T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1096.1 | Gotcha! :-) | DRDAN::KALIKOW | DEC + Internet: Webalong together | Sun May 01 1994 15:51 | 10 |
| Note 1096.0 Perssonal names - please explain here... No replies
^
|
BTW thanks for the explanation... That's always been of interest and
now I know!
As for mine, I love a good double-entendre... and I have another one
brewing, albeit more visual...
|
1096.2 | Fun with kerning puns | DRDAN::KALIKOW | World-Wide Web: Postmodem Culture | Sun May 01 1994 15:59 | 3 |
| Of course, it does depend on the particular fixed-width font your
X display, terminal or termulator offers...
|
1096.3 | Get the comfy chair! | ALLVAX::GELINEAU | | Sun May 01 1994 19:20 | 7 |
| mine is from a Python sketch about the Spanish Inquisition (no one
expected it..):
"...among our chief weapons are (personal name) to the Pope..."
--Angela
|
1096.4 | Notice that I changed the title | TELGAR::WAKEMANLA | Where's the last End If? | Mon May 02 1994 10:15 | 4 |
| Mine is from the latest book in Douglas Adams Hitchhikers
Guide Trilogy, Mostly Harmless.
Larry
|
1096.5 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut res per opera mea meliores fiant | Mon May 02 1994 11:40 | 7 |
| Mine, which is always in Latin and may be the spark that set Derek off
on this topic, currently is:
Ut res per opera mea meliores fiant
May things be made better by my works
Could change tomorrow, though - watch the space above. :-)
|
1096.6 | | BBRDGE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Tue May 03 1994 01:33 | 6 |
| Mine, (which I admit is not original) is because I am a
Kiwi living in France and I derive a perverse personal
feeling of vengeance when insulting the French navy
every time I enter a VAXnote.
/Chris.
|
1096.7 | hmmmmmmm | ALLVAX::GELINEAU | | Tue May 03 1994 10:16 | 7 |
| well that's odd - my personal name didn't show up
in .4 although the name itself is still set...
it is "fear, surprise, and an almost fanatical devotion"
--angela
|
1096.8 | | 19715::PARODI | John H. Parodi DTN 381-1640 | Tue May 03 1994 11:48 | 7 |
|
Re: .7
Perhaps you have a personal name set for MAIL but not for NOTES? Try
entering SHOW PROFILE at the notes prompt.
JP
|
1096.9 | Gands/Antigands | CLYDE::KOWALEWICZ_M | And then there were none. | Tue May 03 1994 13:40 | 4 |
| The title of a sci-fi short story I read a while ago.
Now who wrote it ???
kbear (memory is the second thing to go :-)
|
1096.10 | Good story, I remember it | TLE::JBISHOP | | Wed May 04 1994 09:19 | 6 |
| I think it might have been Frederic Brown, and "gand" refers
to Gandhi's non-violent non-cooperation, applied here as the
foundation of an entire planet's culture. But I don't think
you have the right title.
-John Bishop
|
1096.11 | thanks, and... | ALLVAX::GELINEAU | fear, surprise, and an almost fanatical devotion | Wed May 04 1994 10:01 | 7 |
| re .7: thanks JP - I never knew about that...
re .10: is that the story where people unite against
violence with the phrase F.I.W. (freedom: I won't)?
--angela
|
1096.12 | | CLYDE::KOWALEWICZ_M | And then there were none. | Wed May 04 1994 10:49 | 6 |
| <- .10 .11
I 'm fairly sure the title is correct. Or maybe that was the
last line in the story? Anyhoo, yup that's the one.
kbear
|
1096.13 | | FORTY2::KNOWLES | Integrated Service: 2B+O | Fri May 06 1994 06:59 | 8 |
| Mine's a reference to ISDN, in which the Basic Rate Interface provided
for 2 B-channels and one D-channel transmitting over one bit of wire,
roughly, I think. I guess the D is for `data', but no one ever told me
why the control channels were dubbed `B'. Lots of ISDN implementations
today use the Primary Rate Interface (32B + D, or 26 in some parts of
the world), but my name's not that long.
b
|
1096.14 | Point of information -- rathole alert! | CTHQ::MOHN | blank space intentionally filled | Fri May 06 1994 14:24 | 17 |
| re: -1
The "B" channels in ISDN-speak are "Bearer" Channels; they carry the
telephony connections. The "D" channel is, indeed, the "Data" channel,
which is used primarily for signalling purposes to set up the
connections (although some implementations allow the user to use the
bandwidth for data connections, primarily packet data; i.e., X.25).
The Basic Rate Interface is 2B+D, where each B channel is 64K, and the
D channel is 16K. The Primary Rate Interface is 30B+D in Europe and
some other places, where each B channel is 64K (still) and the D
channel is also 64K; in North America, Japan (and other places that use
the T carrier digital hierarchy) the PRI is 23B+D (23*64K +64K). Back
to your regularly scheduled program...
My PN is familiar to all avid readers of DEC (ooops, make that digital)
documentation.
|
1096.15 | | WELSWS::HILLN | It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall | Thu May 12 1994 07:15 | 17 |
| Over the years I've used several that I can still remember:
"Technology is my vorpal sword"
when I was a Technology Consultant, the vorpal sword was the deadly
weapon used in Jabberwocky (author: Lewis Carroll).
"An emigrant in Paris"
when on relocation from the UK in la Belle France
"Don't worry we have a cunning plan"
after the planning of the 1994 European restructure was announced.
It's a misquote from Baldrick who always has a cunning plan which
inevitably is either so silly or so unsuccessful that it's very funny.
My current one is a quote from Sid, the cafe owner, in Last Of the
Summer Wine. It seems to me to sum up the attitude of so many people I
know of when they're faced with immense problems.
|
1096.16 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon May 23 1994 03:59 | 39 |
| As you can see from the following, I have been using the same
personal name for at least 6 years. A personal name, in my opinion,
should be just that; something that people can recognise you by even if
you are forced by outside circumstances to change node names, user
names, or even companies.
The name came as a train of thought, thinking as a security
consultant. Almost all security problems in computer systems come from
letting human beings have access to them, and if you give something
access to your computer system that does damage you are bringing in a
trojan horse.
Then think of what humanity is doing to the ecosystem. They should
never have been allowed here, but now they are here they are going to
be very difficult to get rid of, a bit like a computer virus.
Anyway, 6 years later I am a programmer rather than a security
consultant, but I have seen no reason to change my node name, user name
or notes personal name. I know of someone in another notes file who
uses a TPU procedure to select at random a personal name from a large
file every time she enters NOTES, but that way lies schizophrenia.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
<<< BONNET::TOOLS:[NOTES$LIBRARY]VALBONNE.NOTE;2 >>>
-< It's not just a job, it's an adventure >-
================================================================================
Note 1015.9 England,dreams and stomachs 9 of 27
PASTIS::MONAHAN "humanity is a trojan horse" 9 lines 24-MAR-1988 09:49
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Actually, there is nowhere in Cheddar that actually makes cheese,
but I have had excellent cheese from a small dairy about 6 miles from
Cheddar. They use traditional methods, and they make a bit of a show of
their cheese making process. I suppose it could qualify as Cheddar,
since that would probably be the nearest large village.
American cheddar cheese bears no significant relationship to the
real product apart from the name. They probably should call it buffalo
cheese - at least that is a place name they can call their own.
|
1096.17 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | $ SET MIDNIGHT | Mon May 23 1994 19:37 | 12 |
| >Almost all security problems in computer systems come from
>letting human beings have access to them,
>Then think of what humanity is doing to the ecosystem. They should
>never have been allowed here, but now they are here they are going to
>be very difficult to get rid of, a bit like a computer virus.
Don't forget the famous line, "We had to destroy the village to save it."
We'll have to kill every last one of us to save ourselves.
-- Norman Diamond
|
1096.18 | Obvious? | KERNEL::MORRIS | Which universe did you dial? | Wed Jun 01 1994 09:33 | 18 |
| My personal name is borne out of working in support for too long.
Ofttimes we would get off the phone after talking to some air-head
customer and quip "What planet was _he_ on?".
Combine that line of thought with another quip going something like "He
was asking me to help him sort out (insert problem type here); I don't
knwo what number he thought he'd dialled".
Mix them together in a cocktail shaker of a brain and you get to "Which
universe did you dial?" which is pronounced with dollops of incredulity
and the emphasis on the interrogative.
Jon
p.s. I have a friend who uses one of my favourite pieces of surreal
personal nomenclature: "Every clown has a silver lining". If you're
out there Graham, post a reply!
|
1096.19 | The secret is strong ears. | MBALDY::LANGSTON | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Fri Dec 02 1994 09:58 | 17 |
| I used to use "The secret is strong ears." This came from a story I read in the
L.A. Times several years about a long-lived ritual competition among a tribe
of native Alaskans (I believe it is Alaska. They're from *somewhere* in northern
North America). The competition involves carrying some heavy object over a long
distance by hanging the object from one's ear.
The interviewer asked the champion his secret to winning. His reply is what I
used to use as my personal name. I thought it a good description of an
essential part of systems analysis and problem solving.
With Digital's recent and seemingly accelerating activity to divest ourselves
of a lot of software business and more and more employees, customers analysts
and consultants asking what our software strategy is, I've cynically changed
my personal name to what it is now: "our middle name is 'Equipment,'" as an
indication of what I think our software strategy is.
Bruce
|
1096.20 | You mean this is reality ? | PEKING::SULLIVAND | Dumb terminal | Fri Dec 16 1994 05:25 | 8 |
| Re .9, .10, .11, 12:
the author was Eric Frank Russell
There's a bit about him (including "And then there were none") in the
Science Fiction conference NOTED::SF, notesd 468, 785 & 888.
|