of the material other than publishing it
|
||
electronically in the usual manner. Your article may be selected for
|
||
publication in a planned "Best of RAH" electronic book. If you want
|
||
your copyright notice to appear in your article, place it as desired
|
||
in the text you submit. Previously published articles may be
|
||
submitted, but proper acknowledgement must be included: periodical
|
||
name, date of previous publication.
|
||
|
||
RAH Distribution System:
|
||
(Sites bearing the <contrib> designation will accept your
|
||
contributions and forward them to the editors.)
|
||
(All these systems would be good places to find sysops with a sense
|
||
of humor...seemingly a rarity these days.)
|
||
|
||
The Puffin's Nest Pasadena, MD. Sysop: Dave Bealer
|
||
FidoNet> 1:261/1129 (410) 437-3463 14400 (V.32bis)
|
||
SailNet> 53:5000/1129 CinemaNet> 68:1410/101 <contrib>
|
||
Current RAH Issue (text format): FReq: RAH
|
||
Current RAH Issue (Readroom format): FReq: RAHR
|
||
Back Issues of RAH: (text) FReq: RAHyymm.ZIP
|
||
(RAH9209.ZIP for premiere issue)
|
||
Back Issues of RAH: (Readroom) FReq: RAHyymmR.ZIP
|
||
(RAH9302R.ZIP and later only)
|
||
Complete Writers Guidelines: FReq: RAHWRITE
|
||
Complete Distributor Info: FReq: RAHDIST
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page A-3 April 1993
|
||
|
||
RAH Gateway Systems:
|
||
|
||
Pooh's Corner Fells Point, MD. Sysop: Mark Truelove
|
||
FidoNet> 1:261/1131 (410) 327-9263 14400 (V.32bis)
|
||
RBBSnet> 8:936/206 FilNet> 33:410/0 CandyNet> 42:1031/1
|
||
<contrib>
|
||
|
||
007LZ Southfield, MI. Sysop: Gary Groeller
|
||
FidoNet> 1:120/636 (313) 569-4454 14400 (V.32bis)
|
||
W-Net_fts> 66:636/1 <mail only - no BBS>
|
||
|
||
The Edge of Sanity Dearborn, MI. Sysop: Tom Smith
|
||
FidoNet> 1:2410/279 (313) 584-1253 9600 (V.32)
|
||
SogNet> 91:7/4279
|
||
|
||
H*A*L Muskogee, OK. Sysop: Lloyd Hatley
|
||
FidoNet> 1:3813/304 (918) 682-7337 14400 (V.32bis)
|
||
RFNet> 73:102/1 RANet> 72:918/21 LuvNet> 77:101/1
|
||
DoorNet> 75:7918/205 <contrib>
|
||
|
||
The Shop Mail Only Flushing, NY. Sysop: Steve Matzura
|
||
FidoNet> 1:2603/203 (718) 460-0201 14400 (V.32bis)
|
||
ADAnet> 94:7180/1 JayNet> 17:99/100 WorldNet 62:4400/200
|
||
MusicNet.FTN> 88:8001/12 <mail only - no BBS)
|
||
|
||
Cyberdrome Philadelphia, PA. Sysop: Mike Taylor
|
||
FidoNet> 1:273/937 (215) 923-8026 14400 (V.32bis)
|
||
PodsNet> 93:9600/2 <contrib>
|
||
|
||
Abiogenesis Kansas City, MO. Sysop: Scott Lent
|
||
FidoNet> 1:280/310 (816) 734-4732 14400 (V.32bis)
|
||
VirNet> 9:103/110 MailNet> 20:416/310 SuperNet> 43:1315/102
|
||
|
||
Datanet BBS Voorschoten, Netherlands Sysop: Ed Bakker
|
||
FidoNet> 2:281/101 31-71-617784 14400 (V.32bis)
|
||
Digital-Net> 15:200/212
|
||
|
||
Supernova BBS Scotstown, Quebec Sysop: Ian Hall-Beyer
|
||
FidoNet> 1:257/40 (819) 657-4603 16800 (HST/Dual)
|
||
GlobalNet> 51:210/0 FrancoMedia> 101:164/103
|
||
|
||
RAH Official Distribution Sites:
|
||
|
||
Alabama
|
||
J & J Online Chickasaw 1:3625/440 (205) 457-5901 V.32bis
|
||
Night Watch Birmingham 1:3602/26 (205) 841-2790 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
California
|
||
Dragon's Cave Berkeley 1:161/412 (510) 549-0311 V.32bis
|
||
InfoMat BBS San Clemente (NoFido) (714) 492-8727 HST/Dual
|
||
Automation Central San Jose 1:143/110 (408) 435-2886 V.32bis
|
||
The Software Station Saugus 1:102/1106 (805) 296-9056 V.32
|
||
Marin County Net Sausalito 1:125/55 (415) 331-6241 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page A-4 April 1993
|
||
|
||
Florida
|
||
The Software Cuisine Miami 1:135/57 (305) 642-0754 V.32bis
|
||
Flamingo Ventures Pensacola 1:3612/320 (904) 478-7716 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Hawaii
|
||
Casa de la Chinchilla Honolulu (NoFido) (808) 845-1303 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
Illinois
|
||
The Crossroads BBS Chicago 1:115/743 (312) 587-8756 HST/Dual
|
||
The Loonatic Fringe Elk Grove 1:115/542 (708) 290-8877 V.32
|
||
|
||
Indiana
|
||
Digicom Evansville 1:2310/200 (812) 479-1310 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
Maryland
|
||
Wit-Tech Baltimore 1:261/1082 (410) 256-0170 V.32bis
|
||
Outside the Wall Baltimore 1:261/1093 (410) 665-1855 V.32
|
||
Pooh's Corner Fells Point 1:261/1131 (410) 327-9263 V.32bis
|
||
The Puffin's Nest Pasadena 1:261/1129 (410) 437-3463 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Michigan
|
||
The Edge of Sanity Dearborn 1:2410/279 (313) 584-1253 V.32
|
||
CALnet @node.1 Detroit 1:2410/120 (313) 836-8275 V.32bis
|
||
007LZ Southfield 1:120/636 (Mail only) V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Mississippi
|
||
Ranch & Cattle South Columbus (NoFido) (601) 328-6486 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Missouri
|
||
Abiogenesis Kansas City 1:280/310 (816) 734-4732 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Netherlands
|
||
Datanet BBS Voorschoten 2:281/101 31-71-617784 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
New Mexico
|
||
High Mesa Publishing Los Lunas 1:301/1 (505) 865-8385 V.32
|
||
Paula's House of Mail Los Lunas 1:301/301 (505) 865-4082 HST
|
||
|
||
New York
|
||
The Shop Mail Only Flushing 1:2603/203 (mail only) V.32bis
|
||
The Wall-2 Middle Village 1:278/612 (718) 335-8784 HST/Dual
|
||
Maj. Woody's Retreat New York 1:278/719 (212) 486-6281 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Oklahoma
|
||
H*A*L Muskogee 1:3813/304 (918) 682-7337 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Ontario, Canada
|
||
Typecast BBS Kingston 1:249/107 (613) 545-9148 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Oregon
|
||
Bitter Butter Better Tigard 1:105/290 (503) 620-0307 V.32
|
||
|
||
Pennsylvania
|
||
Cyberdrome Philadelphia 1:273/937 (215) 923-8026 V.32bis
|
||
Milliways Pittsburgh 1:129/179 (412) 766-1086 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
Random Access Humor Page A-5 April 1993
|
||
|
||
Quebec, Canada
|
||
Supernova BBS Scotstown 1:257/40 (819) 657-4603 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
Texas
|
||
Incredible BBS Burleson 1:130/82 (817) 447-2598 V.32
|
||
|
||
Utah
|
||
Vital Signs Midvale 1:311/20 (801) 255-8909 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Virginia
|
||
Data Empire Fredericksburg 1:274/31 (703) 785-0422 V.32
|
||
Flying Dutchman Newport News 1:271/239 (804) 595-9383 V.32bis
|
||
The Time Machine Newport News 1:271/236 (804) 599-6401 HST/Dual
|
||
|
||
Washington
|
||
Spokane Online Spokane 1:346/20 (509) 327-8540 V.32bis
|
||
|
||
Wisconsin
|
||
The First Step BBS Green Bay 1:139/540 (414) 499-0659 V.32bis |