M Web Magazine Issue 003 (Jun 5, 1997 - Sept 4, 1997)

Wasted

Vacancy

Want fine young lad to check for gas leaks with box of matches. Must be able to fly quickly.

Norman Scicluna


50 Ways to Scare People In the Computer Room

  1. Log on, wait a sec, then get a frightened look on your face and scream "Oh my God! They've found me!" and bolt.
  2. Laugh uncontrollably for about 3 minutes & then suddenly stop and look suspiciously at everyone who looks at you.
  3. When your computer is turned off, complain to the monitor on duty that you can't get the damn thing to work. After he/she's turned it on, wait 5 minutes, turn it off again, and repeat the process for a good half hour.
  4. Type frantically, often stopping to look at the person next to you evilly.
  5. Before anyone else is in the lab, connect each computer to different screen than the one it's set up with.
  6. Write a program that plays the "Smurfs" theme song and play it at the highest volume possible over & over again.
  7. Work normally for a while. Suddenly look amazingly startled by something on the screen and crawl underneath the desk.
  8. Ask the person next to you if they know how to tap into top-secret Pentagon files.
  9. Use Interactive Send to make passes at people you don't know.
  10. Make a small ritual sacrifice to the computer before you turn it on.
  11. Bring a chainsaw, but don't use it. If anyone asks why you have it, say "Just in case..." mysteriously.
  12. Type on VAX for a while. Suddenly start cursing for 3 minutes at everything bad about your life. Then stop and continue typing.
  13. Enter the lab, undress, and start staring at other people as if they're crazy while typing.
  14. Light candles in a pentagram around your terminal before starting.
  15. Ask around for a spare disk. Offer $2. Keep asking until someone agrees. Then, pull a disk out of your fly and say, "Oops, I forgot."
  16. Every time you press Return and there is processing time required, pray "Ohpleaseohpleaseohpleaseohplease," and scream "YES!" when it finishes.
  17. "DISK FIGHT!!!"
  18. Start making out with the person at the terminal next to you (It helps if you know them, but this is also a great way to make new friends).
  19. Put a straw in your mouth and put your hands in your pockets. Type by hitting the keys with the straw.
  20. If you're sitting in a swivel chair, spin around singing "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" whenever there is processing time required.
  21. Draw a pictue of a woman (or man) on a piece of paper, tape it to your monitor. Try to seduce it. Act like it hates you and then complain loudly that women (men) are worthless.
  22. Try to stick a Ninetendo cartridge into the 3 1/2 disc drive, when it doesn't work, get the supervisor.
  23. When you are on an IBM, and when you turn it on, ask loudly where the smiling Apple face is when you turn on one of those.
  24. Print out the complete works of Shakespeare, then when its all done (two days later) say that all you wanted was one line.
  25. Sit and stare at the screen, biting your nails noisely. After doing this for a while, spit them out at the feet of the person next to you.
  26. Stare at the screen, grind your teeth, stop, look at the person next to grinding. Repeat procedure, making sure you never provoke the person enough to let them blow up, as this releases tension, and it is far more effective to let them linger.
  27. If you have long hair, take a typing break, look for split ends, cut them and deposit them on your neighbor's keyboard as you leave. (c) M Web Magazine
  28. Put a large, gold-framed portrait of the British Royal Family on your desk and loudly proclaim that it inspires you.
  29. Come to the lab wearing several layers of socks. Remove shoes and place them of top of the monitor. Remove socks layer by layer and drape them around the monitor. Exclaim sudden haiku about the aesthetic beauty of cotton on plastic.
  30. Take the keyboard and sit under the computer. Type up your paper like this. Then go to the lab supervisor and complain about the bad working conditions.
  31. Laugh hysterically, shout "You will all perish in flames!!!" and continue working.
  32. Bring some dry ice & make it look like your computer is smoking.
  33. Assign a musical note to every key (ie. the Delete key is A Flat, the B key is F sharp, etc.). Whenever you hit a key, hum its note loudly. Write an entire paper this way.
  34. Attempt to eat your computer's mouse.
  35. Borrow someone else's keyboard by reaching over, saying "Excuse me, mind if I borrow this for a sec?", unplugging the keyboard and taking it.
  36. Bring in a bunch of magnets and have fun.
  37. When doing calculations, pull out an abacus and say that sometimes the old ways are best.
  38. Play Pong for hours on the most powerful computer in the lab.
  39. Make a loud noise of hitting the same key over and over again until you see that your neighbor is noticing (You can hit the space bar so your fill isn't affected). Then look at your neighbor's keyboard. Hit his/her delete key several times, erasing an entire word. While you do this, ask: "Does *your* delete key work?" Shake your head, and resume hitting the space bar on your keyboard. Keep doing this until you've deleted about a page of your neighbor's document. Then, suddenly exclaim: "Well, whaddya know? I've been hitting the space bar this whole time. No wonder it wasn't deleting! Ha!" Print out your document and leave.
  40. Remove your disk from the drive and hide it. Go to the lab monitor and complain that your computer ate your disk. (For special effects, put some Elmer's Glue on or around the disk drive. Claim that the computer is drooling.)
  41. Stare at the person's next to your's screen, look really puzzled, burst out laughing, and say "You did that?" loudly. Keep laughing, grab your stuff and leave, howling as you go.
  42. Point at the screen. Chant in a made up language while making elaborate hand gestures for a minute or two. Press return or the mouse, then leap back and yell "COVEEEEERRRRRR!" peek up from under the table, walk back to the computer and say. "Oh, good. It worked this time," and calmly start to type again.
  43. Keep looking at invisible bugs and trying to swat them.
  44. See who's online. Send a total stranger a talk request. Talk to them like you've known them all your lives. Hangup before they geta chance to figure out you're a total stranger.
  45. Bring an small tape player with a tape of really absurd sound effects. Pretend it's the computer and look really lost.
  46. Pull out a pencil. Start writing on the screen. Complain that the lead doesn't work.
  47. Come into the computer lab wearing several endangered species of flowers in your hair. Smile incessantly. Type a sentence, then laugh happily, exclaim "You're such a marvel!!", and kiss the screen. Repeat this after every sentence. As your ecstasy mounts, also hug the keyboard. Finally, hug your neighbor, then the computer assistant, and walk out.
  48. Run into the computer lab, shout "Armageddon is here!!!!!", then calmly sit down and begin to type.
  49. Quietly walk into the computer lab with a Black and Decker chainsaw, rev that baby up, and then walk up to the nearest person and say "Give me that computer or you'll be feeding my pet crocodile for the next week".
  50. Two words: Tesla Coil.


How about submitting a joke for Wasted? Make it nice and clean and you're hosted. Address all your fun stuff to mwm@mcenter.com. (Setting the subject line to MWM Wasted helps:-).


Allegedly Genuine Extracts from Letters Sent to Landlords.

"I wish to complain that my father hurt his ankle very badly when he put his foot in the hole in his back passage."


"The lavatory is blocked, this is caused by the boys next door throwing their balls on the roof."


"This is to let you know that there is a smell coming from the man next door."


"The toilet seat is cracked: where do I stand?"


"I am writing on behalf of my sink, which is running away from the wall."


"I request your permission to remove my drawers in the kitchen."


"Our lavatory seat is broken in half and is now in three pieces."


"Can you please tell me when our repairs are going to be done as my wife is about to become an expectant mother."


"I want some repairs done to my stove as it has backfired and burnt my knob off."


"I am still having trouble with smoke in my built in drawers."


"The toilet is blocked and we cannot bath the children until it is cleared."


"The person next door has a large erection in his back garden, which is unsightly and dangerous."


"Will you please send someone to mend our cracked sidewalk. Yesterday my wife tripped on it and is now pregnant."


"Our kitchen floor is very damp, we have two children and would like a third, so will you please send someone to do something about it."


"Will you please send a man to look at my water, it is a funny color and not fit to drink."


"Would you please send a man to repair my downspout. I am an old age pensioner and need it straight away."


"I awoke this morning and found my water boiling."


"Could you please send someone to fix our bath tap. My wife got her toe stuck in it and it is very uncomfortable for us."


"I want to complain about the farmer across the road. Every morning at 5:30 his cock wakes me up, and it is getting too much."


"When the workmen were here they put their tools in my wife's new drawers and made a mess. Please send men with clean tools to finish the job and keep my wife happy."

Note to M Companies / Organizations


The Source has been set up so that you can explain your wares better. As the name states, this section must help explain what a product does, and, more importantly, how it does what it does.

A tutorial (that should contain worked examples) is the type of information our readers expect. If you are interested in booking this section, drop us a note as soon as possible. Address your e-mail to mwm@mcenter.com with the subject set to MWM The Source. In your e-mail tell us, in a paragraph or two, a little bit about the product (only one) you are proposing together with a rough idea of what you have in mind for your presentation.


M Shareware Authors


At MWM we have a deep thirst for code. Anything from a small routine to an entire system will be considered.

Send in your shareware programs with a decription of what they do and how to install them. Send in any limitations to use. Pack everything up in a zip file, attach it to an e-mail and very soon it will be available for users to download. Our e-mail address is mwm@mcenter.com.

PS. We also accept freeware and probably any other type of ware produced.

The two jokes listed above are taken from Scott Phillips' humor page at http://cis.tamu.edu/~sphilli/. Scott has a vary large collection of jokes sorted by topic and rated.

MWM Campaign


One of the topics discussed in our Commentary is a lack of information about the programming language M in some electronic encyclopedias. By adding an entry about this programming not only will these companies further increase the value of their product, but they will be doing justice to a programming language that merits a place within them.

Irrespective if you're new to M or someone who already uses this programming language, we ask you to spare a few minutes and send the sample letter to the three companies listed in the Commentary. We can only make them aware of the lack in their product if you, like many others send in this letter.

Please do it now.

Pass on our Web Address!

E&OE

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