T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
607.1 | It IS | RICKS::SATOW | | Fri Jan 06 1989 16:48 | 5 |
| Hate to inform you, but according to Dante, the last circle of Hell
IS frozen over. So your observation about the weather could mean
that you are in Hell now.
Clay
|
607.2 | ... Chill out, man ... | CSSE::CIUFFINI | God must be a Gemini... | Fri Jan 06 1989 16:53 | 6 |
|
Hmmm,
We'd then have to consider "a snowball's chance in hell".
Sounds like certainty to me.
jc
|
607.3 | hot and cold, running | COOKIE::DEVINE | Bob Devine, CXN | Fri Jan 06 1989 17:57 | 11 |
| Does anybody know how the concepts of hell/heaven and heat/cold
became randomly shuffled throughout various stories?
For example, today's "common knowledge" is that hell is firey hot
but heaven is perpetually pleasant (sorta like Southern California ;-).
But wasn't Elysian supposed to be a perfect flame that purifies?
Perhaps the selection of hot/cold depended on the person's birth
place. After becoming accustomed to Mediterrean warmth, the
possibility of being frozen might scare more people back to the
straight-and-narrow.
|
607.4 | There's no trick to believing opposite things at the same time | PSTJTT::TABER | KA1SVY -- the new lid on the block. | Fri Jan 06 1989 20:09 | 3 |
| > For example, today's "common knowledge" is that hell is firey hot...
And yet, we say "it's cold as hell out there."
|
607.5 | Nirvana at last | MELEE::BIELSKI | how far is Nirvana? | Fri Jan 06 1989 22:36 | 5 |
|
re: .0, a bug-free program would be written, never to have
the source code changed again.
might this have something to do with superconductivity?
|
607.6 | It's not the heat, it's the humidity... | NEXUS::D_WHITE | Uncle Dave | Sat Jan 07 1989 02:11 | 10 |
| re .3
There is some true to the notion that the concept of hell depends
on your point of origin. The people of the Himalayas consider
hell to be very cold.
Personally, I have no notion about whether hell is hot or cold,
but I am positive that it is HUMID!
Dave
|
607.7 | or something like that | AITG::DERAMO | Daniel V. {AITG,ZFC}:: D'Eramo | Sat Jan 07 1989 19:18 | 9 |
| There used to be a line of greeting cards that featured
newspaper style pictures and headlines on the front with
a witty follow-up inside. One of them had on the front a
photo of a deserted, frozen wasteland with the headline
HELL FREEZES OVER! On the inside it said ...
I was expecting to hear from you right about now.
Dan
|
607.8 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sun Jan 08 1989 10:17 | 7 |
| I used to work with someone who maintained that a bug was disorder
in a programme, and therefore entropy. A first consequence of this is
that a bug must have mass, and so you can tell the number of bugs in a
programme by comparing its weight with a bug-free programme.
A second consequence is that at absolute zero all programmes would
be bug-free.
|
607.9 | Is it a bird? a plane? no, its.... | GIDDAY::VISSER | On a clear day, you can see vacation | Tue Jan 10 1989 08:24 | 9 |
|
If hell has frozen over, that will explain the flying pigs I can
see out of the window, and the fact that I had a peaceful day at
work!
..klaas..
|
607.10 | ... the muse of music ... | CSSE::CIUFFINI | God must be a Gemini... | Tue Jan 10 1989 17:01 | 4 |
| re: -1
If you are seeing pigs outside your window, it could be
that you have been listening to too much Pink Floyd.... :-)
|
607.11 | try the Southeast Expressway in Rush Hour | FLASH1::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Tue Jan 10 1989 19:55 | 6 |
| Re .10:
Oh, it's easy to see pigs outside your window. The rarity is _flying_
pigs.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
607.12 | Pink who?... | GIDDAY::VISSER | On a clear day, you can see vacation | Wed Jan 11 1989 04:36 | 7 |
| re .10
I guess I had a "momentary lapse of reason", probably because of
all the "animals" that live on the "dark side of the moon".
..klaas..
|
607.13 | And by the way, which one's Pink? | AYOV27::ISMITH | With New Two-way Lemon Freshness! | Wed Jan 11 1989 09:17 | 8 |
| Re .12 (Klaas),
A nice pair of animals were they? Or just relics? Make the
final cut and come out from behind that wall of yours because,
really, we wish you were here.
Ian.
|
607.14 | | VISA::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Jan 11 1989 13:21 | 2 |
| Far be it from a moderator to meddle in a topic as obscured by
clouds as this.
|
607.15 | | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Wed Jan 11 1989 13:36 | 5 |
|
Hey, don't spend time or money on that group anymore.
Just be careful with the relics of that axe...
Arie
|
607.16 | me? go out with you??..ha ha ha! | GIDDAY::VISSER | On a clear day, you can see vacation | Thu Jan 12 1989 03:02 | 9 |
|
Having started this minor rathole, I guess I'd better get back to
the topic.......
If hell HAS frozen over, the I'd better get ready for my date with
the gorgeous lady I met down at the health club.......
..klaas..
|
607.17 | Through the Looking Glass... | SSGBPM::KENAH | Six wrongs make a left | Thu Jan 12 1989 23:35 | 7 |
| � If you are seeing pigs outside your window, it could be
� that you have been listening to too much Pink Floyd....
Or reading too much Lewis Carroll...
andrew
|
607.18 | programs taking flight | CRLVMS::TREESE | Win Treese, Cambridge Research Lab | Thu Jan 12 1989 23:58 | 9 |
| Re: .8
Does this imply that a bug-free program is massless? If so, it
will depart instantly at the speed of light.
Therefore, bugs are useful to keep our programs around.
- Win
|
607.19 | Yet another digression | DECSIM::HEILMAN | Buckeroo Hanzai | Fri Jan 13 1989 18:13 | 8 |
| Starting yet another digression (that relates to two previous ones...sort
of), has anyone developed a pantheon of gods and spirits that relate
to programming activities?
I have always thought that there should be some gods and spirits to
whom we could make offerings of burnt listings to protect our software
from bugs. Any ideas?
|
607.20 | | VISA::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Jan 13 1989 21:24 | 6 |
| We already have the basis for a dualist theology - those who
believe bug-free programmes are possible, and those who belive that it
is only the bugs that keep programmes within the solar system and
therefore knowable.
May all you bugs be features...
|
607.21 | | BMT::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Mon Jan 16 1989 16:12 | 3 |
| I always thought Murphy was the programmers' patron....
-dave
|
607.22 | then there are gremlins | MARKER::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason | Mon Jan 16 1989 19:47 | 8 |
| Re "bug" patron:
In Norse mythology, Loki (not the Marvel Comics version of same)
would be appropriate.
So would Eris, goddess of Discord.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
607.23 | Kobolds | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sun Jan 22 1989 12:12 | 16 |
| Other mythical quality degraders were Kobolds. These creatures
inhabited mines, particularly iron mines, and apart from playing other
tricks they would ensure that the steel produced was poor quality.
These days the poor quality is generally attributed to an excess of
cobalt, not of Kobolds, and modern chemistry can not only solve the
problem but find practical uses for the cobalt extracted.
Maybe in a hundred years people will be saying a similar thing for
computer science and bugs.
2089 News Flash.
----------------
"Modern bugge recycling facility built in Maynard. Now all bugges
are automatically extracted from carelessly written code and inserted
in passing worms and viruses to ensure their early demise".
|
607.24 | "knock, knock." | FLASH1::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Mon Jan 23 1989 16:13 | 23 |
| Re .23:
> Other mythical quality degraders were Kobolds. These creatures
>inhabited mines, particularly iron mines, and apart from playing other
>tricks they would ensure that the steel produced was poor quality.
>
> These days the poor quality is generally attributed to an excess of
>cobalt, not of Kobolds ...
If it isn't perfecvtly clear, the metal Cobalt was names after the
Kobolds. Kobolds were rather nasty little underground dwellers,
slightly worse than the "Knockers" of the English mines. Kobolds
and Knockers might cause harm to miners, especially if there were
only one or two at a spot underground. The miners would hear knocking
sounds from the mine tunnels, coming out of the darkness, and know
that the Kobolds were coming to get them ....
It's unclear, but mythologically, the Kobolds appear to have some
relationship to the Earth-elementals called Gnomes (no relation
to the garden-decoration variety). Oh, well, start a mine, and
there goes the neighborhood.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
607.25 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Jan 25 1989 10:54 | 5 |
| I had heard of the Kobold -> cobalt derivation many years ago, so
I checked it in my Oxford dictionary before I entered the note.
Maybe we need a note on obscure, unlikely or impossible
derivations.
|
607.26 | Impossible? No - Unlikely? Yes. | SSGBPM::KENAH | Six wrongs make a left | Thu Jan 26 1989 00:02 | 8 |
| Isaac Asimov wrote a book entitled "Words of Science", wherein he
traces the origins of common and uncommon scientific words. The
paths that a word takes from its original meaning to its current
use are sometimes torturous, and very often fascinating.
F'rinstance: alcohol derives from an Arabic phrase that translates
roughly as "the mascara."
andrew
|
607.27 | | TKOV51::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Tue Apr 24 1990 10:13 | 4 |
| When missionaries described hell as fire and brimstone, the
Eskimos used to get far-away gleams in their eyes. The missionaries
had to obtain special political permission in order to describle
hell as a frozen wasteland.
|
607.28 | Dante | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Apr 24 1990 22:53 | 6 |
| If I recall correctly, Dante's hell had many levels (nine?). Which one
you were committed to depended on your sins in life. Some of the levels
had fire and brimstone. The bottom one, where the devil himself was
located, was ice. The devil was frozen up to his nose in the ice. When
his nose ran .... The descriptions are all very graphic, and might
very well deter believers.
|