Engineers explained

People who work in the fields of science and technology are not like other people. This can be frustrating to the nontechnical people who have to deal with them. The secret to coping with technology-oriented people is to understand their motivations. This chapter will teach you everything you need to know. I learned their customs and mannerisms by observing them, much the way Jane Goodall learned about the great apes, but without the hassle of grooming.

Engineering is so trendy these days that everybody wants to be one. The word “engineer” is greatly overused. If there’s somebody in your life who you think is trying to pass as an engineer, give him this test to discern the truth.

Engineer Identification Test

You walk into a room and notice that a picture is hanging crooked.
You…

Straighten it.
Ignore it.
Buy a CAD system and spend the next six months designing a solar-powered, self-adjusting picture frame while often stating aloud your belief that the inventor of the nail was a total moron.

The correct answer is “C” but partial credit can be given to anybody who writes “It depends” in the margin of the test or simply blames the whole stupid thing on “Marketing.”

Social Skills Engineers have different objectives when it comes to social interaction.

“Normal” people expect to accomplish several unrealistic things from social interaction:

Stimulating and thought-provoking conversation
Important social contacts
A feeling of connectedness with other humans

In contrast to “normal” people, engineers have rational objectives for social interactions:

Get it over with as soon as possible.
Avoid getting invited to something unpleasant.
Demonstrate mental superiority and mastery of all subjects.

Fascination With Gadgets

To the engineer, all matter in the universe can be placed into one of two categories: (1) things that need to be fixed, and (2) things that will need to be fixed after you’ve had a few minutes to play with them. Engineers like to solve problems. If there are no problems handily available, they will create their own problems. Normal people don’t understand this concept; they believe that if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Engineers believe that if it ain’t broke, it doesn’t have enough features yet.

No engineer looks at a television remote control without wondering what it would take to turn it into a stun gun. No engineer can take a shower without wondering if some sort of Teflon coating would make showering unnecessary. To the engineer, the world is a toy box full of sub-optimized and feature-poor toys.

Fashion And Appearance

Clothes are the lowest priority for an engineer, assuming the basic thresholds for temperature and decency have been satisfied. If no appendages are freezing or sticking together, and if no genitalia or mammary glands are swinging around in plain view, then the objective of clothing has been met. Anything else is a waste.

Love Of “Star Trek”

Engineers love all of the “Star Trek” television shows and movies. It’s a small wonder, since the engineers on the starship Enterprise are portrayed as heroes, occasionally even having sex with aliens. This is much more glamorous than the real life of an engineer, which consists of hiding from the universe and having sex without the participation of other life forms.

Dating And Social Life

Dating is never easy for engineers. A normal person will employ various indirect and duplicitous methods to create a false impression of attractiveness. Engineers are incapable of placing appearance above function.

Fortunately, engineers have an ace in the hole. They are widely recognized as superior marriage material: intelligent, dependable, employed, honest, and handy around the house. While it’s true that many normal people would prefer not to date an engineer, most normal people harbor an intense desire to mate with them, thus producing engineer-like children who will have high-paying jobs long before losing their virginity.

Male engineers reach their peak of sexual attractiveness later than normal men, becoming irresistible erotic dynamos in their mid thirties to late forties. Just look at these examples of sexually irresistible men in technical professions:

Bill Gates.
MacGyver.
Etcetera.

Female engineers become irresistible at the age of consent and remain that way until about thirty minutes after their clinical death. Longer if it’s a warm day.

Honesty

Engineers are always honest in matters of technology and human relationships. That’s why it’s a good idea to keep engineers away from customers, romantic interests, and other people who can’t handle the truth.

Engineers sometimes bend the truth to avoid work. They say things that sound like lies but technically are not because nobody could be expected to believe them. The complete list of engineer lies is listed below.

“I won’t change anything without asking you first.”
“I’ll return your hard-to-find cable tomorrow.”
“I have to have new equipment to do my job.”
“I’m not jealous of your new computer.”

Frugality

Engineers are notoriously frugal. This is not because of cheapness or mean spirit; it is simply because every spending situation is simply a problem in optimization, that is, “How can I escape this situation while retaining the greatest amount of cash?”

Powers Of Concentration

If there is one trait that best defines an engineer it is the ability to concentrate on one subject to the complete exclusion of everything else in the environment. This sometimes causes engineers to be pronounced dead prematurely. Some funeral homes in high-tech areas have started checking resumes before processing the bodies. Anybody with a degree in electrical engineering or experience in computer programming is propped up in the lounge for a few days just to see if he or she snaps out of it.

Risk

Engineers hate risk. They try to eliminate it whenever they can. This is understandable, given that when an engineer makes one little mistake, the media will treat it like it’s a big deal or something.

Examples Of Bad Press For Engineers

Hindenberg.
Space Shuttle Challenger.
SPANet(tm)
Hubble space telescope.
Apollo 13.
Titanic.
Ford Pinto.
Corvair.

The risk/reward calculation for engineers looks something like this:

RISK: Public humiliation and the death of thousands of innocent people.
REWARD: A certificate of appreciation in a handsome plastic frame.

Being practical people, engineers evaluate this balance of risks and rewards and decide that risk is not a good thing. The best way to avoid risk is by advising that any activity is technically impossible for reasons that are far too complicated to explain.

If that approach is not sufficient to halt a project, then the engineer will fall back to a second line of defense: “It’s technically possible but it will cost too much.”

Ego

Ego-wise, two things are important to engineers:

How smart they are.
How many cool devices they own.

The fastest way to get an engineer to solve a problem is to declare that the problem is unsolvable. No engineer can walk away from an unsolvable problem until it’s solved. No illness or distraction is sufficient to get the engineer off the case. These types of challenges quickly become personal — a battle between the engineer and the laws of nature.

Engineers will go without food and hygiene for days to solve a problem. (Other times just because they forgot.) And when they succeed in solving the problem they will experience an ego rush that is better than sex–and I’m including the kind of sex where other people are involved.

Nothing is more threatening to the engineer than the suggestion that somebody has more technical skill. Normal people sometimes use that knowledge as a lever to extract more work from the engineer. When an engineer says that something can’t be done (a code phrase that means it’s not fun to do), some clever normal people have learned to glance at the engineer with a look of compassion and pity and say something along these lines: “I’ll ask Bob to figure it out. He knows how to solve difficult technical problems.”

At that point it is a good idea for the normal person to not stand between the engineer and the problem. The engineer will set upon the problem like a starved Chihuahua on a pork chop.

Top things engineering school didn’t teach you

There are at least 10 types of capacitors.

Theory tells you how a circuit works, not why it does not work.

Not everything works according to the specs in the databook.

Anything practical you learn will be obsolete before you use it, except the complex math, which you will never use.

Always try to fix the hardware with software.

Engineering is like having an 8 a.m. class and a late afternoon lab every day for the rest of your life.

Overtime pay? What overtime pay?

Forget an engineering career, just try to keep a job.

Managers, not engineers, rule the world.

If you like junk food, caffeine and all-nighters, go into software.

Dilbert is a documentary.

You may be an engineer

You may be an engineer . . .

If you introduce your wife as “mylady@home.wife” or husband as “myman@tv.hubby”
If your spouse sends you an e-mail instead of calling you to dinner.
If you want an 64X CD-ROM for Christmas.
If Dilbert is your hero.
If you can name six Star Trek episodes.
If the only jokes you receive are through e-mail.
If your wristwatch has more computing power than a Pentium.
If you look forward to Christmas only to put together the kids’ toys.
If you use a CAD package to design your child’s Pine Wood Derby car.
If you have used coat hangers and duct tape for something other than hanging coats and taping ducts.
If, at Christmas, it goes without saying that you will be the one to find the burnt-out bulb in the string.
If you window-shop at Radio Shack.
If your ideal evening consists of fast-forwarding through the latest sci-fi movie looking for technical inaccuracies.
If you have Dilbert comics displayed anywhere in your work area.
If you carry on a one-hour debate over the expected results of a test that actually takes five minutes to run.
If you are convinced you can build a phaser out of your garage-door opener and your camera’s flash attachment.
If you don’t even know where the cover to your personal computer is.
If you have modified your can opener to be microprocessor-driven.
If you know the direction the water swirls when you flush.
If you have ever taken the back off of your TV just to see what’s inside.
If a team of you and your co-workers has set out to modify the antenna of the radio in your work area for better reception.
If you ever burned down the gymnasium with your Science Fair project.
If you own one or more white short-sleeve dress shirts.
If you have never backed up your hard drive.
If you have ever saved the power cord from a broken appliance.
If you have ever purchased an electronic appliance “as is.”
If you see a good design and still have to change it.
If the salespeople at Circuit City can’t answer any of your questions.
If the thought that a CD could refer to finance or music never enters your mind.
If you own a set of itty-bitty screw drivers but you don’t remember where they are.
If you rotate your screen savers more frequently than your automobile tires.
If you have a functioning home copier machine, but every toaster you own turns bread into charcoal.
If you have more toys than your kids.
If you have introduced your kids by the wrong name.
If you have a habit of destroying things in order to see how they work.
If your IQ is bigger than your weight.
If the microphone or visual aids at a meeting don’t work and you rush up to the front to fix them.
If you can remember seven computer passwords but not your anniversary.
If you have memorized the program schedule for the Discovery channel and have seen most of the shows already.
If you have ever owned a calculator with no equal key and know what RPN stands for.
If your father sat 2 inches in front of your family’s first color TV with a magnifying lens to see how they made the colors, and you grew up thinking that was normal.
If you know how to take the cover off of your computer and what size screw driver to use.
If you can type 70 words a minute but can’t read your own handwriting.
If people groan at the party when you pick out the music.
If you did the sound system for your senior prom.
If your wristwatch has more buttons than a telephone.
If you have more friends on the Internet than in real life.
If you thought the real heroes of “Apollo 13” were the mission controllers.
If you spend more on your home or laptop computer than your car.
If you know what http:// stands for.
If you know C.
If you’ve ever tried to repair a $5 radio.
If your three-year-old child asks why the sky is blue and you try to explain atmospheric absorption theory.
If your four basic food groups are: l. caffeine; 2. fat; 3. sugar; 4.chocolate.
If you can understand sentences with four or more acronyms in them.
If you have automated everything in your house, but none of it meets the National Electrical Code.
If you have ever tried to network your home PC, microwave oven and garage-door opener.
If your spouse keeps tripping over the wire you strung — temporarily — three years ago.
If, at a traffic intersection, you try to figure out the synchronization pattern between your car’s blinkers or wipers and the others’.
If you can name all the cards in your PC without looking.
If you can cite the latest Intel or Motorola microprocessor generation number such as 80686 or 68060, but can’t remember your spouse’s birthday.
If you are better with a Karnaugh map than you are with a street map.
If you have at least one historical computer in your closet.
If you take along a printout of the schedule of your family vacation.
If you always have to explain things by drawing it out on paper or a napkin.
If your computer is down, you don’t know what date is it today and miss all meetings too.
If you read through this list completely … and try to convince yourself not to agree with at least one of them.

Top ten reasons (not) to date an engineer

Top Ten Reasons To Date An Engineer:

10.The World Does Revolve Around Us…We Pick The Coordinate System.

9.Find Out What Those Other Buttons On Your Calculator Do

8.We Know How To Handle Stress And Strain In Our Relationships

7.Parents Will Approve

6.Help With Your Math Homework

5.Can Calculate Head Pressure

4.Looks Good On A Resume’

3.Free Body Diagrams

2.High Starting Salary

1.Extremely Good Looking

Top Ten Reasons NOT To Date An Engineer:

10.T-shirt and jean are their formal dress. Hot dog and a 6-pack is their seven course meal.

9.The only social life known of is to post and talk on the net.

8.Flames like a monster and speaks like a pussy cat.

7.Works from 6:30am to 7:30pm, daily. No morning kisses and no evening walks.

6.No matter how hard you cry and how loud you yell, he just sits there calmly discussing your emotion in terms of mathematical logic.

5.Listens to classic rock only. Hates everything from Bach to Prince.

4.Touches his car more than you.

3. Talks in acronym.

2.Can’t leave that damn pencil off his ear for a minute.

1.Will file a divorce if you call him in the middle of debugging.

Insurance claims

The other car collided with mine without giving warning of its intention.

I thought my window was down but found it was up when I put my hand through it.

A pedestrian hit me and went under my car. The guy was all over the place. I had to swerve a number of times before I hit him.

I pulled away from the side of the road, glanced at my mother-in-law and headed over the embankment.

The accident occured when I was attempting to bring my car out of a skid by steering it into the other vehicle.

I was on my way to the doctor’s with rear-end trouble when my universal joint gave way, causing me to have an accident.

As I approached the intersection, a stop sign suddenly appeared in a place where no stop sign had ever appeared before.

The telephone pole was approaching fast. I was attempting to swerve out of its path when it struck my front end.

To avoid hitting the bumper of the car in front, I struck the pedestrian.

My car was legally parked as it backed into the other vehicle.

An invisible car came out of nowhere, struck my vehicle and vanished.

When I saw I could not avoid a collision, I stepped on the gas and crashed into the other car.

The pedestrian had no idea which direction to go, so I ran him over.

I saw the slow-moving, sad-faced old gentleman as he bounced off the hood of my car.

Coming home, I drove into the wrong house and collided with a tree I don’t have.

The indirect cause of this accident was a little guy in a small car with a big mouth.

The best of insurance claim excuses & explanations

PARIS (AFP) – “I sprained my wrist while putting sugar on the strawberries.”

“I am a little hard of hearing so you can understand why I didn’t see the cyclist.”

Herewith a list of some of the best insurance claims compiled by the Insurance Information and Statistics Center (CDIA) in Paris.

— “I admit I went through the intersection without looking to see if anyone was crossing, but I had gone through the same intersection less than an hour before and no one was there.”

— “I am planning to lend my car to someone who doesn’t know how to drive, but beforehand can you please confirm that you’ll pay for the damage he is likely to cause?”

— “You are telling me that according to the civil code I am responsible for my children’s action. If that’s true, the people who wrote that must not have, like me, nine children to watch over.”

— “In place of the intersection they built a roundabout with priority for those coming from the left. Now I didn’t expect that change and I lost control of my car.”

— “While going forward I smashed the rear light of the car in front of me. So I backed up, and in doing so smashed the bumper of the car behind me. That’s when I stepped out of the car, but in doing so I knocked down a bicyclist with my door. That’s all I have to declare for today.”

— “I rammed into a parked car and made sure not to tell the owner that I was responsible. I hope you are satisfied with me and will award me additional bonus points on my insurance.”

— “I smashed into a glass door during an ‘open house’ at the company.”

— “I had a work-related accident while dozing off under an apple tree.”

— “You know my cab has been turned into a hearse and now I only transport dead people. So since my passengers are not at risk, do you think it’s reasonable to make me pay an additional insurance bonus in case they are involved in an accident?”

— “The accident happened while I was changing girls.”

— “While pushing back a dog on a leash, its owner bit me.”

— “I read in my contract that you wouldn’t reimburse me any repairs on my car for damage caused by my driving drunk. I am willing to pay you what it takes to get rid of that clause.”

— “You informed me that there is no such thing as theft between spouses. You obviously don’t know my wife.”

— “I am stunned that you refuse to pay for this accident on grounds that I wasn’t wearing my glasses. I swear the accident wasn’t my fault. I simply didn’t see the bicyclist when I ran him over.”

— “The cyclist kept zigzagging, going right and then left before I could pin him down.”

— “Since her accident, my wife is even worse than before. I hope you will take that into account.”

— “They determined that I had a 2.10 blood alcohol level and plan to convict me. You’ll admit that considering the six to eight litres of blood in our bodies, that wasn’t much.”

Bilskadesanmeldelser til forsikringsselskaber

Jeg mener, at ingen af sagens parter er skyld i uheldet, men hvis det ikke des mindre er tilfældet, er det den anden.

Jeg kørte manden ned. Han indrømmede at det var hans fejl, idet han tidligere var blevet kørt ned.

Uheldet skyldtes, at den anden nær havde undgået mig.

Jeg kørte ind i den anden vogn for at undgå sammenstød.

Jeg stødte sammen med en holdende bus, der kørte i den modsatte retning.

Vognen måtte dreje skarpere end nødvendigt på grund af en usynlig lastbil.

Jeg stødte sammen med et stillestående træ.

Hund på vejen slog bremserne i og skred.

Jeg fortalte den idiot hvad han var, og kørte videre.

Rotter udsatte indtrækket for overlagt hærværk.

En fodgænger ramte mig og fortsatte ind under vognen.

Jeg tudede i hornet, men det virkede ikke idet det var stjålet.

Jeg mente sidevinduet var rullet ned, men det var det ikke, hvilket jeg først konstaterede da jeg stak hovedet igennem det.

En ko slentrede ind i min bil. Man fortalte mig bagefter, at koen var åndssvag.

Hvis føreren af den anden vogn var stoppet nogle meter bag sig selv, ville uheldet aldrig være indtruffet.

Pludselig fik hun øje på mig og tabte hovedet, og vi mødtes.

Jeg så en dame gå over vejen. Jeg tog fejl af hendes hensigter.

Vognen foran bremsede brat, og jeg brasede blidt ind i dens bagagebærer.

Da jeg skulle hjem, kom jeg til at køre ind i den forkerte gård, og kolliderede med et træ som jeg ikke har på min grund.

Jeg hørte et bilhorn og blev ramt bagfra, jeg forstod, at en dame forsøgte at overhale.

Tre damer stod og talte sammen, og da to trådte tilbage og en frem var der jo ikke noget at gøre.

Jeg kørte på en lygtepæl, som jeg ikke opdagede, fordi den var skjult af nogle fodgængere.

Ulykken skyldtes at vejen drejede.

Solen blændede, så jeg brasede lige ind på Rådhuspladsen.

Blind, sked ved et slag i øjet.

Min moder døde nær 58, nærmest af spiritus.

Efter modtagelsen af Deres ærede brev vedr. I.M. Sørensen, hvis indhold vi har bemærket.

Blodforgiftning i den ene arm begrundet på en rift på Frederiksberg Hospital. Har konsumeret flere læger.

Jeg har aldrig haft nogen dødelig sygdom.

Barnet Hansigne Frederiksen er rask, faderen ukendt, da barnet er uægte. Husmand Peter Rasmussen er gift med moderen. Drengens police som fulgte er ægtefødt, altså af Camilla, moderen.

Ved at undersøge sagen nærmere, er Larsen gift.

Undertegnede erklærer herved efter at have set Frk. Larsens ben, og er som følge heraf uarbejdsdygtig.

Kasseret p.gr. af at det ene ben er skævt, som følge af bræk.

Min fader døde pludseligt, men det var ikke alvorligt. Hvoraf min moder døde, ved jeg ikke, men af sidste sygdom kom hun sig.

Manden var ikke hjemme, det besørgede konen. Hun har lov til at besørge alt, når manden er ude. Således er det gået til, og jeg håber ikke, at det skal ske oftere. Selskabet bedes nu afsige sin dom over dette fejltrin.

Min søn er åndssvag og som sådan ansat i min forretning.

Mine eventuelle forældre og søskende kendes ikke. Min mand er død, han har hængt sig, det svin.

Kassationsgrund: For smal over brysterne, klemt fingrene i enden.

Det venstre ben er ca. 2 cm kortere end andet, som jeg er født med.

Kasseret for at miste den halve finger på højre hånd nr. 3.

I ægteskabet er der et barn, som nu er helt opløst.

Password rejected

A female computer consultant was helping a smug male set up his computer and she asked him what word he would like to use as a password to log in with.

Wanting to embarrass the female he told her to enter “PENIS”. Without blinking
or saying a word she entered the password. She almost died laughing at the computer’s response :

PASSWORD REJECTED. NOT LONG ENOUGH.

Error messages the Japanese way

In Japan, they have replaced the impersonal and unhelpful Microsoft error messages with Haiku poetry messages. Haiku poetry has strict construction rules – each poem has only 17 syllables; 5 syllables in the first, 7 in the second, 5 in the third. They are used to communicate a timeless message, often achieving a wistful, yearning and powerful insight through extreme brevity.

Here are some actual error messages from Japan. Aren’t these better than “Your computer has performed an illegal operation”?

Your file was so big.
It might be very useful.
But now it is gone.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

The Web site you seek
Cannot be located, but
Countless more exist.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Chaos reigns within.
Reflect, repent, and reboot.
Order shall return.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Program aborting:
Close all that you have worked on.
You ask far too much.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Windows NT crashed.
I am the Blue Screen of Death.
No one hears your screams.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Yesterday it worked.
Today it is not working.
Windows is like that.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

First snow, then silence.
This thousand-dollar screen dies
So beautifully.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

With searching comes loss
And the presence of absence:
“My Novel” not found.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

The Tao that is seen
Is not the true Tao until
You bring fresh toner.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Stay the patient course.
Of little worth is your ire.
The network is down.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

A crash reduces
Your expensive computer
To a simple stone.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Three things are certain:
Death, taxes and lost data.
Guess which has occurred.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – –

You step in the stream,
But the water has moved on.
This page is not here.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Out of memory.
We wish to hold the whole sky,
But we never will.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Having been erased,
The document you’re seeking
Must now be retyped.
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Serious error.
All shortcuts have disappeared.
Screen. Mind. Both are blank

100+ excuses why I haven’t answered my e-mail

1) My dog ate my motherboard.

2) My cat got kitty-liter in my floppy drives.

3) My modem is on vacation.

4) My offline mail reader got a flat and I had to read my messages online (shudder…).

5) My hard drive went into a spin dry cycle.

6) My CPU’s ROM got RAMmed by some stray cosmic rays.

7) The vendor put out a general recall for all machines produced prior to 1906.

8) My computer ran away with a sales rep from GENIE.

9) Someone set my laser printer on “stun”.

10) I poured milk on my serial ports and all my bits got soggy.

11) My backups weren’t done because the FAT table wouldn’t sing.

12) I ran out of food for the hamsters in my power supply

13) My UPS went OOPS!

14) The chocolate chips in my memory card all melted.

15) I plugged my modem into my printer port and now it is diagonally parked in a parallel universe!

16) My modem got depressed, not the blues really…just a purple Hayes.

17) I left a copy of “Iron Man” on my system and my modem left home to study the manly UARTs.

18) I was arrested for stealing taglines

19) I was booked for plagiarizing taglines

20) My printer mysteriously changed to Chinese typefonts

21) My wife cleaned my keyboard in the dishwasher

22) My kids used all my diskettes as frisbees

23) The kids in the neighborhood think diskettes are a new form of baseball card and started trading them.

24) Cliff Stole asked me to help him track some hackers in East Somalia.

25) My computer is laid up with a slipped disk

26) A lightening bolt partitioned my hard drive

27) My computer came down with a virus and the Doctor told me to take two memory chips and pay him in the morning

28) I put in a Sound Blaster card backwards and blew a hole in my motherboard.

29) My operating system, Ms. Dos, got pregnant. Seems she went to see Dr. Dos who informed her UNIX wasn’t a eunuch.

30) My BIOS went ADIOS!

31) My hard disk went floppy (sounds like a personal problem…)

32) My C.P.U. said C.U.L8ER.

33) I can’t figure out how to use Windows since my cat ate my mouse.

34) My V.32bis modem broke and my communication program is rejecting my 300 baud modem as “too slow”.

35) I’m still studying the DSZ docs for the big test next week

36) I’m waiting to replace the broken glass in my Windows

37) My machine got flooded by a .WAV file

38) I forgot how to program the PFkeys on my keyboard

39) My belfry got overloaded with .BAT files

40) My favorite BBS turned me in as a notorious hacker

41) Haven’t had the time since I became a consultant

42) I loss teh diktionari for my spel chequre

43) My modem starting giving ME the -bis!

44) I discovered a fungus had replaced my CMOS!

45a) I accidently zipped up PKUNZIP

45b) I couldn’t unzip PKUNZIP.ZIP

46) My modem is complaining of carpal tunnel from all the handshaking

47) I’m too busy studying for the elections

48) I can’t talk anymore since I lost my .VOC files.

49) My Twit filter twitted me!

50) My Zmodem decided to catch some Z’s.

51) My computer’s attachment cards asked for a divorce!

52) My memory filed for BANKruptcy.

53) My brain ran out of expansion slots

54) My memory overextended itself

55) My Stackered drive just doesn’t have the zip it used to

56) I’m waiting for replacements for my Broken Windows

57) I got a Tagline Parity Error at segment C000:0000

58) I’m too busy trying to catch the Ether Bunny

59) Too depressed about the political situation to reply to the candidates

60) I lapsed into a state of virtual confusion

61) Still waiting for voting-by-modem.

62) I have no time since joining a Karaoke tagline band

63) I had tried to contain myself, but I escaped

64) Lawyers representing the Meek contacted me about my inheritance.

65a) My wife found out I’d been faking uploads all this time

65b) My users found out I’d been faking uploads all this time

65c) My sysop found out I’d been faking uploads all this time

66) I just can’t seem to respond to mail during daylight hours

67) Bonny Anthony decided I was no friend of RIME

68) I was beamed back to my home planet for an urgent meeting

69) I got beat by Quayle at a spelling bee

70) E-mailing is like work; talk about the QWK and dead!

71) I gave it all up to become a happy face

72) I got caught using Elvis stamps on my E-mail

73) They dropped my favorite conferences due to a lack of interest

74) I got caught in an infinite loop trying to think of something

75) I was arrested for trying to take a Byte out of RIME

76) My ROBO message generator ran out of random numbers

77) I’m too busy attending electronic town meetings

78) I’m trying to lose wait

79) I was arbitrarily and capriciously locked out by the sysop!

80) I’m too busy with my BBS addicts support group

81) My tagline file was confiscated by the Secret Service

82) Rush Limbaugh convinced me E-mail was a liberal fax-and-spend plot

83) POSTLINK postdated all my mail so nobody would see it

84) I’m still waiting for the double thermal-pane version of Windows

85) No one finds my mine fields humorous

86) The Mental Hospital had me out on loan.

87) I’ve been looking for a parking space at “the Dome”.

88) I’ve been too busy tearing Wallace stickers off the bumpers of cars and voting for George McGovern for President.

89) I’ve been busy looking for my picture on milk cartons.

90) I’ve been rewinding my system clock.

91) Someone did a QWK shuffle on my E-Mail punch card deck.

92) I dropped my old Hayes modem on my foot…talk about “mega-hurts”.

93) I got behind in my E-Mail and found RIME waits for no man.

94) My modem has these “hang-ups” about my seeing other modems at work.

95) I was arrested for stripping high order bits in public.

96) I’ve been retrofitting my car with a smaller steering wheel for my mouse driver.

97) Do you know how hard it is to find electronic thumbtacks to post E-Mail on an electronic bulletin board?

98) Do you know how easy it is to get shocked licking electronic stamps for electronic mail?

99) I smashed my modem with an AUTOEXEC.BAT!

100) I’m broke this week and just can’t IO without silver.

101) Isn’t it National E-Mail Apathy month?

102) I’ve been busy in the chemistry department trying to make Ethyl Palpitate.

103) I’ve been trying to decide “Where is Joe Merchant?”. (Hint: check the bookshelves under Buffett, Jimmy)

104) I lost the special tinted glasses that came with my RoseReader.

105) CAM-MAIL gave me the shaft

106) I discovered QModem is not part of the Continuum

107) My wife accused me of having Dual Standards