RFC1882 - The 12-Days of Technology Before Christmas

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
窄屏简体版  字體: |||超大  

Network Working Group B. Hancock

Request for Comments: 1882 Network-1 Software and Technology, Inc.

Category: Informational December 1995

The 12-Days of Technology Before Christmas

Status of this Memo

This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo

does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of

this memo is unlimited.

Discussion

On the first day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

A database with a broken b-tree (what the hell is a b-tree

anyway?)

On the second day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

Two transceiver failures (CRC errors? Collisions? What is

going on?)

And a database with a broken b-tree (Rebuild WHAT? It's a

10GB database!)

On the third day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

Three French users (who, of course, think they know

everything)

Two transceiver failures (which are now spewing packets all

over the net)

And a database with a broken b-tree (Backup? What backup?)

On the fourth day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

Four calls for support (playing the same Christmas song over

and over)

Three French users (Why do they like to argue so mUCh over

trivial things?)

Two transceiver failures (How the hell do I know which ones

they are?)

And a database with a broken b-tree (Pointer error? What's a

pointer error?)

On the fifth day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

Five golden SCSI contacts (Of course they're better than

silver!)

Four support calls (Ever notice how time stands still when on

hold?

Three French users (No, we don't have footpedals on PC's. Why

do you ask?)

Two transceiver failures (If I knew which ones were bad, I

would know which ones to fix!)

And a database with a broken b-tree (Not till next week? Are

you nuts?!?!)

On the sixth day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

Six games a-playing (On the production network, of course!)

Five golden SCSI contacts (What do you mean "not terminated!")

Four support calls (No, don't transfer me again - do you HEAR?

Damn!)

Three French users (No, you cannot scan in by putting the page

to the screen...)

Two transceiver failures (I can't look at the LEDs - they're

in the ceiling!)

And a database with a broken b-tree (Norway? That's where this

was written?)

On the seventh day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

Seven license failures (EXPired? When?)

Six games a-playing (Please stop tying up the PBX to talk to

each other!)

Five golden SCSI contacts (What do you mean I need "wide"

SCSI?)

Four support calls (At least the Muzak is different this

time...)

Three French Users (Well, monsieur, there really isn't an

"any" key, but...)

Two transceiver failures (SQE? What is that? If I knew I would

set it myself!)

And a database with a broken b-tree (No, I really need to talk

to Lars - NOW!)

On the eighth day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

Eight MODEMs dialing (Who bought these? They're a security

violation!)

Seven license failures (How many WEEKS to get a license?)

Six games a-playing (What do you mean one pixel per packet on

updates?!?)

Five golden SCSI contacts (Fast SCSI? It's supposed to be

fast, isn't it?)

Four support calls (I already told them that! Don't transfer

me back - DAMN!)

Three French users (No, CTL-ALT-DEL is not the proper way to

end a program)

Two transceiver failures (What do you mean "babbling

transceiver"?)

And a database with a broken b-tree (Does anyone speak English

in Oslo?)

On the ninth day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

Nine lady executives with attitude (She said do WHAT with the

servers?)

Eight MODEMs dialing (You've been downloading WHAT?)

Seven license failures (We sent the P.O. two months ago!)

Six games a-playing (HOW many people are doing this to the

network?)

Five golden SCSI contacts (What do you mean two have the same

ID?)

Four support calls (No, I am not at the console - I tried that

already.)

Three French users (No, only one floppy fits at a time? Why do

you ask?)

Two transceiver failures (Spare? What spare?)

And a database with a broken b-tree (No, I am trying to find

Lars! L-A-R-S!)

On the tenth day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

Ten SNMP alerts flashing (What is that Godawful beeping?)

Nine lady executives with attitude (No, it used to be a mens

room? Why?)

Eight MODEMs dialing (What Internet provider? We don't allow

Internet here!)

Seven license failures (SPA? Why are they calling us?)

Six games a-playing (No, you don't need a graphics accelerator

for Lotus! )

Five golden SCSI contacts (You mean I need ANOTHER cable?)

Four support calls (No, I never needed an account number

before...)

Three French users (When the PC sounds like a cat, it's a head

crash!)

Two transceiver failures (Power connection? What power

connection?)

And a database with a broken b-tree (Restore what index

pointers?)

On the eleventh day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

Eleven boards a-frying (What is that terrible smell?)

Ten SNMP alerts flashing (What's a MIB, anyway? What's an

extension?)

Nine lady executives with attitude (Mauve? Our computer room

tiles in mauve?)

Eight MODEMs dialing (What do you mean you let your roommate

dial-in?)

Seven license failures (How many other illegal copies do we

have?!?!)

Six games a-playing (I told you - AFTER HOURS!)

Five golden SCSI contacts (If I knew what was wrong, I

wouldn't be calling!)

Four support calls (Put me on hold again and I will slash your

credit rating!)

Three French users (Don't hang your floppies with a magnet

again!)

Two transceiver failures (How should I know if the connector

is bad?)

And a database with a broken b-tree (I already did all of

that!)

On the twelfth day of Christmas, technology gave to me:

Twelve virtual pipe connections (There's only supposed to be

two!)

Eleven boards a-frying (What a surge suppressor supposed to

do, anyway?)

Ten SNMP alerts flashing (From a distance, it does kinda look

like XMas lights.)

Nine lady executives with attitude (What do you mean aerobics

before backups?)

Eight MODEMs dialing (No, we never use them to connect during

business hours.)

Seven license failures (We're all going to jail, I just know

it.)

Six games a-playing (No, no - my turn, my turn!)

Five golden SCSI contacts (Great, just great! Now it won't

even boot!)

Four support calls (I don't have that package! How did I end

up with you!)

Three French users (I don't care if it is sexy, no more nude

screen backgrounds!)

Two transceiver failures (Maybe we should switch to token

ring...)

And a database with a broken b-tree (No, operator - Oslo,

Norway. We were just talking and were cut off...)

Security Considerations

Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

Author's Address

Bill Hancock, Ph.D.

Network-1 Software & Technology, Inc.

DFW Research Center

878 Greenview Dr.

Grand Prairie, TX 75050

EMail: hancock@network-1.com

Phone: (214) 606-8200

Fax: (214) 606-8220

 
 
 
免责声明:本文为网络用户发布,其观点仅代表作者个人观点,与本站无关,本站仅提供信息存储服务。文中陈述内容未经本站证实,其真实性、完整性、及时性本站不作任何保证或承诺,请读者仅作参考,并请自行核实相关内容。
 
 
© 2005- 王朝網路 版權所有 導航