Humor with a message.......
An unemployed man goes to apply for a job with Microsoft as a janitor. The manager there arranges for him to take an aptitude test (Section: Floors, sweeping and cleaning). After the test, the manager says, "You will be employed at minimum wage, $5.15 an hour. Let me have your e-mail address, so that I can send you a form to complete and tell you where to report for work on your first day. Taken aback, the man protests that he has neither a computer nor an e-mail address. To this the MS manager replies, "Well, then, that means that you virtually don't exist and can therefore hardly expect to be employed. Stunned, the man leaves. Not knowing where to turn and having only $10 in his wallet, he decides to buy a 25 LB flat of tomatoes at the supermarket. Within less than 2 hours, he sells all the tomatoes individually at 100% profit. Repeating the process several times more that day, he ends up with almost $100 before going to sleep that night. And thus it dawns on him that he could quite easily make a living selling tomatoes. Getting up early every day and going to bed late, he multiplies his profits quickly. After a short time he acquires a cart to transport several dozen boxes of tomatoes, only to have to trade it in again so that he can buy a pickup truck to support his expanding business. By the end of the second year, he is the owner of a fleet of pickup trucks and manages a staff of a hundred former unemployed people, all selling tomatoes. Planning for the future of his wife and children, he decides to buy some life insurance. Consulting with an insurance adviser, he picks an insurance plan to fit his new circumstances. At the end of the telephone conversation, the adviser asks him for his e-mail address in order to send the final documents electronically. When the man replies that he has no e-mail, the adviser is stunned, "What, you don't have e-mail? How on earth have you managed to amass such wealth without the Internet, e-mail and e-commerce? Just imagine where you would be now, if you had been connected to the internet from the very start!" After a moment of thought, the tomato millionaire replied, "Why, of course! I would be a floor cleaner at Microsoft!" Moral of this story: 1. The Internet, e-mail and e-commerce do not need to rule your life. 2. If you don't have e-mail, but work hard, you can still become a millionaire. 3. Since you got this story via e-mail, you're probably closer to becoming a janitor than you are to becoming a millionaire. 4. If you do have a computer and e-mail, you have already been taken to the cleaners by Microsoft. -- Winbloze: 32-bit extensions and a graphical shell for a 16-bit patch to an 8-bit operating system originally coded for a 4-bit microprocessor, written by a 2-bit company that can't stand 1-bit of competition. -- Winbloze: 32-bit extensions and a graphical shell for a 16-bit patch to an 8-bit operating system originally coded for a 4-bit microprocessor, written by a 2-bit company that can't stand 1-bit of competition.
On a side note , I was trying to install an old dos 5.0 based pc game for my 8 year old. In the en I could not get it to run , so I just told him it was desinged for much older computers and that I no lonher had dos 5 to install along with suse and win 98. He picked up on his own that you can install more than one os thanks to the new nifty graphical log in. His rely to me was to ask if dos 5 was from the 1960s . Now I feel like a dinasour even thoufgh I am in my mid thirtys. He alos noted how stable linux was.
-- Winbloze: 32-bit extensions and a graphical shell for a 16-bit patch to an 8-bit operating system originally coded for a 4-bit microprocessor, written by a 2-bit company that can't stand 1-bit of competition.
-- Winbloze: 32-bit extensions and a graphical shell for a 16-bit patch to an 8-bit operating system originally coded for a 4-bit microprocessor, written by a 2-bit company that can't stand 1-bit of competition.
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Samy Elashmawy wrote:
On a side note , I was trying to install an old dos 5.0 based pc game for my 8 year old. In the en I could not get it to run , so I just told him it was desinged for much older computers and that I no lonher had dos 5 to install along with suse and win 98. He picked up on his own that you can install more than one os thanks to the new nifty graphical log in.
His rely to me was to ask if dos 5 was from the 1960s . Now I feel like a dinasour even thoufgh I am in my mid thirtys.
He alos noted how stable linux was.
An other sidenote Samy, There is "Freedos" (the DOS, dosemu runs with under Linux) http://www.GCFL.net/FreeDOS/command.com/ I had some trouble running games on it, getting the keyboard to german layout but it is 18 month that I looked last. Hmmm. M$ DoS 5.0..... reminds me of a Compaq DoS Version in the closet at Work. 3 packs with docs and everything bought as upgrade for machines that I turned into spares ages ago. Your son must be right... very late 60's ;-) Juergen -- =========================================== __ _ Juergen Braukmann juergen.braukmann@gmx.de| -o)/ / (_)__ __ ____ __ Tel: 0201-743648 dk4jb@db0qs.#nrw.deu.eu | /\\ /__/ / _ \/ // /\ \/ / ===========================================_\_v __/_/_//_/\_,_/ /_/\_\
On Wed, Mar 28, 2001 at 07:22:13PM +0200, Juergen Braukmann wrote:
Samy Elashmawy wrote:
On a side note , I was trying to install an old dos 5.0 based pc game for my 8 year old. In the en I could not get it to run , so I just told him it was desinged for much older computers and that I no lonher had dos 5 to install along with suse and win 98. He picked up on his own that you can install more than one os thanks to the new nifty graphical log in.
His rely to me was to ask if dos 5 was from the 1960s . Now I feel like a dinasour even thoufgh I am in my mid thirtys.
He alos noted how stable linux was.
An other sidenote Samy,
There is "Freedos" (the DOS, dosemu runs with under Linux) http://www.GCFL.net/FreeDOS/command.com/ I had some trouble running games on it, getting the keyboard to german layout but it is 18 month that I looked last.
There is also OpenDOS by Caldera. A very good product. Just 5 diskettes. -Kastus
Hmmm. M$ DoS 5.0..... reminds me of a Compaq DoS Version in the closet at Work. 3 packs with docs and everything bought as upgrade for machines that I turned into spares ages ago. Your son must be right... very late 60's ;-)
Juergen
-- =========================================== __ _ Juergen Braukmann juergen.braukmann@gmx.de| -o)/ / (_)__ __ ____ __ Tel: 0201-743648 dk4jb@db0qs.#nrw.deu.eu | /\\ /__/ / _ \/ // /\ \/ / ===========================================_\_v __/_/_//_/\_,_/ /_/\_\
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On Wed, 28 Mar 2001, Juergen Braukmann wrote:
Hmmm. M$ DoS 5.0..... reminds me of a Compaq DoS Version in the closet at Work. 3 packs with docs and everything bought as upgrade for machines that I turned into spares ages ago. Your son must be right... very late 60's ;-) Now wait a minute. IBM introduced the original PC in 1981. Running PC/MS-Dos 1.0. Dos 5 came much later... I suspect late '80's or early '90s. DOS 6.22 was popular with Win 3.1 just about the time Win95 came out.
-- Rick Green "I have the heart of a little child, and the brain of a genius. ... and I keep them in a jar under my bed"
Rick Green wrote:
On Wed, 28 Mar 2001, Juergen Braukmann wrote:
Hmmm. M$ DoS 5.0..... reminds me of a Compaq DoS Version in the closet at Work. 3 packs with docs and everything bought as upgrade for machines that I turned into spares ages ago. Your son must be right... very late 60's ;-) Now wait a minute. IBM introduced the original PC in 1981. Running PC/MS-Dos 1.0. Dos 5 came much later... I suspect late '80's or early '90s. DOS 6.22 was popular with Win 3.1 just about the time Win95 came out.
Exacly. As I said. the very late 60's. For the *true* flower power generation, the 60's never end. ;-) [I didn't want to be realy serious with my remark, that's what the smily was for] Juergen -- =========================================== __ _ Juergen Braukmann juergen.braukmann@gmx.de| -o)/ / (_)__ __ ____ __ Tel: 0201-743648 dk4jb@db0qs.#nrw.deu.eu | /\\ /__/ / _ \/ // /\ \/ / ===========================================_\_v __/_/_//_/\_,_/ /_/\_\
and ever since then some of us have been kicking and screaming , Thank god Linus came up with Linux , could you imagine M$ Windows now if there were no linux .
Now wait a minute. IBM introduced the original PC in 1981. Running PC/MS-Dos 1.0. Dos 5 came much later... I suspect late '80's or early '90s. DOS 6.22 was popular with Win 3.1 just about the time Win95 came out.
-- Rick Green
"I have the heart of a little child, and the brain of a genius. ... and I keep them in a jar under my bed"
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On Sunday 25 March 2001 05:00, Fred A. Miller wrote:
After a moment of thought, the tomato millionaire replied, "Why, of course! I would be a floor cleaner at Microsoft!"
Moral of this story:
1. The Internet, e-mail and e-commerce do not need to rule your life.
2. If you don't have e-mail, but work hard, you can still become a millionaire.
3. Since you got this story via e-mail, you're probably closer to becoming a janitor than you are to becoming a millionaire.
4. If you do have a computer and e-mail, you have already been taken to the cleaners by Microsoft.
Fred, This is blatant plagiarism! The original short story called, IIRC, "The Churchwarden" (by an author I shall remember as soon as I've sent this), was about a man who, when sacked by a new vicar for being illiterate, sets up as a tobaccanist. He ends up with a chain of shops, and is eventually asked the question about where he would have been had he been literate. The answer was, of course, "the churchwarden at at St Mary's" Still, I suppose it applies to a successor technology just as well. Thanks for reminding me of a most enjoyable short story. Now, if you could only remind me of the author........ Regards, Terence
participants (6)
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Fred A. Miller
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Juergen Braukmann
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Konstantin (Kastus) Shchuka
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Rick Green
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Samy Elashmawy
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Terence McCarthy