------------------------------------------------------------------------ ***** ***** ***** *** *** ** *** *** *** ** *** *** *** ******* *** ** *** *** *** ******* *** ***** *** *** *** *** ***** ***** ****** ** ****** ****** ****** **** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** **** *** ***** *** ****** *** **** *** *** *** ** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***** *** ****** ****** *** *** *** *** *** ** *** **** **** ****** *** **** *** **** Electronic Humor Magazine. Issue011, (Volume II, Number 7) April, 1986. NutWorks is published semi-pseudo-monthly by Brent C.J. Britton and Leonard M. Friedman ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Some say: "Knowledge without common sense is folly." We say: "Knowledge without folly is BORING." ------------------------------------------------------------------------ NutWorks News ============= 1) SPECIAL TO SUBSCRIBERS: There have been a small number of requests that NutWorks be sent via DISK DUMP or SENDFILE, instead of as a MAIL file. Unfortunately, because of the size of the subscription list, and the size of the magazine itself, we must continue to use MAIL. This alleviates much network traffic by only sending one file to each node, instead of one file per person. (If you didn't know this, ask your systems personnel about how the Columbia VM Mailer works.) 2) (Outdated text deleted.) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ *** NutWorks News Extra *** ============================ (Netcon Info) (Outdated text deleted) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ From the Bridge =============== Captains Log: Stardate: 860414 Commander Spock Reporting: Well having now worked in the computer field a bit more and also having lived a bit longer I have made a few conclusions about life. 1) Murphy was right on the mark. Murphy states that: a) If anything can possibly go wrong it will, at the worst possible moment. b) Nothing is as easy as it looks. c) Nothing is fool proof, because fools are so damn ingenious. (He says alot more, but that is all I can rememeber...) 2) Murphy was an optimist. 3) It's true, Life's a bitch and then you die. 4) If there are n possible bugs in a program the one that will cause the most damage is the one that will go wrong. 5) If you correct the n possible bugs in your program the n+1 bug is bound to appear. 6) I now understand why computer programers hate keypunch operators. 7) There is a cause and affect relationship between operators forgetting to do backups and system crashes. 8) People somehow know when you are at 300 baud. Why else is it then and only then that they choose to bombard you with messages. 9) People know when you are at 300 baud and trying to edit something. (see above) And now a few stories, with some morals about life: If You Are Unhappy ================== Once upon a time... There was a non-conforming sparrow who decided not to fly south for the winter. However, soon the weather turned so cold that he reluctantly started to fly south. In a short time ice began to form on his wings and he fell to earth in a barnyard, almost frozen. A cow happened by and crapped on the sparrow. The sparrow thought that it was the end, But the manure warmed him and defrosted his wings. Warm and happy, able to breath, the sparrow began to sing. Just then a large cat came by and hearing the chirping, investigated the sounds. The cat cleared away the manure, found the chirping bird, and promptly ate him. *** The Moral of The Story *** 1) Everyone who shits on you is not neccessarily your enemy. 2) Everyone who gets you out of the shit, is not neccessarily your friend. 3) And, if your warm and happy in a pile of shit, keep you mouth shut. Leonard M. Friedman ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Nuts & Bolts ============== by Brent C.J. Britton Ok folks, so I misspelled a word... you don't have to bite my head off! Just for good measure, though, the "silliest pair of assholes" entry in last months column should have read "Gramm/Rudman" and not "Grant/Rudman", (which is rather humorous in itself if you consider all the "grants" that are disappearing due to the efforts of Mr. "Gramm"). A friend of mine was sitting in class recently, doing his best to wholly ignore the lecture, and he came up with the following thoughts on life in general. I hope you like them: I was Just Thinking... =================== By Arthur Hannaford College professors, on the whole, are the worst dressed group of people in the world. No one, no matter how strangely they may be built, could ever be comfortable in any seat designed for classroom use. Hippis should join us in the 80's... then I changed my mind, leave them in the 60's. Those people who sit in a lecture hall and nod their heads in agree- ment as if they were talking individually with the instructor have no idea how stupid they look. Polyester is never sexy or attractive. Young males who can't grow a mustache shouldn't try. Restaurants with paper placemats are not places I'd want to take someone I was trying to impress. Hack-sack is a weird game that no one seems to be able to play well. No one is more creative than a student who is making up an excuse for missing an exam. Blue is a nice color, orange is not. There should be a class in personal hygiene for college freshmen. The statement "Heavy Metal Music sucks" is inaccurate; Heavy Metal is not music. Left-handed people look funny when they write. Matching shoes and belts, especially in white, was a great idea... it makes geeks easier to spot. I don't like Freshmen. They have bad attitudes. I, of course, was never a Freshman. Synchronized swimming is a silly sport. I don't like station wagons. They tend to imply that the owner is a mother of six. It would be funny if someone parked a Corvair in Ralph Nader's gar- age. Bathroom poetry wouldn't be funny if you weren't sitting on the toilet with your pants down while reading it. People who refer to the terminal on which they are working as "my computer" shouldn't be told the difference. ah & bcjb ------------------------------------------------------------------------ How To Make A Board =================== by Dave Barry Most of what I know about carpentry, which is almost nothing, I learned in shop. I took shop during the Eisenhower administration, when boys took shop and girls took home economics--a code name for "cooking". Schools are not allowed to separate boys and girls like that any more. They're also not allowed to put students' heads in vises and tighten them, which is what our shop teacher, Mr. Schmidt, did to Ronnie Miller in the fifth grade when Ronnie used a chisel when he should have used a screwdriver. (Mr. Schmidt had strong feelings about how to use tools properly.) I guess he shouldn't have put Ronnie's head in the vise, but it (Ronnie's head) was no great prize to begin with, and you can bet Ronnie never confused chisels and screwdrivers in later life. Assuming he made it to later life. Under Mr. Schmidt's guidance, we hammered out hundreds of the ugliest and most useless objects the human mind can conceive of. Our first major project was a little bookshelf that you could also use as a stool. The idea was that someday you'd be looking for a book, when all of a sudden you'd urgently need a stool, so you'd just dump the books on the floor and there you'd be. At least I assume that was the thinking behind the bookshelf-stool. Mr. Schmidt designed it, and we students sure know better than to ask any questions. I regret today that I didn't take more shop in high school, because while I have never once used anything I know about the cosine and the tangent, I have used my shop skills to make many useful objects for my home. For example, I recently made a board. I use my board in many ways. I stand on it when I have to get socks out of the dryer and water has been sitting in our basement around the dryer for a few days, and has developed a pretty healthy layer of scum on top (plus heaven-only-knows-what new and predatory forms of life under- neath). I also use my board to squash spiders. (All spiders are deadly kill- ers. Don't believe any of the stuff you read in "National Geographic".) If you'd like to make a board, you'll need: Materials: A board, paint. Tools: A chisel, a handgun. Get your board at a lumberyard, but be prepared. Lumberyards reek of lunacy. They use a system of measurement that dates back to Colonial times, when people had brains the size of M&Ms. When they tell you a board is a "two-by-four", they mean it is NOT two inches by four inches. Likewise, a "one-by-six" is NOT one inch by six inches. So if you know what size board you want, tell the lumberperson you want some other size. If you don't know what size you want, tell him it's for squashing spi- ders. He'll know what you need. You should paint your board so people will know it's a home carpentry project, as opposed to a mere board. I suggest you use a darkish color, something along the lines of spider guts. Use your chisel to open the paint can. Have your gun ready in case Mr. Schmidt is lurking around. Once you've finished your board, you can move on to a more advanced project, such as a harpsichord. But if you're really going to get into home carpentry, you should have a home workshop. You will find that your workshop is very useful as a place to store lawn sprinklers and objects you intend to fix sometime before you die. My wife and I have worked out out a simple eight-step procedure for deciding which objects to store in my home workshop: 1. My wife tells me an object is broken. For instance, she may say, "The lamp on my bedside table doesn't work." 2. I wait several months, in case my wife is mistaken. 3. My wife notifies me she is not mistaken. "Remember the lamp on my bedside table?" she says. "Yes?" I say. "Still broken," she says. 4. I conduct a preliminary investigation. In the case of the lamp, I flick the switch and note that the lamp doesn't go on. "You're right," I tell my wife. "That lamp doesn't work." 5. I wait 6 to 19 months, hoping that God will fix the lamp, or the Russians will attack us and the entire world will be a glowing heap of radioactive slag and nobody will care about the lamp anymore. 6. My wife then alerts me that the lamp still doesn't work. "The lamp still doesn't work," she says, sometimes late at night. 7. I try to repair the lamp on the spot. Usually, I look for a likely trouble spot and whack it with a blunt instrument. This often works on lamps. It rarely works on microwave ovens. 8. If the on-the-spot repair doesn't work, I say: "I'll have to take this lamp down to the home workshop." This is my way of telling my wife that she should get another lamp if she has any short-term plans, say, to do any reading in bed. If you follow this procedure, after a few years you will have a great many broken objects in your home workshop. In the interim, however, it will look barren. This is why you need tools. To give your shop an attractive, nonbarren appearance, you should get several thousand dollars worth of tools and hang them from pegboards in a graceful display. Basically, there are four different kinds of tools: Tools You Can Hit Yourself With (hammers, axes). Tools You Can Cut Yourself With (saws, knives, hoes, axes). Tools You Can Stab Yourself With (screwdrivers, chisels). Tools That, If Dropped Just Right, Can Penetrate Your Foot (awls). I have a radial arm saw, which is like any other saw except that it has a blade that spins at several billion revolutions per second and therefore can sever your average arm in a trice. When I operate my rad- ial arm saw, I use a safety procedure that was developed by X-ray machine technicians: I leave the room. I turn off all the power in the house, leave a piece of wood near the saw, scurry to a safe distance, and turn the power back on. That is how I made my board. Once you get the hang of using your tools, you'll make all kinds of projects. Here are some other ones I've made: A length of rope. Wood with nails in it. Sawdust. If you'd like plans for any of these projects, just drop some money in an envelope and send it to me and I'll keep it. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ And now, another silly excuse from Joe_User for why he has been working on the same programming assignment for twelve weeks running: Student: (to consultant) "I don't know what I'm doing. I never listen to the teacher during class. I just take notes." Mark Woodruff & bcjb. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Used Car ============ By Richard Lawson (STERMAN @ CITROMEO) ( This is reputed to be a true story ) It seems there was a man looking for a used car. Perusing the want ads, he came across this item: Two-year-old Corvette. Good condition. Low mileage. $75 Unable to believe the price, and believing the price to be a typo, he called the number in the ad. A woman answered and assured him that the price was correct as printed -- $75. The man got her address and rushed to her home. Arriving at the address, the prospective buyer knocked at the door, which was answered by a middle-aged woman. She took him into the garage and showed him the merchandise. As advertised, it was a two-year-old Corvette, in good condition and with low mileage. The man again asked the price and was again quoted $75. Incredulous, but no fool, he wrote a check. When the registration had been signed over to him, the new owner of the Corvette said to the seller: "Lady, why did you sell me that car for such a low price? You could easily have gotten thousands of dollars for it!" He received this explanation: "This is my husband's car. Last month he left me and ran off with his secretary. Last week he wrote me a letter asking me to sell his Corvette and send him the money." Thus the deal was completed to the satisfaction of both parties. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Q: How many IBM types does it take to change a light bulb? A: 100. Ten to do it, and 90 to write document number GC7500439-0001, Multitasking Incandescent Source System Facility, of which 10% of the pages state only "This page intentionally left blank", and 20% of the definitions are of the form ".of 4;A:...... consists of sequences of non-blank characters separated by blanks". lmf ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Mathematics Glossary ==================== Rainer Koch (UNI011 @ DBNRHRZ1) Any student who ever sat or slept trough a mathematics course knows that certain words and phrases occur very frequently. This glossary might eliminate some confusion. When the instructor says He really means ------------------------ --------------- trivial The student might be able to do it in three hours or so. simple An "A" student can do it in a week or so. easy This topic would make a good master's thesis. clear The instructor can do it (he thinks). obvious The instructor is sure it is in his notes somewhere. certainly The instructor saw one of his instructors do it, but has completely forgotten how it was done. left as an exercise The instructor lost his notes. for the student is well known The instructor heard that someone once did it. can be shown The instructor thinks it might be true, but has no idea how to prove it. the diligent student It is an unsolved problem - can show probably harder than Fermat's Last Theorem. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Shaggy Dogs =========== Last month, (NutWorks Issue010), we printed a few "shaggy dog" stories. To our utter joy, several people have sent in more shaggy dogs for us to print. We received so many in fact, that we couldn't possibly shove them all into one issue. It is a known fact in the world of medi- cine that exposure to too many shaggy dog stories in one sitting can cause excess groaning, (which can lead to sore throats), and can overwork the "jovial-major" muscles. So, what we'll do is this: You keep on sending us your favorite shaggy dog stories, and we will print ONLY ONE PER MONTH, so they don't get tiresome, and to save you from the medical expense of alleviating the above mentioned malignancies. Here is this month's Shaggy Dog... bcjb. There once was a hunter that travelled to deep Africa. He hired a local guide to show him the way through Africa to a legendary lake where, supposedly, there were dolphins that lived forever. After the first day, the hunter found a myna bird which perched itself on his shoulder for the rest of the trip. On the 5th day, the guide pointed out a dead lion in the path and indicated that the hunter should pass around the dead lion. The hunter didn't heed the guide's warnings and stepped right over the lion, whereupon he was arrested by the National Police. The reason: "Transporting a myna across staid lions for immortal porpoises." (Contributed by Henry Nussbacher) ------------------------------------------------------------------------