T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1127.1 | | JRDV04::DIAMOND | segmentation fault (california dumped) | Sun Dec 25 1994 17:00 | 8 |
| Computer programmers are maligned both publicly (as nerds in society)
and privately (as nerds in Digital).
Used car dealers are a rank above politicians.
Then there are agents of top secret organizations who are paid by a
country's taxpayers to deprive them of civil rights. The word "spook"
is unjustifiably kind.
|
1127.2 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Dec 27 1994 09:29 | 5 |
| What no one tells you is that "spook" is a description of the
personality type preferred by that Certain Internationally-oriented
American organization.
Ann B.
|
1127.3 | | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | SERVE<a href="SURF_GLOBAL">LOCAL</a> | Tue Dec 27 1994 11:01 | 7 |
| The sUBTLY cONCEALED aCRONYM in .2 reminds me what we called the same
organization when I consulted to them in the '70s from Bolt Beranek &
Newman Inc., but when a conditition of their funding was that we
neverNeverNEVER could reveal whence the $$s sprang... The Cigar
Institute of America. O'course, them were the days before second-hand
smoke was an issue... :-)
|
1127.4 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Dec 28 1994 00:41 | 21 |
| Ah yes, back in the early 70s I worked on speech processing with
someone who was an acknowleged world expert, but had an openly
expressed political viewpoint that meant he could never become a
government employee. Our main customer was a government laboratory
whose name or location could never be mentioned, but was a subsidiary
of GCHQ.
They would come to us with purely hypothetical questions, like
"Imagine you had a tape recording of a conversation that sounded almost
as if there was a shower going on in the background; how would you
process it to make it more intelligible?"
We had a meeting at their site once, and you had to be escorted to
the toilet by an employee since there were 3 different door combination
locks between the meeting room and the toilet.
They had very efficient receptionists. I and my colleague had to
sit together with the chief receptionist pointing a gun just slightly
to one side of us, while his buddy sat way off to our left with his own
gun. They put their guns away when a member of staff positively
identified us.
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1127.5 | | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | SERVE<a href="SURF_GLOBAL">LOCAL</a> | Wed Dec 28 1994 00:52 | 17 |
| I guess our backgrounds are far more similar that I'd known! :-) One
of my most amusing recollections of my daze as a Consultant to
SpookLand was the time, deep in the sub-sub-basement of the Cigar
Institute, when I was beginning another gig, this one on de-noise-
ifying a recording of someone speaking a Slavic language, whilst the
listening device producing the recording was heavily masked by what
sounded like a vacuum cleaner. While the tape was being played, and I
and my Contract Minotaurs (that was a typo but I'm standing by it!)
were interrupted by the cleaning staff, just outside our laboratory,
starting up what sounded like an identical vacuum cleaner...
Only later did I speculate that the sound-track in question might have
been recorded close to those premises, rather than beamed across the
ocean from a more Slavic venue... "Spy vs. Spy" might have been
internecine rather than global... :-)
Ah, war-stories... I got a million...
|
1127.6 | | FORTY2::KNOWLES | | Fri Jan 13 1995 06:01 | 9 |
| Back to the topic. I don't know for certain but I suspect (Nick Hill
could confirm/refute) that one of the main reasons for the publication
of the New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary was that the old one
(vintage 1933, but with Addenda growing for 60-odd years) defined
abbreviator as `vatican official who draws up the Pope's briefs'-
so the profession wasn't exactly maligned, but its copy-book was
blotted.
b
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1127.7 | | WELSWS::HILLN | It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall | Fri Jan 13 1995 06:49 | 13 |
| Brian
I'd like to help, but I only have the recently published NSOED, not
the 1933 edition. And of course they don't cite examples like
'abbreviator' among their reasons for revising and republishing.
Nick
PS: whilst discussing this I'll repeat the confession about one of
my forenames which is Hollyer.
Many years ago I discovered that a Hollyer is a brothel keeper or
whoremonger.
|
1127.8 | I wonder who pulled them down...wouldn't want that job either | SAPPHO::DUBOIS | HONK if you've slept w/Cmdr Riker! | Fri Jan 13 1995 08:35 | 26 |
| < `vatican official who draws up the Pope's briefs'-
Not a profession I'd want to have...
Can you imagine?! Following the pope around and doing nothing all day but
pulling up his underwear?
Carol ;-)
|
1127.9 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jan 13 1995 09:47 | 1 |
| I'd have thought he's more of a boxer shorts kinda guy.
|
1127.10 | whitesmith? | GIDDAY::BURT | DPD (tm) | Sun May 21 1995 21:30 | 5 |
|
Does anyone know what a "whitesmith" is? It's listed as the profession of one
of my great-greats. (Which cuts out refrigerator makers :^} )
Chele
|
1127.11 | ?? | BIRMVX::HILLN | It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall | Mon May 22 1995 05:05 | 5 |
| Nothing directly in the NSOED, but I'd suggest that it was a smith
would be involved in the making of white dyestuffs.
As a deduction it seems a little stretched though. I'd expect white to
be made by milling rather than smithing.
|
1127.12 | Metal | FORTY2::KNOWLES | Per ardua ad nauseam | Mon May 22 1995 07:09 | 17 |
| If you try the NSOED sv. `smith' Nick, I think you'll find a more
general `making' sort of idea behind `smith' - hence `goldsmith',
`silversmith' (both to do with metals) and indeed `wordsmith' -
which may have been a joke (suggesting that writers actually do work,
rather than stealing their pay checks).
Here's an idea: a blacksmith dealt with base metals, and a whitesmith
dealt with precious ones (so some whitesmiths specialized as
goldsmiths and some as silversmiths). Perhaps I should take this reply
to the Fictionary note.
A less plausible idea would involve the temperatures worked at - but at
that rate a blacksmith should be a redsmith.
This is getting silly.
b
|
1127.13 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Mon May 22 1995 09:17 | 6 |
|
from _The Chambers Dictionary_:
whitesmith - a worker in tinned or white iron; a tinsmith; a polisher
or finisher of metals
|
1127.14 | You think I'm Linford Christie, or what? | BIRMVX::HILLN | It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall | Mon May 22 1995 10:20 | 12 |
| .12
Give me a break...
I had to fetch the NSOED from another room separated from here by
two flights of stairs, and find the white and smith entries, and start
to compose an answer, all within the ACB time-out period. I thought I
did reasonably well under the circumstances.
:-)
Nick
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1127.15 | thankyou | GIDDAY::BURT | DPD (tm) | Mon May 22 1995 17:13 | 1 |
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