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- %Hackers dictionair
-
- Assumed Decimal Point:
- Located two positions to the right of a programmer's current salary in
- estimating his own worth.
-
- Bit:
- The increment by which programmers slowly go mad.
-
- Chaining:
- A method of attaching programmers to desks to speed up output.
-
- Checkpoint:
- The location from which a programmer must forget in order to be successful.
-
- Core Storage:
- A receptacle for the center section of apples.
-
- Counter:
- A device over which martinis are served.
-
- Disassembler:
- An unattended five year old child.
-
- Error:
- What someone else has made when he disagrees with your computer output.
-
- External Storage:
- A wastebasket.
-
- Fixed Word Length:
- Four-letter words used by programmers in a state of confusion.
-
- Floating Control:
- A characteristic exhibited when you have to go to the restroom but
- cannot leave the computer.
-
- Floating Point:
- The absolute limit before floating control is lost.
-
- Flow Chart:
- A graphic representation of the fastest route to the restroom.
-
- Input:
- Food, whiskey, beer, asprin, etc.
-
- Macro:
- The last halU}of an expression of surprise: "Holy Macro".
-
- Memory Dump
- Amnesia.
-
- Programmer:
- A red-eyed, mumbling mammal capable of conversing with inanimate opjects.
-
- Beginner:
- A person who believes more than one sixteenth of a computer
- salseperson's spiel.
-
- Advanced User:
- A person who has managed to remove a computer from its packing materials.
-
- Power User:
- A person who has mastered the brightness and contrast controls on
- any computer's moniter.
-
- Sales Associate:
- A former cheese-monger who has recently traded mascarpone for MS-DOS
-
- Sales Manager:
- Last week's new sales associate.
-
-
- Bonus cookie!
- Lucky you! YES YOU! The just got a bonus cookie..... Which means,
- 15 WHOLE MINUTES extra online time today!
- +T15
- Oh? You also want a real cookie? Oh well... you can't have everything!
-
-
- Consultant:
- A former sales associate who has mastered at least one tenth of
- the D-BASE 3 Plus Manual.
-
- Systems Integrator:
- A former consultant who understands the term "AUTOEXEC.BAT".
-
- Warranty:
- Disclaimer.
-
- Service:
- Cursory examination, followed by the utterance of the phrase
- "It can't be ours" and either of the words "hardware" or "software."
-
- Support:
- The mailing of advertising literature to customers who have returned
- a registration card.
-
- Alpha Test Version:
- Too buggy to be released to the paying public.
-
- Beta Test Version:
- Still too buggy to be released.
-
- Release Version:
- Alternate pronounciation of "beta test version."
-
- Enhanced:
- Less awful in some ways than the previous model, and less likely
- to work as expected.
-
- Convertible:
- Transformable from a second-rate computer to a first-rate doorstop
- or paperweight. (Lexicoginal note:replaces the term "junior.")
-
- Upgraded:
- Didn't work the first time.
-
- Upgraded and Improved:
- Didn't work the second time.
-
- Fast (6MHz):
- Nowhere near fast enough.
-
- Superfast (8MHz):
- Not fast enough.
-
- Blindingly Fast (10MHz):
- Almost fast enough.
-
- Astoundingly Fast (12MHz):
- Fast enough to work only intermittently.
-
- Memory-Resident:
- Ready at the press of a key to disable any currently running program.
-
- Multitasking:
- A clever method of simultaneously slowing down the multitude of computer
- programs that insist on running too fast.
-
- Encryption:
- A powerful algorithmic encoding technique employed in the creation
- of computer manuals.
-
- Desktop Publishing:
- A system of software and hardware enabling users to create documents with
- a cornucopia of typefaces and graphics and the intellectual content
- of a Formica slab; often used in conjunction with encryption.
-
- High Resolution:
- Having nothing to do with graphics on an IBM-compatible microcomputers.
-
- FCC-Certified:
- Guaranteed not to interfere with radio or television reception until you
- add the cable required to make it work.
-
- American:
- Italian or Taiwanese, as in "American Telephone and Telegraph."
-
- American-Made:
- Assembled in America from parts made abroad.
-
- Windows:
- A slow-moving relation of the rodent family rarely seen near computers but
- commonly found in specially marked packages of display cards, turbo cards,
- and Grape-Nuts Cereal.
-
- TopView:
- The official position of IBM brass that an abysmally slow character-based
- multitasking program is the product of the future.
-
- Shareware:
- Software usually distinguished by its awkward user interfaces,
- skimpy manuals, lack of official user support, and particularly its free
- distribution and upgrading via simple disk copying; eg. PC-DOS.
-
- DOS-SHELL:
- An educational tool forcing computer users to learn new methods of doing
- what they already can.
-
- UNIX:
- Sterile experts who attempt to palm off bloated, utterly arcane,
- and confusing operating systems on rational human beings.
-
- EMS:
- Emergency Medical Service; often summoned incases of apoplexy
- induced by attempts to understand extended,expanded, or enhanced
- memory specifications.
-
- Videotex:
- A moribund electronic service offering people the privlege
- of paying to read the weather on their TV screens instead of
- having Willard Scott read it to them free while they brush their
- teeth.
-
- Artificial Intelligence:
- The amazing, human-like ability of a computer program to understand that
- the letter y means "yes" and the letter n means "no."
-
- Electronic Mail:
- A communications system with built-in delays and errors designed to emulate
- those of the United States Postal Service.
-
- C-py Pr-t-ct--n:
- An obscenity unfit to print and fast disappearing from common parlance.
-
- Turbo Card:
- A device that increases an older-model computer's speed almost enough to
- compensate for the time wasted in getting it to work.
-
- Laser Printer:
- A xerographic copying machine with additional malfunctioning parts.
-
- Workstation:
- A computer or terminal slavishly linked to a mainframe that does not offer
- game programs.
-
- RISC:
- The gamble that a computer directly compatible with nothing else on the
- planet may actually have decent software written for it someday.
-
- AUTOEXEC.BAT:
- A sturdy aluminum or wooden shaft used to coax AT hard disks into
- performing properly.
-
- Plotter:
- A terroristic hypodermic device used to inject graphic representations of
- boring data into boring meetings.
-
- Clone:
- One of the many advanced-technology computers IBM is beginning to
- wish it had built.
-
- CD-ROM:
- An optical device with storage sufficieent to hold billions
- of predictions claiming it will revolutionize the information
- industry.
-
- IBM Porduct Centers:
- Historical landmarks forever memoralizing the concept of
- "list price only."
-
- IBM:
- Somewhat like an IBM product; in current parlance, invariably followed
- by the word "compatible."
-
- IBM Compatible:
- Not IBM compatible.
-
- Fully IBM Compatible:
- Somewhat IBM compatible, but won't run IBM BASIC programs.
-
- 100% IBM Compatible:
- Compatible with most available hardware and software, but not with the
- blockbusters IBM always intriduces the day after tomorrow.
-
- Lap-Top:
- Smaller and lighter than the average secretary.
-
- Portable:
- Smaller and lighter than the average refrigerator.
-
- Transportable:
- Neither chained to a wall nor attached to an alarm system.
-
- Hard Disk:
- A device that allows users to delete vast quantities of data with simple
- mnemonic commands.
-
- Mouse:
- A peripheral originally christened "vermiform appendix" because of its
- functional resemblance, renamed for its appropriateness as a cat toy.
-
- Printer:
- An electromechanical paper-shredding device.
-
- Modem:
- A peripheral used in the unsuccesful attempt to get two computer to
- communicate with each other.
-
- Network:
- An electronic means of allowing more than one person at a time to corrupt,
- trash, or otherwise cause permanent damage to useful information.
-
- Documentation:
- A perplexing linen-bound accessory resorted to only in situations of dire
- need when friends and dealers are unavailable, usually employed solely as
- a decorative bookend.
-
- User-Friendly:
- Supplied with a full-color manual.
-
- Very User-Friendly:
- Supplied with a disk and audiotape so the user needent bother with the
- full-color manual.
-
- Extremely User-Friendly:
- Supplied with a mouse so that the user needent bother with the disk and
- audiotape, the full color manual, or the program itself.
-
- Easy to Learn:
- Hard to use.
-
- Easy to Use:
- Hard to learn.
-
- Easy to Learn and Use:
- Won't do what you want it to.
-
- Powerful:
- Hard to learn and use.
-
- Menu-Driven:
- Easy to learn.
-
- Copy Protection:
- (1) A clever method of preventing incompetent pirates from stealing
- software and legitimate customers from using it;
-
- Copy Protection:
- (2) a means of distinguishing honest users from thieves by preventing
- larceny by the former but not by the latter.
-
- Warranty:
- An unconditional guarantee that the program purchased is actually included
- on the disk in the box.
-
- Version 1.0:
- Buggier than Maine in June; eats data.
-
- Version 1.1:
- Eats data only occasionally, upgrade free to avoid litigation by
- disgruntled users of version 1.0.
-
- Version 2.0:
- The version origionally planned as the first release (except for a
- couple of data-eating bugs that just won't seem to go away), no free
- upgrades or the company would go bankrupt.
-
- Version 3.0:
- The revision in the works when the company goes bankrupt.
-
- Spreadsheet:
- A program that gives the user quick and easy access to a wide variety of
- highly detailed reports based on highly inaccurate assumptions.
-
- Word Processor:
- Software that magically transforms its user into a professional author.
-
- Though Processor:
- An electronic version of the intended outline procedure that thinking
- people instantly abandon upon graduation from high school.
-
- Business Graphics:
- Popular with managers who understand neither decimals, fractions,
- percentages, Roman numerals, but have more than a passing acquaintance
- with pies and bars.
-
- Database Manager:
- A program that allows the user to manipulate data in every conceivable way
- except the absolutely essential one he or she concieves of the day after
- entering 20 megabytes of raw information.
-
- Project Manager:
- Software for generating fantasy scenarios of amazing optimism;
- proven in computer firms, where it is extremely successful at scheduling
- advertising campaigns for unavailable products.
-
- Integrated Software:
- A single product that deftly performs hundreds of functions the user never
- needs and awkwardly performs the halfdozen he uses constantly.
-
- Windows:
- A method of dividing a computer screen into two or more unusably tiny
- portions.
-
- Now Available:
- Available any day now.
-
- Available Soon:
- Available in a year or so.
-
- Available May 1:
- Version 1.0 may ship to dealers August 1.
-
- Standard:
- Similar to something else on the market.
-
- Backup:
- The duplicate copy of crucial data that no one bothered to make;
- used only in an abstract sense.
-
- Computer Journalist:
- (1) A data processing manager who can't write a coherent English sentence;
-
- Computer Journalist:
- (2) A writer who can produce a definitive opinion on a product after
- spending an hour with its manual;
-
- Computer Journalist:
- (3) A person with an insatiable lust for free hardware and software;
-
- Computer Journalist:
- (4) A harmless drudge.
-
-