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Thread: Computer Jokes

  1. #1
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    Default Computer Jokes

    Bill Gates picks his own punishment
    Satan greets him: "Welcome Mr. Gates, we've been waiting for you. This will be your home for all eternity. You've been selfish, greedy and a big liar all your life. Now, since you've got me in a good mood, I'll be generous and give you a choice of three places in which you'll be locked up forever.

    Satan takes Bill to a huge lake of fire in which millions of poor souls are tormented and tortured. He then takes him to a massive coliseum where thousands of people are chased about and devoured by starving lions. Finally, he takes Bill to a tiny room in which there is a bottle of the finest wine sitting on a table. To Bill's delight, he sees a PC in the corner. Without hesitation, Bill says "I'll take this option."

    "Fine," says Satan, allowing Bill to enter the room. Satan locks the room after Bill.

    As he turns around, he bumps into Lucifer. "That was Bill Gates!" cried Lucifer. "Why did you give him the best place of all!"

    "That's what everyone thinks" snickered Satan.

    "The bottle has a hole in it!"

    "What about the PC?"

    "It's got Windows 95!" laughed Satan.

    "And it's missing three keys,"

    "Which three?"

    "Control, Alt and Delete."

  2. #2
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    Would you define OCR?
    OCR - Optical Character Recognition

    A technology that can take written words and convert them back into computer-readable form, provided they're in the right font, using the correct colors sometimes, at the right point size and pitch, dark enough on the paper, and you're prepared to spend several centuries correcting all the 1's that came out as l's, all the O's that came out as 0's, and all the :'s that come out like ;'s.

  3. #3
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    Top Ten Ways Y2K Will Affect Disney World
    10. Accidental switch back to 19,000 Leagues Under the Sea.

    9. Screwed up computers report EuroDisney turning a profit.

    8. Air traffic control glitch causes Dumbo to smack into a DC-10.

    7. The "It's a Small World After All" creatures go on a rampage.

    6. The Hall of Presidents keeps chanting "Kill Clinton, kill Clinton."

    5. When you wish upon a star, nothing happens.

    4. Unexpected power surge brings an angry Walt Disney back to life.

    3. "Main Street Electrical Parade" becomes "Main Street Two Guys With Plastic Flashlights Parade."

    2. Ticket machine accidentally dispenses day passes for less than $600.

    1. Two words: catapulting teacups.

  4. #4
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    Floppy disk care
    By following the instructions below, you should have error-free, long-lasting floppy disks.
    Never leave diskettes in the disk drive, as data can leak out of the disk and corrode the inner mechanics of the drive. Diskettes should be rolled up and stored in pencil holders.


    Diskettes should be cleaned and waxed once a week. Microscopic metal particles can be removed by waving a powerful magnet over the surface of the disk. Any stubborn metallic shavings can be removed with scouring powder and soap. When waxing the diskettes, make sure the surface is even. This will allow the diskette to spin faster, resulting in better access time.


    Do not fold diskettes unless they do not fit into the drive. "Big" diskettes may be folded and used in "little" disk drives.


    Never insert a diskette into the drive upside down. The data can fall off the surface of the disk and jam the intricate mechanics of the drive.


    Diskettes cannot be backed up by running them through the xerox machine. If your data is going to need to be backed up, simply insert two diskettes into the drive. Whenever you update a document, the data will be written on both diskettes.


    Diskettes should not be inserted or removed from the drive while the red light is flashing. Doing so could result in smeared or possibly unreadable text. Occasionally the red light remains flashing in what is known as a "hung" or "hooked" state. If your system is "hooking" you will probably need to insert a few coins before being allowed access to the slot.


    If your diskette is full and you need more storage space, remove the disk from the drive and shake vigorously for 2 minutes. This will pack the data enough (Data Compression) to allow for more storage. Be sure to cover all the openings with scotch tape to prevent loss data.


    Access time can be greatly improved by cutting more holes in the diskette jacket. This will provide more simultaneous access points to the disk.


    Diskettes may be used as coasters for beverage glasses, provided that they are properly waxed beforehand. Be sure to wipe the diskettes dry before using. (see item 2 above)


    Never use scissors and glue to manually edit documents. The data is stored much too small for the naked eye, and you may end up with data from some other document stuck in the middle of your document. Razor blades and scotch tape may be used, however, provided the user is equipped with an electron microscope.


    Periodically spray diskettes with insecticide to prevent system bugs from spreading.

  5. #5
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    The problem is at your end
    One of Microsoft's finest technicans was drafted and sent to boot camp. At the rifle range, he was given some instruction, a rifle, and bullets. He fired several shots at the target. The report came from the target area that all attempts had completely missed the target.

    The technician looked at his rifle, and then at the target. He looked at the rifle again, and then at the target again. He put his finger over the end of the rifle barrel and squeezed the trigger with his other hand. The end of his finger was blown off, whereupon he yelled toward the target area, "It's leaving here just fine, the trouble must be at your end!"

  6. #6
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    Is Windows a virus?
    With the recent problems being encountered by Windows users all across the country, people are begin to ask themselves if windows is a virus. In response to the high demand for an answer to that question a study was done and concluded the following.

    1. Viruses replicate quickly.
    Windows does this.

    2. Viruses use up valuable system resources, slowing down the system as they do so.
    Windows does this.

    3. Viruses will, from time to time, trash your hard disk.
    Windows does this.

    4. Viruses are usually carried, unkown to the user, along with valuable programs and systems.
    Windows does that too.

    5. Viruses will occasionally make the user suspect their system is too slow (see 2) and the user will buy new hardware.
    Same with Windows, yet again.

    Maybe Windows really is a virus.

    Nope! There is a difference!

    Viruses are well supported by their authors, are frequently updated, and tend to become more sophisticated as they mature. So there! Windows is not a virus.

  7. #7
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    Some possible computer bumper stickers
    1. BREAKFAST.COM Halted...Cereal Port Not Responding

    2. <The> Bad command or file name! Go stand in the corner.

    7. Southern DOS: Y'all reckon? (Yep/Nope)

    8. Backups? We don' *NEED* no steenking backups.

    9. E Pluribus Modem

    10. .... File not found. Should I fake it? (Y/N)

    11. Ethernet (n): something used to catch the etherbunny

    12. CONGRESS.SYS Corrupted: Re-boot Washington D.C (Y/N)?

    13. 11th commandment - Covet not thy neighbor's Pentium.

    14. Windows: Just another pane in the glass.

    15. SENILE.COM found . . . Out Of Memory . . .

    16. RAM disk is *not* an installation procedure.

    17. Smash forehead on keyboard to continue...

    18. COFFEE.EXE Missing - Insert Cup and Press Any Key

    19. ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI!

    20. E-mail returned to sender -- insufficient voltage.

    21. Error: Keyboard not attached. Press F1 to continue.

    22. "640K ought to be enough for anybody." - Bill Gates, 1981

    23. Press any key... no, no, no, NOT THAT ONE!

    24. Press any key to continue or any other key to quit...

    25. REALITY.SYS corrupted: Reboot universe? (Y/N/Q)

    26. Error reading FAT record: Try the SKINNY one? (Y/N)

    27. Hit any user to continue.

    28. Disk Full - Press F1 to belch.

    29. Backup not found: (A)bort (R)etry (P)anic

    30. (A)bort, (R)etry, (G)et a beer?

  8. #8
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    Mailing list users changing light bulbs
    Q: How many internet mail list subscribers does it take to change a light bulb?
    A: Exactly five hundred.

    1 to change the light bulb and to post to the mail list that the light bulb has been changed.

    7 to share similar experiences of changing light bulbs and how the light bulb could have been changed differently or to caution about the dangers of changing light bulbs.

    17 to point out spelling/grammar errors in posts about changing light bulbs.

    21 to flame the spell checkers.

    49 to write to the list administrator complaining about the light bulb discussion and its inappropriateness to this mail list.

    20 to correct spelling in the spelling/grammar flames.

    32 to post that this list is not about light bulbs and to please take this email exchange to alt.lite.bulb.

    69 to demand that cross posting to alt.grammar, alt.spelling and alt.punctuation about changing light bulbs be stopped.

    41 to defend the posting to this list saying that we all use light bulbs and therefore the posts are relevant to this mail list.

    106 to debate which method of changing light bulbs is superior, where to buy the best light bulbs, what brand of light bulbs work best for this technique, and what brands are faulty.

    12 to post URLs where one can see examples of different light bulbs.

    8 to post that the URLs were posted incorrectly, and to post corrected URLs.

    2 to post about links they found from the URLs that are relevant to this list which makes light bulbs relevant to this list.

    15 to concatenate all posts to date, then quote them including all headers and footers, and then add pointedly, "Me Too."

    6 to post to the list that they are unsubscribing because they cannot handle the light bulb controversy.

    9 to quote the "Me Too's" and happily add, "Me Three!"

    3 to suggest that posters request the light bulb FAQ.

    1 to propose new alt.change.lite.bulb newsgroup.

    24 to say this is just what alt.physic.cold_fusion was meant for, leave it here.

    53 votes for alt.lite.bulb.

  9. #9
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    Have a Microsoft Christmas
    'Twas the night before Christmas, and all through the house Not a creature was stirring, except father's mouse. The computer was humming, the icons were hopping, As father did last-minute Internet shopping.

    The stockings were hung next the modem with care In the hope that Santa would bring new software. The children were nestled all snug in their beds, With visions of computer games filling their heads.

    Dark Forces for Billy, Doom II for Dan, Carmen Sandiego for Pamela Ann. The letters to Santa had been sent out by mum, To [email protected]--

    Which now had been re-routed to Washington State Where Santa's workshop had been moved by Bill Gates. All the elves and the reindeer had had to skedaddle To flashy new quarters in suburban Seattle.

    After living a life that was simple and spare, Santa now finds he's a new billionaire, With a shiny red Porsche in place of his sleigh, And a house on Lake Washington just down the way > From where Bill has his mansion. The old fellow preens In black Gucci boots and red Calvin Klein jeans. The elves have stock options and desks with a view, Where they write computer code for Johnny and Sue.

    No more dolls or tin soldiers or little toy drums Will be under the tree, only compact disk roms With the Microsoft label. So spin up your drive, >From now on Christmas runs only on Win95.

    More rapid than eagles the competitors came, And Bill whistled, and shouted, and called them by name. "Now, ADOBE! now, CLARIS! now, INTUIT! too, Now, APPLE! and NETSCAPE! you're all of you through,

    It's Microsoft's SANTA that the kids can't resist, It's the ultimate software with a traditional twist - Recommended by no less than the jolly old elf, And on the package, a picture of Santa himself.

    Get 'em young, keep 'em long, is Microsoft's theme, And a merger with Santa is a marketer's dream. To the top of the NASDAQ! To the top of the Dow! Now dash away! dash away! dash away - wow!"

    And mum in her 'kerchief and me in my cap, Had just settled down for a long winter's nap, When out on the lawn there arose such a clatter, The whirr and the hum of our satellite platter, As it turned toward that new Christmas star in the sky, The SANTALITE owned by the Microsoft guy. As I sprang from my bed and was turning around, My computer turned on with a Jingle-Bells sound.

    And there on the screen was a smiling Bill Gates Next to jolly old Santa, two arm-in-arm mates. And I heard them exclaim in voices so bright, have a Microsoft Christmas, and to all a good night!

    The above document was written by Chet Raymo.

  10. #10
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    The Apple explosion
    OFFICE MEMO
    Date: 1/18/96

    SPINDLER CALLS IN AIR STRIKE, DESTROYS APPLE TO SAVE IT

    Stock Price Increases 50%

    "We'll do it better," Says Microsoft

    CUPERTINO, Calif. JANUARY 18, 1996
    The massive pile of smoking rubble near Interstate 280 here in Cupertino was not the result of an earthquake or natural gas explosion, as officials first believed.

    It now appears that the terrific explosion and fire at Apple Computer headquarters was the result of the first corporate-initiated airstrike on U.S. or California soil in U.S. history.

    Sources within Apple have told newspapers that, in an effort to save Apple from an internal coup that would result in the breakup and sale of the company, embattled Apple CEO Michael Spindler called in elements of the California Air National Guard, based at Moffet Federal Air Station in Mountain View, Calif. to bomb and strafe his own headquarters.

    Spindler allegedly called the California Air National Guard late last night and ordered the airstrike, using an Apple Macintosh Quadra A/V with experimental sound cards to simulate the voice of California Governor Pete Wilson.

    Within Apple, Spindler is seen as a hero. "Cool! He called in an airstrike on his own position to save his company," said one internal Apple applications developer, who gave his name as "Scooter." "It was like one of those cool movies about, like, you know, Viet Nam, that I read about it on the Web, dude."

    A memo to key staffers, reportedly written by Spindler himself, explained the need for the sir strike to counter moves by Apple managers and board members to oust him in a corporate coup and to simultaneously increase the company's marginal revenue. "Existing Macintoshes, both those in use and those in warehouses, will instantly become collector's items and therefore increase dramatically in value," according to the memo, which went on to explain that "this action will therefore increase our margins on existing stock with no cost to our sales and manufacturing operations." Spindler, said to be ailing, is in seclusion. Attempts to reach him by phone mail and fax were unsuccessful.

    Apple stock shot up 50% on the news, as Wall Street apparently agreed with Spindler's strategy. "Blowing up his own headquarters was a stroke of genius," said one Wall Street analyst. "This is the kind of pure creative, self-destructive genius we used to see when Steve Jobs was at Apple. It's like the old days. Mac is back!" Overall, computer stock stocks rose 75% as a result of the Apple news, then plunged 80% later in the day on rumors that Dan Dorfman had been seen having lunch with Jim Clark and Marc Andreeson.

    The Spindler airstrike memo, obtained via Internet e-mail by this reporter, was fragmented and missing key information. Apparently, the strike was planned for January 1, but key aides to Spindler did not receive the e-mail until yesterday due to routing table buffer problems and addressing errors.

    Cupertino city officials issued a statement at 10:00 PST this morning calling the air strike "an unfortunate incident that, while we hope we will all gain something from it, we hope it did not offend anyone of any race, creed, color, religion, thought process or emotional state, and we must emphasize that the City of Cupertino had no role in this incident if it did." Class-action lawsuits against Apple and the city, alleging emotional trauma resulting in a lost train of thought, loss of computing resources and interrupted Internet access have already been filed in California State Court.

    Later, when told by federal officials that the city will qualify for both federal disaster relief funds and labor department funds for unemployment and job training programs as a result of the destruction, Mayor Bob Mellow said, "Cool. We applaud Apple and Mike Spindler for having the vision and courage to take this decisive action, and hope that our earlier statement was taken in the spirit in which it was meant."

    In Redmond, Wash., Microsoft announced plans to build and detonate several networked low-yield nuclear devices at its own headquarters some time in 1997. "This is a project we already had underway," said a spokeswoman for Microsoft chairman Bill Gates. "We just decided that the marketplace won't be ready for it until 1997. Or 1998, if we decide that's when we really want to do it. Or maybe later. Right now, we're hiring additional staff, developing new technology and getting ready to copy Apple's idea, strategy and execution. Oops, I meant to say that we're evaluating previously extant competitive actions." The project, dubbed Curtains `97, is expected by analysts to be complete some time in 1999.

    Apple announced it will sue Microsoft in federal court over the "look and feel" of the use of explosive devices in business and home computing product strategies.

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