|
'Twas the night before crisis, and all through the house The programmers were wrung out, too mindless to care, When out in the lobby there arose such a clatter More rapid than eagles, his programs they came, His eyes were glazed over, his fingers were lean He spoke not a word, but went straight to his work,
The updates updated, the deletes they deleted,
The system was finished, the tests were concluded.
'Twas the night before Christmas and all through the nets
The floppies were stacked by the modem with care
The files were nestled all snug in a folder And leaving the keyboard along with my mouse When up from the drive there arose such a clatter Away to the mouse I flew like a flash, The glow from the screen on the keyboard below When what to my wondering eyes should appear And a tiny disk driver so SCSI and quick More rapid than trackballs his cursors they came, "Now Flasher! Now Dasher! Now Raster and Bixel! To the top of the stack. To the top of the heap." As data that before the wild electrons fly, So up to the screentop the cursors they flew And then in a twinkling I heard the high whine As I gazed at the screen with a puzzling frown He was dressed all in bytes from header to footer A bundle of bits he had flung on his back His eyes how they glazed, his hair was so scary, His droll little mouth was drawn up like a GIF The stump of a routine he held tight in his code He spoke not a word but looked right at me He self-decompressed and I watched him unfold, And the whispering sound of my hard drive's head He went straight to his work without saying a word And 'tis the whole truth, as the story is told, He sprang to the serial port as if truly on fire But I heard him exclaim as he scrolled out of sight
Santa Claus Is Not Coming To Town (He's Surfin' the Net) I've just received some shocking news, via e-mail sent from the North Pole. While I'm not at liberty to identify my source, I can say his email address is that of "blitzen@npole.com." I fear the worst. The situation being as it is, I feel it's my duty as a journalist to pass along to the children of this country whatever information has been sent to me. As a human being, though, I wish I could just close my eyes and make it all go away.... The message reads as follows: Urgent! I send this in hopes someone can help! Christmas is in jeopardy!! Santa Claus has become a recluse up here, and rumor around camp has it he's going to sit this year out. For the past two months, thousands of children have foregone their traditional requests for bikes, dolls, little puppies and Scooter Pies and instead have asked for computer modems that will allow them to "Surf the Net." Santa, confused by such a huge demand for phone utensils, took it upon himself two weeks ago to check out the Internet and see what the fuss was all about. He hasn't left his room since...
NORTH POLE (API) - MICROSOFT announced an agreement with Santa Claus Industries to acquire Christmas at a press conference held via satellite from Santa's summer estate somewhere in the southern hemisphere. In the deal, Microsoft would gain exclusive rights to Christmas, Reindeer, and other unspecified inventions. In addition, Microsoft will gain access to millions of households through the Santa Sleigh. The announcement also included a notice that beginning Jan 1, 1995, Christmas and the Reindeer names would be copyrighted by Microsoft. This unprecedented move was facilitated by the recently acquired MS Court. Microsoft stated its commitment to "all who have made Christmas great," and vowed to "make licensing of the Christmas and Reindeer names available to all." It is believed that the guidelines for licensing these names, due before Halloween, will be very strict. When asked "Why buy Christmas?" Bill Gates replied "Microsoft has been working on a more efficient delivery mechanism for all of our products for some time, but recognized that the Santa Sleigh has some immediate benefits. We'll use it first for the release of Windows 95 and Office 95." In a multimedia extravaganza, the attendees were shown a seemingly endless video stream of products that make up the deal. It ended with a green and red version of the Microsoft logo, and a new Christmas 95 trademark, leading into the announcement of the first product from the deal. Vixen, the new Director of Holidays and Celebrations said, "The first step is to assimilate Christmas within the Microsoft Organization. This will take some time, so don't expect any changes this year." She continued, "our big plans are for next year, when we release Christmas 95. It will be bigger and better than last year." She further elaborated that "Windows users who sign up with MS Network will get sneak previews of Christmas[95] as early as November first." Christmas 95 is scheduled for release in December of 1995, though one unnamed source said that it is dangerously close to the end of the year and may slip into the first half of 1996. An economist at Goldman Sachs explained that a slip would be catastrophic to next year's economy and the nation's tax revenue, possibly requiring the IRS to move the deadline for filing income tax returns to three months after Christmas, whenever that was. "But it could be good in the long term," he explained. "With Microsoft controlling Christmas, we may see it move to May or June, which are much slower months for retailers. This may serve to even out the economy over the year." When asked if other holidays are being considered, Mr. Gates explained that "Christmas is the flagship of holidays, so we wanted to start there. Not all holidays are available for sale, and the remaining will have to show a good long term business," suggesting that holidays with a short history may not be in the plans. Though specific terms of the agreement were withheld pending final FTC approval, a Santa official confirmed that the deal was "sizeable, even for a man of Santa's stature." Some analysts think that Santa has saturated the Holiday market, and is looking for a means to expand his business to year 'round products and services. Others contend that the Jolly Red Man is looking to retire in Redmond. A spokesperson for the most famous Reindeer could not be reached for comment.
The Twelve Bugs of Christmas For the first bug of Christmas, my manager said to me: For the second bug of Christmas, my manager said to me: (similarly) Tell them it's a feature, say it's not supported change the documentation blame it on the hardware find a way around it say they need an upgrade reinstall the software ask for a dump! run with the debugger try to reproduce it ask them how they did it, and see if they can do it again.
|