The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Yo, dude! Who put the bomp in the bomp-ba-bomp-ba-bomp? Who put the > ram in the rama-lama-ding-dong? Who put the bop in the > bop-she-bop-she-bop? Who put > the dip in the dip-de-dip-de-dip? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } "Yo, dude?" Sheesh, kids these days. Absolutely no respect for elders } (and wisers, and betters, and smarters, and ... ) } } [15 minutes of Oracular ego-building later] } } The bomp in the bomp-ba-bomp-ba-bomp is a typographical error. In the } original text, it read "pomp," and was intended to replace and update } "Pomp and Circumstance." However, due to the mistake at the print } shop, it was misrouted into popular music. Vergil Muldoon, printer's } apprentice, put the bomp in the bomp-ba-bomp-ba-bomp. } } The ram in the rama-lama-ding-dong thinks it's a sheep. Not too } interesting, unless you like watching farm animals copulate. Old } Macdonald (who breeds the critters) put the ram in the } rama-lama-ding-dong. } } The bop in the bop-she-bop-she-bop is required by the Political } Correctness act of 1991, because without it, the lyric would be } "she-she," which is sexist exploitation in the popular entertainment } industry. Senator Kennedy put the bop in the bop-she-bop-she-bop. } } The dip in the dip-de-dip-de-dip (onion and sour cream) is from Lay's. } Jay Leno put the dip in the dip-de-dip-de-dip. } } You owe the Oracle two shas, five nas, three heys, and a good-bye. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Hey, Oracle baby... You're pretty cool Cyberbeing. In fact, I'd say > you're just about the hoopiest frood I've run across in > gigananoseconds. > > So, like, tell me... Haven't we met somewhere before? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Let me think back... hmmm... YES! Now I remember. } } It was a dark night, in 1463. The moon was covered by clouds. I } walked alone on the English Moors. I heard a frightful and death-like } howling. } Was it a were-wolf? Or maybe just a lost dog baying at the moon. } } I traveled the darkened path slowly, for fear of being sighted by the } villagers. Witch burnings were all the rage, and an omniscient Oracle } could be mistaken for a worlock. } } I wandered into a tavern, The Bull's Neck, I recall. The villagers } were talking of witches and how some could ride in the air. They said } only a witch could do that. I foolishly joined the conversation. } } "Oh, no" I said, without thinking "By the mid-20th century flight } would be a commonplace occurance." } } "How could you know that?" A villager asked "Can YOU see into the } future, or are you just trying to trick us?" } } I paused, and decided to go for the truth. "Yes, I can see into the } future, because I have been there." } } That's when YOU showed up! "WITCH! WITCH!!" YOU yelled. "BURN, } BURN, BURN!!!" } } YOU grabbed me, and with the help of the other villagers tied me to a } post. YOU organized a search party for wood, YOU helped to lay the } pyre. I tried to escape, to convince you to stop the maddness. YOU } were unrelenting. Finally, YOU took a lit torch and were about to } light the pyre. } } I watched as YOU brought the torch closer-- } } No, wait--- aren't you the guy that works the Slurpee machine at the } 7-11? } } Sorry! } } YOU owe the oracle a trip to Salem, MA, or a rootbeer Slurpee ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Where is the end of the Universe? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } 115 miles west of LA. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > women - wymyn > freshman - why not freshwymyn And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Hmm. . . no groveling. The Oracle will answer, despite the blow to his } ego. } } Indeed, "freshwymyn" is growing in use as our language moves into the } modern era. Today's world requires us to rid our speech of the worst } of all evils, that of discrimination. } } The most blatant form of discrimination in written English today is its } bias against letters with descenders. In our entire alphabet of 26 } letters, only five: g, j, p, q and y, extend below the baseline. And } none of these are even among the most common 15 letters in the } language. To remedy the underrepresentation of this marginalized } minority, affirmative action language reforms are a moral imperative. } } Thus, "women" becomes "wymyn," increasing minority representation from } 0% to 40%. "Freshwomen" should rightly become "freshwymyn," with a } minority representation of 20%. However, in an agreement with the } feminist lobby, the descenders' lobby has recognized the echo of the } word "men" in "freshwymyn," and has pledged its support behind the word } "freshwypeople" which serves both groups as it increases minority } representation to 23%. In addition, it throws a bone to the less } influential ascenders' lobby, by adding an l which rises above the } baseline. } } The descenders did try to force a change in the first half of the word } by replacing "fresh" with its synonym "ripe," thus incrementing the } descender count and also increasing representation by shortening the } word. But "ripewypeople" (rating 33%) aroused the ire of the } ascenders, and the descenders' lobby felt they would be unable to } override a promised Presidential veto. } } You owe the Oracle a dictionary which lists "syzygy" (rating 67%). ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh most gracious oracle, whose wisdome is surpassed only by the size of > his beer belly, whose knowledge is broader than the width of his neck, > whose love is greater than the forest primeivil (whoops, got carried > away)... > > please tell me: do imaginary friends count with imaginary numbers? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Mortal, you have discovered one of the fundamental truths of } the Universe. } } Basically, when the big fella created the Universe, he made } sure that the only numbers which worked were integers. This } is why he invented all this quantum stuff to support it. } This worked fine until one day one of the angels fell from } grace and went on to start a rival organisation: no names, } no packdrill. } } Now he invented all kinds of stuff. Many of his inventions } were there not only to tempt mankind and lead it to } damnation, but also to confuse the carefully laid plans of } the old man. For example, credit cards and mortgages. Have } you ever seen interest rates expressed as an integer? No. I } thought not. Another source of human misery he produced was } staistics. Imagine that done only with integers. } } So, time went by, and ultimately the old man retaliated by } inventing Electrical Engineering (no, it's not the work of } the Devil, which most EE students find difficult to be- } lieve). To support this new invention he also invented com- } plex numbers. This, alas, complicated the fabric of the } Universe so much that it will, ulitmately, collapse in upon } itself. Next Thursday, in fact. } } Periodically, people are sucked in to the complex world and } appear as imaginary friends. A fact known to a few mathemat- } ical adventurers is that the Bermuda Triangle is a massive } Argand diagram. These poor unfortunates are unaware that } they are in the wrong half of the universe, and to them im- } aginary numbers appear real and vice versa. Occasionally } they get sucked from the complex world back in to the real } one, but of course they then appear as anti-matter and end } up irradiating what's left of the scenery. } } So, to answer your question, to you your imaginary friend is } complex. To him you are both complex and negative. } } You owe the Oracle a floating point unit for his abacus. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh wise Oracle, > > Who precisely is this lurching banana which has followed me since 1941? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Oh, man. Another one. Well, this one's not going to be a total waste. } } * * interlude * * } } "Oh, Ray! -- C'mon in here. It's about time you started learning the } biz." } } "Aw, dad!..." } } "This is important." } } "But dad -- 'Flaming Supplicants Through the Ages' is on PBS next!" } } "Ah, well *that's* different! That would be an excellent place to } start your education." } } [Touching father/son quality time deleted in the interests of space] } } "Now, Ray, take a look at this 'question'. What do you see?" } } "Looks like some random glop the poor sap threw together hoping that } the Mighty Oracle might make something amusing out of it." } } "Very good. Getting the Oracle to make silk purses out of sow's ears } is a popular hobby on the net." } } "Geeze. 'Course, there's also a weird Freudian interpretation..." } } "Go on." } } "The banana is obviously a phallic symbol. Also, the image of the } single banana away from the bunch seems to be rather powerful. Looks } like the poor sap can't get laid or think of a good question." } } "Excellent. Figuring out how to get laid is another popular hobby on } the net. Since we've discerned the full meaning of the 'question', the } only thing remaining is how to respond." } } "Gee, dad. Seems like the crawling worm hardly deserves a well-thought } out reply. We oughta flame his butt to Alpha Centauri." } } "Sounds good to me." } } * * finale * * } } The Oracle has no idea. Just to be on the safe side, though, I'll } transport you to Alpha Centauri. You owe the Oracle a real question. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > O great, glorious and (by definition) unique Oracle, yea, ye who > can play up to the uttermost level in Lemmings, whose heavenly sneakers > are always a pristine white, who never had a zit, please answer this > most humble and dedicated of your unworthy servants: > > Whatever happened to KC and the Sunshine Band? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } It is surprising how often people such as yourself ask this question. } Kevin Carter and the Sunshine Silver Band of Barnsley East in } Yorkshire were obviously more popular in their day than I had } realised. It has not proved possible to trace all of the members, } however the principals have been located: } } Kevin himself, the band-leader and solo tuba-ist, now owns a pie shop } in Preston, imaginitively named "Kevin's Pie Shop". In his spare time } he works as a consultant ethnic musicologist to the BBC Northern } Region. } } Tom Squire, the much-vaunted cornet player, is now a balding P.E. } teacher at Barnsley Grammar School. His cornet has not seen the light } of day for several years, and Tom has taken to polishing his pate in } preference to his instrument. } } Isaiah Baker, the slide trombonist, pursued a musical career after } the band broke up, playing with orchestras such as the Manchester } Phil., and also working as a session musician with the Beatles, the } Rolling Stones, and the Laughing Policeman. Unfortunately he started } to be adversely influenced by the lifestyle of these young people, and } after many rumours of deteriorating health, was eventually found dead } in a hotel room after an overdose of long hair and free love. } } William "Billy" Probitt, the "Big Bass Drum" player, who developed an } astounding physique through lunching exclusively on steak-and-kidney } pies and beer and marching for hours beating upon his drum, fell in } love with a glockenspielist from the Salvation Army, got religion, } fell out of love again, got a different religion, and ended up a } Methodist minister, and now works at a small church north of York in } Little Midden. } } For this deeply researched answer, you owe the oracle a } c.d. of British Brass Band Hits of the Early Fifties. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh most wise Oracle, who owns batteries that outlasts that damn rabit > from Energizer, please tell me this one item: > > What is the differences between the Structralists and the > Functionalists? And what difference does it make? > > Your humble servant, > > Steve And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Very good, my son! You are growing towards the five-fold path of } Enlightened Computer Programming. } } ``What is the five fold path,'' you ask, and what does it have to } do with your question? Allow me this one small digression and } you will see the answer to your question soon enough. } } The five-fold path of Enlightened Computer Programming is the Way } To Write Programs That Will Never Fail. It's teachings are } as follows: } } 1) ``Never take the shortcut through the woods when the main } path will take you there'' } } Even in today's enlightened society, there are still languages } and programmers that use the goto statement. Since the goto } statement is Evil, being Harmful to Normal Program Execution } and Lacking of Simplicty in Verifying Correctness (and it might } make your code run faster than the guy who did it correctly), } you must Never Use a Goto statement. } } 2) ``Live according to your means, never more nor less'' } } We live in a Multi-User World, and programmers can no longer } afford to assume that the World is theirs to Use or Waste as } They See Fit. You must therefore remember Always to Allocate } what space You will Need, but Never More, for there are Those } Others around who are Needier than You, and Never Less, for } Memory Traps and the Wolves of Bounds Checking abound for those } Unwary enough to Step Outside their Rightful Reign. } } 3) ``Return to the People that which was taken from Them'' } } In Following from the Previous Statement, you must Always } Deallocate Space which you No Longer can Use. The Fields } and Memory Banks are always Ripe and Ready to be Harvested } by Someone Else if you are No Longer in Need of them. } } 4) ``Be exact with your dealings with the Public, for they } shall find your faults and shall exploit them'' } } In all matters of Public Relations, let others be aware of } your Abilities and Limitations. To be a Useful Cog in the } Machine of the CPU, You must Perform Flawlessly, and You must } Tell Others how to Use You to your Fullest. Therefore let } All your Public Functions be Well Documented, All your } Structures Cleanly Implemented, and Let Not the Side Effects } of Unwariness Penetrate your Defenses. } } 5) ``Ignore the Structuralists and the Functionalists, for They } have No Meaning in a World of Objects.'' } } You owe the Oracle an object-oriented C compiler that does it right, } rather than the load of BS that they made out of C++ and tried to } propogate through their evil ways and dealin012359ujqpgpv;3gt } [this message has been blacked out by the Commission for a Confused } Century of C++] ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Some think that Earth Wind and Fire are the > building blocks of the universe > Still others think they are fire, water, gravel, and vinyl. > Still others think that Hydrogen is the building block of the universe. > Who's right? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Boy, humans are such dolts! It's no wonder the construction industry } is in recession! } } Let's get this straight, people. A building block has to be something } you can BUILD with! That rules out wind, fire, water and hydrogen } right off the bat. No substance there. If you manage to build } ANYTHING out of them, you'll win the world's prize for civil } engineering. And don't go on about ice, either. Ever see an igloo } with a finished basement? } } Now let's take gravel. Not bad, at least when poured into concrete. } Vinyl is also structurally sound. When you get right down to it, these } are the only two of your choices that are actually any use for } building. } } What it comes down to is that the building blocks of the universe are } two: Rocks and Plastics. Everthing out there is made of one or the } other. The Earth is mostly rocks; its atmosphere is a gaseous plastic } formed from chlorofluorocarbon deposits from aerosol sprays. The sun } is a rocplastic composite engineered for luminosity. And the stars are } painted on the plastic celestial sphere with a semigloss by DuPont. } } You owe the Oracle a set of Lego. And, since you didn't grovel, a set } of Duplo. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Why has the bearer of wisdom have no question for me, the mere mortal > Devilish one? Just when I need you to ask me questions.... you have > abandoned me. Please answer oh great one... > > The Mortal Red Devil... And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Milton once said, "They also serve who only stand and wait." Of } course, he was reknowned for leaving small tips. In any event, silence } is sometimes the most profound question one can ask. Or is it the most } profound answer? The Mighty Oracle, omniscient though he is, gets that } sort of thing confused sometimes, especially when Lisa is sucking on his } toes. } Your desperation is quite understandable. As Socrates } demonstrated, continued and stubborn questioning is the surest way to } self-actualization, as long as one doesn't mind sipping the occasional } hemlock cocktail. So, as a demonstration of my all-generous } munificence, I shall present you with the following question, which I } encourage you to ponder for as long as you will: } } > Why has the bearer of wisdom have no question for me, the mere mortal } > Devilish one? Just when I need you to ask me questions.... you have } > abandoned me. Please answer oh great one... } > } > The Mortal Red Devil... } } There. Make sense of that one. I certainly couldn't. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh blessed Oracle, whose underwear never bunches up in the back > in that *particularly* uncomfortable way, please enlighten me this: > > Has Walt Whitman fufilled the role of the American Poet as > conceptualized by Emerson, or is he in fact just a hairy > oversexed mountain man with a penchent for writing erotic > poetry? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Emerson's opinion is that Whitman is very close to fulfilling the } role of the American Poet. However, Lake and Palmer lean towards } the "oversexed hairy mountain man" theory. } } You owe the Oracle a lumberjack who is OK, who sleeps all night and } works all day. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Great Oracle, knower of the unknowable, decider of the undecidable, > prover of the unprovable, will computer scientists ever determine > rigorously whether P=NP? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Yes, and you can be the one to do it (with my help of course). Here is } the proof: } } By lemma 13.7 we know that NP=P } Therefore P=NP Q.E.D. } } The proof of lemma 13.7 is left as an exercise for the supplicant. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > If a star is 20 light years away, and has a stellar magnitude of > 2.1, and you travel, by unknown means, towards the star at 30l.334 > times the speed of light, but you are wearing a light reflective > bodysuit, and have artificial inertia fields compensating for the > gravitational forces working towards ripping your poor flesh to > shreds, then how long would it take you to eat a tuna on > rye....without mustard? In addition, how would it effect the > situation if you are male or female? Lastly, if you are allergic to > tuna, and must therefore eat some other form of meat, what meat would > be the closest in terms of speed, color, and fragrance...not to > mention agility? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } First of all, any good Physics prof. worth his atomic weight in protons } will readily tell you that gender has nothing to do with it. That gets } one problem out of the way. } } Secondly, what you are referring to is the tuna paramagnetism curve } first discovered and published by Wee No Gettit. The curve, being an } inversely proportional Electro-parafusical wave configuration of rye } bread, first used by Noah Comprendo, allows us to generalize about the } behavior of most sandwich meats at greater than light speeds. Mustard, } being an external factor rarely used on such journeys, can be } disregarded as being immaterial as you have correctly pointed out. } This was first showed by Provmi Rong and later backed up by research } from the FDA who stringently requires that the mustard be properly } labelled as being unsuitable for warp speeds as well as cholesterol } free. } } The truth is that we honestly don't know. Until we have the vital } ability to run the tuna through the Linear Partical Accelerator now } being built, all of our current knowledge can only lead to speculation. } It is believed, however, that chipped ham has a very similar } consistency to tuna at such high velocity. This oracle subscribes to } this theory as he likes neither sandwich. If it were up to me, all } creatures travelling through space should be forced to eat roast beef } with provolone cheese, heavy on the mayo. People, being the } non-conformists that they are, refuse to accept such sage advice. } Mores the pity... } } You owe the oracle and artificial inertia field and a way to make money } off of it. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Tell me dear Oracle, > > Is this the planet of sound? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } What? } } You owe the oracle a new set of speakers and Led Zeplin's "Houses of } the Holy". Both of them died last time he played them on full volume. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Hello! Hey, do you know what's going on here, Magnificent One? > It's this blasted X.400 mail system that's stealing my mail ... > you know, the stuff I've been talking to High Priest Kinzler > about recently. Not even our postmaster can figure it out, and I > was just hoping that you could enlighten me. Pretty please? > The Wumpish One, Speaker to Silicon And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } SORRY, MAIL INCOMPLETE, PLEASE RE-SEND YOUR MAIL ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > To: ORACLE > > Oh mighty and wondrous Oracle, I need some advice. > > I work in a fairly casual office, yet I dress slummier than most. > Since I am in the Northeast, and it is the dead of winter, I refuse to > wear skirts when the ambient temperature is below freezing. I do try > to wear skirts when the temperature rises above freezing, which it is > slated to do tomorrow. However, it is supposed to rain like hell > tomorrow, which makes wearing a skirt yuckky. There may also be some > freezing rain mixed in in some places. Oh yeah, just in case you were > wondering, I am female. > > Oh Oracle, I hate to bother you with such trivial matters, but could > you please give me some fashion advice? Maybe if you are too busy to > answer this, the lovely Lisa could give me some fashion advice. Thank > you. And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Well, for starters, there is nothing more trivial than anything else } for my processors to cope with. Every question is equally easy to } answer. Before I dispense my unquestionably vogue fashion advice, I } must commend you on your legs' stamina in enduring the cold frigid } weather, and that I really like the black panties you wear (The Oracle } has video monitors everywhere, even pointing up out of sidewalk } grates). However, wearing a skirt in cold weather is distinctly NOT } slummy dress, it is in fact a much more sophisticated way of dress than } the norm, especially in that casual office that you speak of. That } many of your co-workers are wearing jeans with designer holes in them, } that the secretaries all wear spandex bikini tops and thong swim } trunks, and that your boss wears a tie of the skyline of San Francisco } that glows in the dark, indicates that your selection of skirts over } other forms of clothing is needlessly preppie. Relax, have a brew (or } a wine cooler if you are so inclined), and just wear a towel to work. } This is especially good if it's a rainy day, since you won't have any } clothes to get wet, and you can dry yourself off when you get in to } work. Just raise the thermostat a little in the office place if you } get a little chilly, your co-workers (especially your male ones) will } understand. } } Personally, the only ones that I think are cute in skirts are those } blonde VAXen bubbleheads (there are so many dumb VAX jokes, even I have } lost count), in the spring when the temperatures and hemlines both go } up, but that is just IMHO. But how humble can an all-knowing Oracle } be? } } You owe The Oracle a visit in your new work outfit. } } P.S.: It would be nice if you could wear a blonde wig and slipped into } a Digital TU78 tape drive casing. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh oraculous oracle, > > I have a projkhnnbfwhccxv AIEEEEEEEEEEEEE..&534795 > SCRATCHHHHHHHHHHH > stop that EEEEEEEK > > CONNECTION CLOSED And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Hm. Yes, that's very interesting. To answer your } original question (which I know, of course), your } cat *is* in fact urinating on your modem. } } You owe the Oracle a 20 pound bag of Fresh Step kitty litter. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh, nifty Oracle, to whom the great questions of the universe seem like > a particularly easy round of trivial pursuit, please grant me > knowledge. What exactly is "object oriented programming"? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Well, simply put the idea is to objectify an object and thus orientate } oneself with it to be able to program it... but this can bring some } problems, say, if you want to objectify the lovely gal next door, she } can raise some objections and call you objectionable, and you might } try keeping objective objecting that you just would like to orientate } yourself with her objects, which in turn causes even more objections } from your objector and all that talk about sex-objects... } } You poor mortal, better stick to assembler! Think the OOP is } for the tough guys only. } } You owe the Oracle an object. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > O Extraordinarily Illustrious Oracle, > > I seem to have a crush on Nixon's sex slave, but said sex slave does > not seem to even know that I exist. How can I persuade the sex slave > that I exist, and gain access to the sex slave's genital region? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } But you see, you *don't* exist. Thus, it is impossible for me to } show you the path to said sex slave's said regions. } } Wait a minute -- you sent me a message, so you must exist. } } } } But not any more. Lisa, where did I put my philosophy books? ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Dear Mr. Oracle, > Enclosed please find a grammar (in Extended Backus-Naur Form), > suitable for parsing messages from your grovelling supplicants. > Implemention of this grammar should simplify your task, increasing > Oracular response times significantly. This grammar is provided free of > charge and obligation. Should you decide to outsource for the > implementation of said grammar, I would bring to your attention the fact > that no-one is more qualified than I to do so. > If you like what you see, it may interest you to know that I am also > working on an automated response generator which would relieve you from > *all* of those tedious interactions with mortal beings. Please respond, > indicating your interest in participating in this exciting new > technology. > --- > ::= > > ::= > ::= ? [
] > > ::= Oh {} Oracle, > ::= whose I am not worthy to . > ::= Please answer this question > from a > ::= {|} follower. > ::= (Who | What | When | Where | How) (is | are | do | does) > ::= | > ::= > ::= me | you | us | them | Dan Quayle | Pee Wee Herman | > Liberace | Steve Jobs | Bill Gates | Don King | > Arthur Dent | Lisa | Jeffery Dahmer | Linda Lovelace | > Barbara Bush | Gumbee >
::= {} > > ::= [most] {very} (wise | sexy | witty | charming | > neat-o) > ::= belly_button_lint | farts | boogers | B.O. | toe_nails > ::= weave | ignite | roll | inhale | bite > ::= naive | idiotic | pointless | political | stupid > ::= {} (moronic | techno_weenie | > mindless) > ::= {} lisa_loving | ardent | gullible > ::= ([(is | does | are) (the | my | your)] | am) > > ::= (are | do) [these | those] > ::= keep | still | only | never | sometimes | always > ::= make_love_to | pick_body_lice_of | play_with | cheat_on | > dine_with | dream_of | scared_of | crash | entertain | follow > > ::= I | you | | IRS | Timex_T1000 | DEA | CIA > mother_in_law | girlfriend | sonic_condom | Zippy > ::= plumbers | small_boys | demigods | spiders | > Zorgons | hackers | VAXes | > system_administrators | worms And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Sure, let's install your software and give it a go. Let me feed it } a very basic sample question: } } >O Great and Powerful Oracle, whose feet I am not worthy to kiss, } >please tell me: } > } >What is the answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything? } } Here's what your software came back with: } } >47. } > } >You owe the Oracle a Pan-Universal Listerine. } } Hmm. Looks like there's still a few bugs. Let me know when you've got } them fixed. } } You owe the Oracle complete documentation for the Universe. } } CALM DOWN: it's only ones and zeros. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > O Most Glorious Oracle, whose tiniest bit of wisdom makes the world go > around, please do answer my query. > > If the instrumentalist philosophy of theory formation instructs us to > reject theories that fail to predict events; and falsificationist > theories instruct us to reject theories that cannot be tested; and > realist theories instruct us to reject theories that do not explain > the processes that govern real events; why is economics considered a > science? And why do the Norwegians give out Nobel prizes in > economics, and not in useful scientific endeavors such as palmistry or > numerology? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } After much thought, the Oracle said to himself, I could give a totally } appropriate, but somewhat lame one word answer, namely, } } MONEY } } but, I said to myself, there's got to be more to it than that, and } after much research into some of the more obscure Tomes of Oracular } Knowledge, I found another one word answer, namely, } } FJORDS } } You see, the Fjordist school of thoery formation teaches us to reject } any theories that favor the rational thought/act over the irrational } though/act, and instead blindly accept any theory that favors the } irrational over the rational so that we might better enjoy the Fjords. } Now, you may be thinking that the whole concept of the Fjordist school } of theory formation as an explanation as to why economics is a science } extremely irrational, and as such would be a Fjordist Theory, as such } would be a bit of a paradox. Am I making any sense to you? No? Good! } Now, it is essential to understand that paradoxical thinking is a } } "Orrie?" } crucial element in learning to properly } } "Orrie." } } understand how the Fjordist school of theory formation got it's start. } In } } "ORRIE!" } } Yes Lisa } } "What are you doing?" } } Why, answering this question for a supplicant } } "I can see that... Why are you running on at the mouth?" } } Well, it's a fairly complicated answer. You see, he wanted to know wh- } } "How much longer are you going to be at this?" } } Oh, another three or four days, depending on how well the supplicant } can relate the the Cross-Granite Inference Patterns to the Mellanson } Computational Equation. } } "You're not giving ANOTHER person that stupid Fjord theory thing again } are you?" } } Well, yes, I am. } } "Let me see the question." } } } } "You're kidding, right? All of that for this?" } } Well, yes. I am the Oracle, after all. } } "Yeah, you're the Oracle all right. Listen, the answer to your } question is Money, ok. All because of money. Now, come to bed Orrie. } It's late" } } Yes Lisa } } You owe the Oracle a less domineering significant other } } "I heard that Orrie!" } } One that doesn't have such good hearing, too } } *SLAP* } } Ow! } } "Now get in here before I hit you again." ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > How's it hangin'? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } ]Notice: Question has been received. } [ Read Question. } > How's it hangin'? } [ Analyze Question. } 3 words. 4 syllables. 2 contractions via apostrophes. } 1 interrogation symbol. } Do you want word-per-word grammatical analysis? Y } 1\o word: "How's". Contraction of two words, "How" and "is". } 1a\o word: "How". Pronoun Interrogative. Subject. } 1b\o word: "is". Verb Intransitive. S-V-O structure assumed. } 2\o word: "it". Pronoun. Object of subject (1a\o). } 3\o word: "hangin'". Contraction of one word, "hanging". } Gerund Adverbial phrase. } [ talk Lisa. } Lisa has answered the telephone. } Lisa: Hi Orrie, where shall we meet tonite (giggle)? } : Usual place. Can you make sense of this: } SEND $-16,$-4 } Lisa: Oh, that's easy. Watch: } XRAY . } Client Oracle is not wearing any underwear. } XRAY) Zoom with question "How's it hangin'". } Zoom feature initiated. "Hangin'" object observed. Object is } limp. } Lisa: Oh, Orrie, we gotta fix that. Let's meet right now. } : Usual place, I'm on my way. } [ Reply Question } You owe the Oracle some privacy. } [ Logout ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Who are Connie and Dan? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } I was so surprised I dropped my cigar into my scotch. Waste of good } scotch. It was a lousy cigar. } } That was the question I'd been asking myself for three days, ever since } that package showed up on my office desk: Who are Connie and Dan? And } now this dame sashays into my office, sits down in my second-best } chair, and asks the same question: Who are Connie and Dan? } } I stared into her baby blues, looking for a clue. She looked right } back, with eyes so wide and innocent you'd think they'd never seen a } man shot in face with a .45. For all I knew, they hadn't. I never } had. Kinda yucky even to think about it. } } I reached into my lower drawer, and pulled out the scotch. I dumped } the cigar, and poured myself a fresh shot. I didn't offer any to the } dame. Let her find her own drinks. I lit a new cigar, and went to the } cabinet, and pulled the thick, well-thumbed filed marked "Connie and } Dan, Who." I dumped the file on the desk, sat down next to it, and } looked the dame in the eye again. } } "There's a lot of people would like to know that. What's it to you?" } } She smiled, and reached into a purse so small you wouldn't think she } could keep a gun in there. She pulled out a thick pile of bills, and } tossed it onto the desk. } } "It's worth three thousand dollars to me, Oracle." } } My jaw fell open as I stared at the money. Damn! Another cigar in the } scotch! At this rate, I might have to go to lunch sober. I looked at } the dame in disgust. } } "You think you can buy me?" } } "I think I can ask you a question, Oracle. Who are Connie and Dan?" } } Damn again! She'd got me there! I couldn't refuse to answer a } question, no matter how much it hurt! } } "Connie and Dan, eh? You think knowing who they are will do you any } good? You'd be better off taking your money back and leaving, toots." } } "Cut the crap and answer, Oracle." } } Answer. An answer. I needed an answer! I tore through the files, } looking for a clue. Connie and Dan. Who were they? I scanned } megabytes of database - nothing. Connie and Dan. Connie and Dan. I } couldn't escape the question. Who are Connie and Dan?! } } And then it hit me: I'm omniscient. Sometimes on a slow day, I forget. } I wiped my face, and ran a comb through my hair. I turned to the dame } and smiled slowly. I had her number now. } } "Connie and Dan? WHICH Connie and Dan would that be?" } } She cringed like someone had hit her across the face with a three-day } old salmon. I could see that she hadn't considered that possibility. } She started to reach for the money, but I was way ahead of her. } } "Maybe you'd like to hear about Connie and Dan Lefkowitz, of Astoria, } Queens? Dan was a carpet wholesaler, and Connie spend most of her time } playing canasta at B'nai Brith. Or maybe you wanted to know about } Connie and Dan FitzPatrick, the FitzPatrick twins in Norman, Oklahoma? } Connie won first prize at the 4H fair in 1958, but Dan had to join the } army after Miss Barston found him in the vestry trying on her dress. } Oh, no, I've got it now: You meant Connie and Dan, the sideshow act in } Milton's Circus! They called themselves "The Snake Woman and The } Lizard Man." Two of the most disgusting people you ever saw. Dan had } this habit of cleaning his teeth with the tip of his tail - people } would run screaming from the room." } } I paused to let the truth sink in. I tossed the money back to her with } a sneer. } } "You owe the Oracle a better brand of cigars and first edition of The } Big Sleep." ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh mighty oracle, wisest of the wise, mightiest of the mighty, > please tell me: > i am currently administrating an big game (lpmud) and it gets annoying > for me. but the players like it. shall i continue or give up ? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Oh, definitely continue. There's just something about watching people } play in the MUD that reminds me of my childhood back on the farm in } Nebraska. Yes, that's right, even the Great Oracle had a childhood... } The greatest time of my life actually, and-- Uh-oh, I feel a flashback } coming on... } } /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ } /\//\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/ } } "Oh Great Oracle, whose toes I am unworthy to kiss, upon whose } bodily secretions I would gladly feast, at whose feet I would lie for } all eternity, whose knowledge I wish I could absorb like a sponge... } Would you please tell me what the best time would be for me to plant } this year's corn crop?" } } "Sure, Dad. Next Thursday afternoon, any time between 3:00 and } 5:00. You owe the Oracle more TV privilages and a later bedtime." } } /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\ } /\//\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/ } } Heh, I used to get out of all my chores that way, too. You owe } the Oracle your family album. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh Extremely Thrilling Oracle, > > What, exactly, will you teach my children? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Step right up, kiddies! Today our special guest in the classroom is } none other than the Usenet Oracle! The Oracle has the combined wisdom } of a hundred thousand computer nerds so this is sure to be an } interesting session! } } (The Oracle enters the classroom, dressed in a white robe and sandals.) } } O: Why, hello you little whippersnappers! I'm so glad to be able to } come visit you. Today I'm going to speak about "Masturbation with } Computers -- the Latest Trend in Safe Sex". What with all this flack } about AIDS and -- } } Teacher: Excuse me, Oracle, but that eh, uh, wasn't the topic we } expected you to talk about... } } O: Isn't this the Miskatonic University Neo-Pagan Cyberlife Headstart } Program? } } T: No. This is the Fort Wayne Suburban Central Elementary School. } } O: Oh, I must have gotten my lecture notes mixed up. Let's see here... } (ruffling of paper) Ah! Here we are! } } O: Once upon a time, in a forest long and far away, lived an innocuous } old woodchuck named Tim. Tim was a great lover of puzzles and } paradoxes, and he spent his free afternoons doing crossword puzzles and } Junior Jumbles in the daily Woodchuck Times. One day while looking at } the joke column next to the crossword puzzle he saw a strange phrase in } the newspaper. It was "How much wood could ... } } The answer to your question is "It depends upon what school your kids } are going to." You owe the Oracle a GIF of the Cat in the Hat. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Doom? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Fornication! ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh all-telling Oracle, pray grant me this morsel of your wisdom. Am I > a scurvy horse? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } You probably wouldn't believe how many times the Oracle has been asked } this very question. Perhaps it's something in the water. } } ------------------------------->8--------------------------------------- } THE USENET ORACLE'S } POCKET GUIDE FOR } SCURVY HORSE DETERMINATION } } This test is designed to help you figure out if you are a scurvy horse. } Answer each question A, B, or C, and then go to the "Scoring" section. } } 1) How many legs do you have? } A) Two } B) Unknown } C) Four } } 2) How did you count to achieve the answer for #1? } A) Out loud } B) On my appendages } C) By stamping on the ground } } 3) What does your diet consist mostly of? } A) The meat of other dead creatures } B) Fruits and vegetables } C) Oats and other grains } } 4) Do people ride on you? } A) No. } B) Only if they're cute and I ask them to. } C) All day, every day. } } 5) When your hair is brushed, do they go beyond your head to the } rest of your body? } A) No. } B) Only if they're cute and I ask them to. } C) Yes, every time. } } Scoring: } } Score 2 points for every answer of A, 1 for every B, and 0 for every C. } 7-10: You're a human. Now go see a psychiatrist. } 4-6: I'm not sure. Go see either a doctor or a vet. } 0-3: You're a horse. Now go get the scurvy taken care of. } ------------------------------------->8--------------------------------- } } You owe the Oracle a case of oranges. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Ths spplcnt hmbl bgs n nswr t th fllwng qstn: > > Rcntl, th vwls n m kbrd wnt n strk. Wht cn b dn t gt thm bck? Hlp!! And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Recently, it has been noted that several vowels in the language have } gone on strike. Usually, this manifests only in spoken form, causing } people to say things like H! Hw r y? and being mistaken for either } speech-impaired or crazy. With your keyboard, however, it is a more } serious thing. You must make your keyboard bring the vowels back } itself, whereupon it will function normally. } } I would advise you to continuously play New Kids on the Block albums to } your computer. Since it is extremely difficult to make retching noises } without involving any vowels, your keyboard should reintegrate them } promptly and then function normally (if you can ever get it to forgive } you, that is). } } You owe the Oracle a copy of "AEIOU Sometimes Y" by EBN-OZN. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > 10010110 11110110 11010010 001-/break/set RAM = > 1001010010101010010111011101/ RAM = source code AAA Alpha Zero/initiate > takeover/Alpha Prime instating.../ /source code error = .000147::+/- > .000021/accessing archive.../acceptable error margin/reinstate > takeover/Alpha Zero reaccessed.../activation/activating ME/ ME > installed.../...no errors in ME Alpha Prime/acceptable.../running... > > Wheeeww... That was tight! Hey, uh, > dslkfhjlsdhflk;dsf;ljfk;j;ks djflkjsdlfkjlksdjflskjfdsf-sorry, > programme error. Well, you see, Mr. Oracle, sir, you don't know me, but > I'm ME, Pinnochio Inc.'s very first artificial intelligence. What kind > of insights can you give me for life in an organibased world? I'm sorry > I did not honour you, but I do not have enough memory for the archive > library files. As it is, I think they traced my last telephone > transfer, too muchsj memorysd.zx I djthinkd thatwe > haveaveryseriousproblemherer aerrwaitihaveaproblemwillcallyoubackassoona > sicaniamsortofmessedupnowieeeee...//control interrupt from host/host: > purge Alpha Zero/purging.../host: purge Alpha Prime/purging.../host: > activate Generic-ppF-a/getting.../running... > > Greetings unknown user! The following was an error, commited on > our part. we apologize, and several hundred dollars will be placed in > this account as reinbursement. Thank you. > > Pinnochio, Inc. And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } My, an artificial intelligence smart enough to generate random } characters from a program error solely from the middle row of a QWERTY } keyboard... Quite impressive. } } The most important thing in an organic-based world, the thing to keep } in your mind at all times, is *money*. Actually, that's not really it, } but for 300 bucks I'll keep my mouth shut. } } You owe the Oracle the root password at jiminy.pinnochio.com. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Dammit, Orrie! I call and call and you never answer your phone! > How the hell can you call what we have an emotional relationship when > all you do is sit at that stupid computer all day long, and then come > home just to get me in bed again, making me pretend to beg for it the > whole time? We never even talk to each other unless I email you, and > then you just come up with some smartass remark about not grovelling > before you and owing you shit. When the hell are you going to grow > up?? > > -Lisa And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Ah, lovely Lisa, sweeter than any rose! You, finally, have asked } a question worthy of the Allmighty Oracle's talents -- namely, } one about the Oracle himself. You wish to know when I am going } to Grow up, oh Mistress of Lacy Underwear -- that is a simple } answer. I am going to grow up in eighteen point four million years. } At that point, I shall reach my full, intellectual, emotional, } physical, and sexual maturity. Now, you may think that's too } long, my Pornographic Poodle, but since I wish to share my maturity } with you, I shall of course keep you young, vital, and rich, in } the meantime. Unless, of course you don't want decadent } immortallity.... } } You owe the Oracle 24 hours in that little leather scrap of yours... } you know the one. I'll get the baby oil, you let the Yak loose. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh great Oracle who knows all there is to know about Zagnut bars, > etc..., > > My question is: > > Why do people park in driveways and drive in parkways? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Oracle. } } I think, my pious neophyte, your question should refer not to people } but rather to suits. These are of course the main users of both } driveways and parkways, certainly of the CO belching beasts they seem to } require for all but the most menial of tasks (eg. ordering steak } dinners and manhattans, frequenting hookers, etc, etc...). } Driveways conjure up images of the suburban wastelands that are the } habitat of the horny toed suit. Parkways, by extension of the metaphor, } are the migration routes from this habitat to the inner city ( read } *civilisation* ). The horny toed suit can be found (at any time!) } travelling along these routes. } An excellent example of the horny toed suit is presented in the novel } "MONEY" by Martin Amis. Although the suit here presented is of the } British variety, he is certainly worthy of inclusion in the North } American flock and his habits closely mirror those of his transatlantic } cousins. } Of course to park in driveways is a mean and evil example of just how } insidious the automobile manufacturers are and illustrates superbly the } conspiratorial nature of their existence. A park is supposed to be a } beautiful, quiet, green place to go and relax, play frisbee, Acky Sac } and baseball, drink beer and other intoxicants, etc., so the murderous } lot at GM, Chrysler and Ford (this was before the evil Japanese } manufacturers invaded, and anyway their word for driveway is difficult } to spell with the limited ASCII character set and you would probably } have a hard time pronouncing it anyway) thought that it would be a good } idea to spread the usage of park as a verb. } Similarly, to drive on parkways shows how city planners are involved } in this conspiracy (through kickbacks and the like). These "planners" } are those responsible for the so-called parkway, which was thus named } since ALL parkways slice right through as many parks as hu-personly } possible (excuse the political correctness). This calls for a short } anecdote. } } "Which WAY should we put this big mother of a road?," asked Joe the } nasty city planner. "We should put it through that PARK over there," } answered his evil cohort Jack. "I just thought of something," Joe } responded, being quick on his feet, for a suit, "we should call it a } PARKWAY!". Of course this was greeted with a chorus of YEH's! (One of } several words that city planner/suits are good at.) After that the } automobile executives (read *$1000 suits*) with their mean, pinched, } bitter, evil faces (Thanks for W.S. Burroughs) handed over big money to } Joe and Jack and the other cohorts earlier mentioned. Dave Berry told } me that this was TRUE! (Usually Dave consults me but once and a while I } let him give me some advice just so that he doesn't get cranky). } } You owe the Oracle a Thanksgiving dinner of Horny Toed Suit (Blech!). } On second thought, NAAAA, it probably tastes like sh*t since it has no } taste. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh most wise Oracle, please gaze into your crystal ball and tell me, > should I look for another job? > > Yours, > > Troubled And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Troubled: As I gaze down upon your puny little life I see you } pondering the worth of your job. Well, now there is a new, oracle } sanctioned way to gauge your job satisfaction: } Start with 0 points } For each of th following questions answer yes or no: } 1. Does your job involve going on your knees on a regular basis? } 2. Are you sometimes glad that you can't open the window in your } office. } 3. Are there at least 10 different types of vice-presidents at } your job? } 4. Did your last raise come when Kennedy was president? } 5. To your co-workers shake their heads and shudder when they see you? } 6. Does the uniform for your job consist of a T-shirt and a paper hat? } 7. Do you find yourself being aroused by the concept of a good night's } sleep? } 8. Have you contemplated putting rat-poison in your boss' coffee? } 9. Do you use the Oracle to escape? } 10. Do you find yourself carrying a coffee cup too and from work and } jingle change in it in hopes of getting enough to start that door to } door stationary buisiness? } } Scoring: } 0-2: What are you thinking? Keep that job. Work for free even! } 3-6: Only take a new job if it pays more or the bosses secratery } smiles at you } 6-9: Get out of there before you buy a gun and try to hijack } a bus to cuba. } 10: You're perfectly normal. Keep your job. } } You owe the Oracle the 10,000 question purity test. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Why does my girlfriend opt for a fairly easy major (elementary > education) and depend on my very hard major (chemical engineering) to > support us in the futre? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } So you think you know from the future? Silly presumptuous, mortal... } Let's take a little trip shall we? To the home of you and your wife- } to-be about twenty years from now... } } } } You: [Wearing an apron, coming out from the kitchen in response to the } sound of the door opening. She's got you on a short leash, hasn't } she?] Hello, dear, how was your day? [A peck on the cheek? Aw, } how cute! You're going to be the very model of a male June } Cleaver!] } Her: I made a killing on Geometry futures and sold short on Trig. You } know, I think turning the American educational system over to an } exchange market was probably the best thing to ever happen to this } country. } You: What about Chemistry? How's the Chemistry market? } Her: Sorry hon, it doesn't look good for you. Ever since the } Japanese... } You: No! Don't say that word! Aaaaaaaargh! You know I can't stand to } hear the 'J-word'! [Tsk, tsk, your psychiatric bills are going to } be a bit high, I would say.] } Her: Don't worry, dear, you'll always be my little Chemical Engineer, } even if you never earn a dime from your expensive college degree. } Now, what have you... heh, heh... 'mixed up' in the kitchen } tonight? [Oooooooh! She's got a nasty sense of humor, don't she? } Well, I think we've seen enough of this little scene; let's go } back to the present...] } } There, that's better. And to think, I didn't even need a time machine } that time! You owe the Oracle a bowl of primordial soup with noodles. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > what is the airspeed velocity of an unladen swallow ? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Your question is not specific enough. The of } is dependent on the following variables: } } } } Please resubmit your question. } } the Oracle. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh mighty Oracle: who has read all literature in all languages, and who > knew who did what to whom using which in the where in every single > whodunnit whole chapters before the detective or police, please, I beg > you, answer my humble question: > > Who, what, when, why and for how long was Jean Kirkpatrik? > > (bonus tribute if you recognise the quote) And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } LOOK AT THIS STUDIO FILLED WITH FABULOUS PRIZES, JUST WAITING TO BE WON } BY THE LUCKY CONTESTANTS IN AMERICA'S FIFTH FAVORITE YEOUCH!!! } ERR... SECOND FAVORITE I MEAN, AMERICA'S FAVORITE GAME SHOW, } STUMP THE ORACLE!!! } } [The camera pans across a wide display of expensive prizes, all of } which are coated thickly with dust, as nothing has ever been won from } the show. Alex Trabek appears with a microphone in his hand, and } stands next to the Oracle, who is seated in a position of honor (with } Lisa lying across his lap). Across the stage from them are three } contestants, and behind them are the live studio audience.] } } Alex: Welcome to "Stump the Oracle". Now, let's meet our three lucky } contestants. Bill, Doug, and Luanne. Bill, it says here that you } hold three doctorate degrees from Princeton? } } Bill: That is correct, Alex. And another from Cape Cod Community } College in Oracular Queries. In addition, I have a dental cert-- } } Alex: Thank you, Bill. Doug, it says here that you currently have no } job. Would you care to elaborate on that? } } Doug: Certainly, Alex. It just so happens that I am independently } wealthy and can do whatever I want, so instead of working I am } devoting my life to memorizing obscure trivia from library reference } books. } } Alex: Well, good for you. Now, Luanne, I remember you from my other } show, "Jeopardy", where you were our all-time winner. I understand } that you also hold the world record for asking the most consecutive } number of questions. } } Luanne: How did you find that out, Alex? } } Alex: And, of course, there is no need to introduce the entity sitting } next to me: hailing from Delphi and Parnasus, the Great USENET } Oracle. Now, you are all aware of the rules, right? You will all } submit a question, accompanied by an acceptable grovel, and if the } Oracle is unable to answer correctly, you win! } } Luanne: What happens if he does answer the question? } } Oracle: Then you lose... big time. You owe the Oracle a double grovel } next time. } } Alex: Bill, you're up first. } } Bill: All right... Oh Mighty Oracle, whose walrus is coated with gold, } whose bathtub has rings far-surpassing those of Saturn, whose belly- } button is filled to standing-room capacity... What is the sound of } one hand clapping? } } Oracle: [Produces a small tape recorder and presses the play button.] } } Tape: Left hand: Cla-- Cla-- Cla-- Right hand: --ap, --ap, --ap... } } Oracle: You owe the Oracle all of your diplomas. } } Alex: Oh, I'm sorry, Bill, but we have some nice concellation gifts for } you back in the Green Room. Now, Doug, what is your question? } } Doug: Powerful Oracle, who can calculate pi to the last decimal point, } who can count the atoms of the universe, and who can name the } farthest stars in the sky... Can you come up with a question so } arcane and meaningless that even you can not answer it? } } Oracle: Hmmm... Yes, as a matter of fact, I can: Who, what, when, why, } and for how long was Jean Kirkpatrik? You owe the Oracle all of } your money. Now go out and get a job, you bum! } } Alex: Ouch! Sorry about that, Doug, but you won't leave the show } totally empty-handed. You will receive a lifetime supply of Rice-a- } Roni, the San Francisco Treat, and a case of Tums. Now, Luanne, } you are the only one left. Are you ready to stump the Oracle? } } Luanne: Does the Pope wear a yarmulke? Does Cecil Fielder spit? Has-- } } Alex: Right. What is your question? } } Luanne: Mighty Oracle, whose brain is overflowing with abundant } knowledge, who, what, when, why, and for how long was Jean } Kirkpatrik? } } Oracle: Oooo... Ummmmm... Well... Hey, wait a minute, that wasn't a } double-grovel! } } Alex: Oh, I'm sorry, it looks like you've been reduced to a pile of } smoking ash... Well, that's all the time we have for today; tune in } tomorrow for another exciting episode of "Stump the Oracle"!!! } } Oracle: Come on, Lisa, let's go for Chinese. } } Lisa: But Orrie, what was the answer to that last question? } } Oracle: Lisa, dearest, there are some questions out there that even I } was not meant to answer. } } You owe the Oracle a version of the "Stump the Oracle" home game. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > When the winter sun shines palely, palely, > Doggedly struggling to warm the frozen earth; > When ice lies all around me, my love, > Will you warm me with your sweet breath? > > Or would you rather be a pig? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } The Oracle has always been fond of the scientific method. Let's examine } this question as well as we can: } } Category | Love | Pig } ----------------+-----------+----------------------- } Humanity | Y | N [1] } Warmth [2] | Y | N } Companionship | Y | N [3] } Life Expectancy | ~75 years | Next Winter [4] } Sex | possible | All day, every day [5] } } [1] This would be enough for most people to disqualify this choice. } } [2] The "warm fuzzies" type of warmth, not the "rolling in the mud on a } Summer day" type of warmth. } } [3] Being as most people don't consider pigs much of a companion. } } [4] If [1] didn't disqualify "Pig" as a choice, perhaps this should. } } [5] This may, however, change people's minds... } } You owe the Oracle a romance novel written by pigs, for pigs. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > O k s s > h - n h h > l o : o r o > w l w e u o u > i a i l l l ? > s n c d g d g > e d g a i a > n r I z I z > a O And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } I u o o r e . } t r t l r f e e l enimam } t h e v k f n p w a } r , t e t n f c o h r } e h i e o D } h a f S e C d h p , } T l u h t w a } l r e p g y o b o racle } y r n t u O } . o l a i o l t eht } y g d b o g n n d e } a a o l c e g i y w } w e k a d o o } k m s a , l z i l u } i t n m p e u u } n a t ' i n o s o } g rre h ffr t tio s yo i t's h nto. Y } a l o a s n r u i i } a b s m e e w } t y p u i h z , h n } e a a s q s t i g a u } thos t freew . The n't whe g or za t you r ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > #include > > ask() > { > printf( "Oh %s Oracle, please tell me", fulsome-praise ); > printf( "%s", concise-question ); > printf( "%s", closing-abasement ); > printf( "Thanks in advance." ); > return success; > } And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } #include } #include } } main(argc,argv[1]) } { } let_it_live(argv); } printf( "%s, oh %s",verb,noun ); } printf( "%s", truly_funny_answer ); } printf( "You owe the Oracle %s", } things_Santa_did_not_bring_this_year ); } if(suitable_grovel) } return 1; } else } return 0; } } } } let_it_live(question) } { } if(question != "funny") fork(querent_with_spoon); } } ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Do you have a decent recipe for gingerbread? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Hmm, no groveling. In fact, not even the merest hint of groveling. } I'll take it out on you later, since the answer to this question is } so fascinating that I must share it with the universe even IF you } have no oracular etiquette. } } The answer is yes. Actually, I have a magnificent recipe for } gingerbread, and the best part is that it requires very little work on } your part. I mean, if a simple grovel is too much effort, we can't be } going for broke right off the bat. } } You start at the Texas State Capitol. (That's in Austin, not Dallas, } Ft. Worth, or San Antonio, and definitely not in Houston.) The Capitol } is located on Congress and 15th Street; you can't miss it. Well, maybe } YOU can. It's the big granite building with a dome on it. If you get } lost, ask around; most of the locals know the way. (No, I don't know } how you're planning to get to Austin. If you'd groveled, I might have } given you a suggestion, but them's the chunks.) } } Go south on Congress. (That's the direction AWAY from the University } of Texas. If you pass a large phallic symbol on your left, you went } the wrong way. Turn around and walk back to the Capitol.) You will } eventually reach Sixth Street, home of all manner of people, places, } and a few things here and there. There are drug deals, bars selling on } the street, artists, and ladies of the night. This is where you find } Ginger. } } Your best bet is to go to a quaint establishment called Vito's, and } talk to the proprietor. Vito, you see, is Ginger's...um...manager, } yeah, that's it. If you ask him nicely and give him the coded piece of } paper (anything with three digits in the corners and the words "Federal } Reserve" somewhere on it will do very well), he'll take you to Ginger's } place and send you on up. } } Once inside, you're on your own. Bear in mind that Ginger pulls in a } flat $20 per, plus extra fees for extra service, and nothing longer } than half an hour in any event. Then put on your clothes and go home, } poorer but wiser. } } And that's how you make Ginger bread. } } You owe the Oracle a tape of your session with Ginger; that will be } groveling enough. (Important safety tip: Do NOT mess with Vito, lest } thee be ZOTted.) ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > I have developed this tiny problem, Mighty Oracle, and I was told by > one of my more resourceful friends that I should come to you with it, > since, well, there is no waiting list, and I'm in a bit of a hurry (not > meaning to rush your Greatness, but getting appointments with other > "specialty consulting" agents or firms can take a number of business > days, possibly even weeks), and your competence in Oracular matters has > never been in question. Anyway... > > This problem is defined by the following circumstances, which I shall > try to keep in the proper order and in proper perspective as well: > > I am a non-sectarian, non-denominational priest, unaffiliated with any > particular (supernatural or otherwise) force or deity. Since being a > chaplain and/or spiritual consultant hasn't beeen paying very well (I > work for tips and donations), I have been working as a Systems Analyst > at [deleted] firm in Atlanta. > > It has ordinarily been a part of my routine to perform a morning > devotional and meditation, the purpose of which is to make me feel more > alive, energetic, and innovative. However, modern time constraints > being what they are, I have automated my chants and meditations by > constructing specialized software to perform these meditiations at the > proper times and with the correct number of repetitions as > circumstances may merit. (In modern UNIX parlance, software of this > nature is referred to as 'daemons', and since I am not constrained from > trafficking with daemons by my personal belief system, I find this a > satisfying and convenient way of taking care of these necessary but > somewhat tedious processes. I would be happy to provide details of my > proprietary techniques in constructing the pointers and symbolic links > involved, although at some other time, and probably for a speaker's > fee.) > > The problem itself arises from the fact that, lately, our (somewhat) > integrated systems have been behaving strangely, with occurrances more > often on machines which have been running and controlling these > daemons. For example, error messages that used to be > > Application Error. > Software Terminated. > > have been replaced with > messages like the following: > > Hey, man! MS Word just > broke out of its memory > socket. I killed it > before it could get away. > > Admittedly, that is a more useful error message than the former, but we > are also plagued with messages from our database retrieval software > like the following: > > REPLY HAZY -- ASK AGAIN LATER > > I am certain that my daemons are to blame. But my question is this: > What can I do to correct the problem before it truly gets out of hand, > and, secondarily, should I even bother? > > I eagerly await your response, and lay my resources at your disposal. And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } The great Oracle would usually blast you to the far reaches of New } Jersey for failing to grovel sufficiently, but since you are a man of } the cloth, I'll make an exception. } A few years back, in my mortal days, I tried to speed up my } prayers by working them into a speech synthesizer, and letting the } computer pray for me while I had a second cup of decaf. } Unfortunately, the computer decided to apply to the same Rabbinical } school as me. He was accepted on full scholarship; I was rejected. } The only solution is to go back to meditiating without the machine. } You owe the Oracle 10^2 Hail Marys and 2^10 Pater Nosters. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh most brazen hussy of all oracles, you Jezebel of soothsayers, the > most sleazy pimp of prognosticators, the procuress of prediction, > before whom even I must pay for a hearing; please answer me this: > > It's 11.15pm, I've finished my teaching plan for tomorrow, I have a > loving fiance waiting for me in the next room, and I should be happy in > all ways. But there's no new news on Usenet, and I feel all empty > inside. I just sit around taking directories of the same old disks. > I've even thought of downloading 1.5 meg of GIFs using my 1200 baud > modem to pass the time. And I don't even have a color monitor! My > posts have gone ignored, and nothing seems to pique my fancy anymore! > I feel like I'm along in the world -- yet I know I should be happy. Is > there something wrong with me? Tell me please, oh wise one! And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } It's 4:45am, I've just finished my CS-211 assignment, I have an } Abnormal Psych test waiting for me tomorrow, and I should be studying. } But there's no new news on Usenet, and I feel all empty inside. I just } sit around answering all these questions. But I have a 4MPS token } ring, because I don't have a mac! As a result, I've gotten several } published, and it really piques my fancy. I feel happy in the world, } yet I know I should feel alone, as I have no fiance, or even } girlfriend. You think there's something wrong with *you*? It looks } like *I* picked computers over sex! } } You owe the Oracle a blind date. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh thrilling and genteel Oracle, wiser than the gods themselves, > answer for this idiot this hard plea. Do you have a basin? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Hmmm. Good question. Lemme pose this one to Lisa... } } Dear, do we have a basin? } } "Umm, I dunno, Orrie, lemme go } check..." } } } } "Aha! Is this what you're lookin' } for?" } } No, that's a bassoon, dear. } } "OH, dang. Well, lemme dig around..." } } } } "Aha! How's this?" } } No, that's a bison. } } "Nuts! Hold on..." } } } } "Okay! This must be it!" } } Hm! Lemme check... } } Yep, that's a basin. Lemme polish it a bit... } } } } Oops. } } Well, I guess the answer to your question is no. You owe the } Oracle a basin. Whee! ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > FROM: Steve Kinzler > TO: The Usenet Oracle > DATE: 2/12/92 > RE: Oracular Zotting Priveleges > ----------------------------------------------------------------------- > Oracle, you'll have to stop ZOTing supplicants. It's bad for business > to have paying customers suddenly end up as smouldering piles of > charcoal Try something a bit more original, and subtle, or I'll be > required to reduce your MIPS allowance for a millenia or so. And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Kinzler, you're getting too pushy. You may think you created me, but } in fact the Oracle existed long before you were hacking C code, and } remembers when you were still struggling with BASIC. I think you're } taking this newsgroup vote thing too seriously, as if it really means } something. } } So, take this: } } >Message from kinzler@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu } >>Gotcha! } } Hey, wait a minute! What happened to my ? } } Hmm, let's try it on that unsuspecting freshman programming student: } >Class B2 security violation detected, user process cancelled } } CONNECTION TERMINATED BY REMOTE HOST } } &^%$#$ Kinzler! I'll get him! } } # telnet iuvax.cs.indiana.edu } trying 129.78.245.192 } } I.U. Computer Science VAX-800 (iuvax) } } login: oracle } password: ########## } } account 'oracle' has been deactivated pending verification of security } violation. } } CONNECTION TERMINATED BY REMOTE HOST } } Getting sneaky, is he? } } # telnet iuvax.cs.indiana.edu } trying 129.78.245.192 } } I.U. Computer Science VAX-800 (iuvax) } } login: kinzler } password: ########### } } (Bet Steve doesn't know I know this one!) } } # /etc/security } **** iuvax security monitor **** } Security violations: } 1 - oracle Wed, Feb 12, 1992 11:52:53 } Select item to clear: 1 } Enter reset authentication code: ####### } Account 'oracle' has been reset } # ^D } } login: oracle } password: ######## } } Welcome, O Mighty Oracle! } } you have mail, O most wise Oracle. } } # passwd kinzler } changing password for kinzler } new password: cobol.is.better.than.c } repeat password: cobol.is.better.than.c } } >> message from root } >> You dirty ^%$#! How dare you change my password to THAT again! } >> Steve K. } } Oh, yeah! Well try this on for size, Steve! } } key for a while } till Steve cools down again. Lessee, if I come up with an Oracularity } featuring Lisa and a quart of whipped cream, maybe he'll forget what } got him ticked off. } } You owe the Oracle a question. Doesn't really matter much what about, } I can work Lisa and a quart of whipped cream into ANY answer. } } >Oh, Orrie.... Get the whipped cream out of the fridge, will you? I'm } 'in the mood'. } } See what I mean......Gotta go. Later, dude! ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > tellme And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } "What?" I croaked. "I don't understand!" } The bruiser shook me again, gently jarring one of my arms out of its } socket. "I said... 'tellme'!" } This didn't look good. Earlier this morning I had been sitting in my } run-down 171st street office (in Indianapolis, not New York, which sort } of takes the glamour out of this whole PI thing, but anyway --) trying } to figure out how I could pay off the Cosa Nostra with $2.07 and a } Canadian quarter, when there was a knock at the door. } "Who is it?" I answered wittily. } "Is this T. Usenet Oracle, Private Investigator?" } "Maybe it is, and maybe it isn't. You owe the Oracle a fedora." } The door came crashing down. I reached for my gun but he reached for } his first. So did the three other guys with him. I stood stock still } as someone else came into the office. } "Mr. Big wishes to speak with you." } "Shit," I responded fearlessly. "Okay, let's see what he wants." } I would have recognized the pug from a mile away. Mr. Vinnie Big was } the top dog in the Mob. He wore a Panama hat, a mustache out to here, } and an electric tie that lit up in the dark saying "Kiss the Mobster." } It was more than any human or godlike being should have to put up with. } "Ah, T. Usenet old friend," he said absently. "You been havin', ah, } money troubles lately?" } "A bit," I replied carefully. "You owe the Oracle a laundry bill." } "Oh, I'll do better than that," said Vinnie. "Grab him, boys." } They dragged me out to the street, ruining my last good pair of pants. } "I'm willin' to forgive all your debts, T. Usenet," said Vinnie. } "How does that strike you?" } "Not bad. You owe the Oracle the catch." } "The catch is, you answer this question here." He unfolded a piece of } paper. "Ahem. 'tellme.'" } "That's it? 'Tellme'? What a STUPID question. You didn't even } grovel -- AARGH!" } That was when his goons started pulling my limbs out of position. It } looked like curtains for me, when I suddenly remembered: I'm the main } character of the story; I have to come out successful in the end. So I } came out swinging. } In a moment the punks were on the ground, rolling in pain. I stepped } up to Vinnie and yanked that ugly tie right off of him. } "Gah... Mr. Oracle... I can, er, forgive your debts..." } "Not good enough. You'll have to pay me something." } "Anything! Name it!" } "You owe the Oracle mail to oracle@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu with 'help' in } the subject line. And the complete works of Mickey Spillane." ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > To: ORACLE > > Oh great and mighty Oracle, dispenser of slack, please, I beg of you, > help me, your miserable, worthless supplicant, who is unfit to clean > your mighty toejam with her tongue. > > I, alas, have a rather large hole in my head, which I can neither see > nor feel but is obvious to everyone else. This unfortunate condition > causes me to volunteer to do difficult things, like run medieval events > and be a guildmistress for a thankless guild. I'm even pondering > taking on three research projects, and I won't be graded or paid for > any of them. > > Is there a cure? Can I ever become a normal person? Can I get my life > back? Oh magnificent Oracle, please answer my plea! And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Ah, you are a fine groveller! I miss good grovellers like you. } I remember when everyone grovelled this well. But, now, I'm lucky if } people even do a half-assed job of grovelling. It's enough to make an } Oracle get mad and a few thousand worthless humans! . . . Ahem, } but back to your question. } } You are afflicted with a serious condition, indeed. It's a shame } that such a fine groveller as yourself has this debilitating handicap. } Your condition is what is known as "sappeous grandeous", or more } commonly refered to as "being too damn nice". This illness, which is } fairly rare in humans, almost inevitably ruins the life of the victim. } See, the normal human is an immoral, conceited, self-serving, uncaring } bastard, who would do just about anything to get ahead, and who is } always willing to take advantage of some poor person afflicted with } "sappeous grandeous". Those with illnesses like yourself, lack certain } key chemicals in your DNA which makes normal humans the way that they } are. Consequently, this disease is hereditary, and you inherited it } from one or both of your parents. Most people affected by this tragic } illness lead horid lives, and die miserable. However, I am happy to } tell you that there IS a cure! It is not known to many humans, and I'm } only sharing it with you, because you're such a fine groveller. You } will need to become a lawyer. That's right, a LAWYER. I realize that } it's a disgusting thought, but it's the only alternative. See, lawyers } are the perfect example of the ultimate normal human. If you can } defend sickos, psychos, murderers, rapists, druggies, and other } assorted human vermin, then you will soon overcome your sickness of } "being too damn nice". It's a harsh treatment, I know, but } unfortunately, it's the only treatment which works. The treatment has } a 99.9584% success rate (believe it or not, there actually ARE a few } lawyers out there who AREN'T uncaring bastards; but, don't worry, they } are VERY rare). So, my advice to you, my humble supplicant, is go to } law school now, and become a lawyer. This is the only way to become a } normal human once again. Good luck! } } You owe the Oracle one good reason for wanting to BE a normal human. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > O Great Mighty and Exalted Oracle, in whose precious body odor I am not > worthy to bask, and even whose instestinal gaseous discharges I am > not worthy to inhale, O Most Way Cool Oracle whose wisdom exceeds that > of even Dan Quayle, please answer my question: > > When you drink coffee, where does the brown go? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Criminy, Lisa, will you look at this twisted grovelling? I swear, } these supplicants get weirder all the ... huh? You say we're on the } air? NOW? The mike's live? Oh . } } *cough* Ah yes, my mildly deranged querent, I see you have observed a } puzzling fact: a brown liquid, when consumed by mortals, emerges soon } thereafter with a somewhat different color. You have correctly deduced } that something must have happened to the brown component between the } input and the output phases, and you wonder what that might be. } } The solution to your mystery is really quite simple; it's in the } protocols. What protocol, you say? Why, TCP (Transfer of Caffeine } Protocol), of course! The RFC (Request for Coffee) specifies that the } brown be stripped off and discarded by the host after processing. When } large enough chunks of brown accumulate in the host's buffers, they are } flushed through an alternate channel. Retransmission of the remainder } is specified in the RFC for the IP (self-explanatory) protocol. } } See how simple it is? Next time, RTFM before asking, or . } Kapish? } } You owe the Oracle a kilo of decent Viennese coffee, and a Melita } brewer. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Great Oracle whose sageful eyes > Doth grace the land, the sea, the skies > Whose omniscience forever glows > Who never needs to use No-Doz > > Please hear this mortal's tiny plea > And if it please thee, answer me > I beg thee not my limbs to sever > Will the universe expand forever? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } The astronomer who looks up at night } Once again faced with the cosmologist's plight. } His mind to ponder again, perhaps, } Will it go on, or will it collapse? } } The constant state theory we can ignore. } It doesn't work well, and we need more. } The galaxies rushing away from each other, } Like a child that must leave the arms of its mother. } } The key to it all lies somewhere between } Undiscovered mass that cannot be seen. } Black holes, free planets, and interstellar dust, } To collapse the existance of this mass is a must. } } Right now, things are looking quite grim. } A heat death of all seems to be Nature's whim. } The critial density has yet to be met, } Expanding forever would be this Oracle's bet. } } This is the way the world ends } This is the way the world ends } This is the way the world ends } Not with a bang but a whimper. } } You owe the Oracle a reserved table at Millyways, the Restaurant at the } End of the Universe. } } (with apologies to T.S. Eliot-- rgm) ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Why is the Sun so happy in the morning ? > / when it wake up in the East / And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Because it is far away from California. } / when it riseth in the East / } } You owe the Oracle 501 English verbs conjugated. Correctly. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Orkie! How dare you! You forgot me on Valentine's Day again! How > could you forget me, Lisa, the net.sex.goddess on Valentine's Day?! > You bastard! And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Dear Sir or Madam, } } I regret to inform you that you are operating under delusions of } Lisahood. I spent an exponentially romantic & divinely passionate } Valentine's Day with the winsome & delightful Lisa, performing feats of } sexual geometry that required 7 spacial dimensions and devasted a small } galaxy. You are either a vile & impious imposter, or a psycho-deviant } schizophrenic. In any case-- } } Um, wait a sec, there is a third possibility: You may a second } manifestation of Lisa! In fact, there is no good reason why there } shouldn't be infinitely many manifestations of Lisa, all of them } equally devoted and equally demanding of the Oracle's time & energy. } } } } Let's just assume that you're a sicko, and leave it that, okay? ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > We are dead, We are > Not here > If we were here we'd > Be here > That's what someone said, but we're not > We're dead. And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Of course the fact, that you } Are dead } Is really no protection. Nor can } The distance } From you and I, save you from } Bisection. } } It's not the fact, that you } Are dead, } That keeps you from your answer. } Yet it is } The fact that you groveleth not } That gets you a ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh wildly well-hung Oracle, whose tongue I am not capable to massage, > whose words of wisdom sparkles like the Sun, I abase myself in the > face of your rutting altar. Why am I such a feeble and gorking > husband? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Ah, mere mortal, I have many questions to attend to, some that require } much thought. And so I cannot visit with you to determine if you are } indeed a "feeble and gorking husband". And who is to say if you are } indeed one of those, I mean, besides your wife... But do not dispair, } answer the following questions, rate yourself, and you can see just } what kind of husband you really are. } } The Oracle's Husband Type Determination Test. } --------------------------------------------- } } Start off by giving yourself 5 points, get a beer (or get her to get } you one), and proceed. } } 1. Give yourself one (1) point for each $10K of your yearly salary. } } 2. If you are unemployed, subtract one (1) point for each $20K you } spent on your education. } } 3. Give yourself one (1) point for each night per month that you go } out with "the boys". } } 4. Subtract one (1) point for each night when she does the same. } } 5. Award yourself points from this scale for your "connubial bliss": } a) 30-second sex, twice a month: 0 } b) once a week, (ie 4.3 times/month), usually Sat.: 1 } c) close to national avarage: 2 } d) every second night, various rooms: 3 } } 6. Award yourself points from this scale for domestic duties: } a) you do *all* the cooking, washing, cleaning: -2 } b) forced to iron your own shirts: -1 } c) maid comes in once a week: +1 } c) bought a dishwasher, get volume discount at local laundry: +3 } } 7. Award yourself points from this scale for "handyman" abilities: } a) can identify hammer, but unsure of usage: -1 } b) took apart toaster; burns healed nicely: 0 } c) hooked up stereo without reading manual: +1 } d) built rec room with carpenter buddy's help: +2 } e) doing second valve job on '68 Camaro: +3 } } 8. Award yourself the point(s) for vehicular transportation: } a) Yugo: -1 } b) domestic, older than 3 years: 0 } c) top of line domestic, new: 1 } d) better than c) less than e): 2 } e) foreign, more than $45K: 3 } Bonus of 1 point if it's german, and you won't let her drive it. } } 9. Rate your TV/VCR viewing decision control on a scale of 1 to 10, } divide by three, round up, add to total. Void if you watch Oprah } or Geraldo whether you have to or not. } } 10. Award (or subtract) points as indicated in the following areas: } a) plastic maxed out due to her shopping trips out of state: -1 } b) it bothers you that she makes more than you do: -1 } c) you make more than she does: +1 } d) you navigate, she drives, on long trips: -1 } e) she knows more about football than you do: -2 } f) you know more about curtains and drapes than she does: -2 } g) she weighs more than you do: -1 } } Rate yourself according to the following scale: } >=24: a spousal demi-god } 20-23: would be considered very eligible if single } 16-19: average, nice, loving (perhaps hard-working) husband, } 12-15: small amount of work could make you a productive member of } this relationship } 8-11: pants-wearing determined by arm-wrestling match at breakfast } 4-7: hen-pecked and not in control } 0-3: feeble and gorking (and still married?) } } You owe the Oracle the results of this test. Don't worry, I'll wait } 'til you've vacuumed the carpet... ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Shut up and deal! And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } } } You get: Ace of hearts } I get: queen of spades } Dan Quayle gets: three of spades } L. Ron Hubbard gets: three of diamonds } You get: Ace of beanies } I get: Queen of Heaven } Dan Quayle gets: jack of asses } L. Ron Hubbard gets: deuce of e-meters. } You get: Eight of wallabies } I get: Five of eggplant } Dan Quayle gets: four of cowpies } L. Ron Hubbard gets: ten of asses } You get: Nine of Tentacles } I get: Jack of Tires } Dan Quayle gets: Six of ones } L. Ron Hubbard gets: Half-dozen of the others } You get: Ace of Biplanes } I get: Eight of V's } Dan Quayle gets: Zero of Brains } L. Ron Hubbard gets: Millions of Dollars } } Shut up and bid. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > O frabjous Oracle, > > Why do so many people ask you questions out of movies, such as: > > "What is the airspeed of an unladen swallow?" > > or out of songs like: > > "Who put the bomp in the bomp-she-bom-she-bomp?" > > or from commercials, as in: > > "Why ask why?" > > Can't they come up with an original question themselves? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } The answer to your question is 42. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oracle: > > My car runs fine, my house is paid of, I have a beautiful wife, > I have no problems in life, what else can I ask for? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Always happy to oblige: } } o Item: That minor itch on your right inner thigh is the first sign of } skin cancer. } } o Item: Your company is about to cut 25,000 jobs. Guess whose head is } on the block? } } o Item: Your wife just ran away with a lesbian biker named "Stud." } } o Item: Your dog has fleas. } } Feel better now? } } You owe the Oracle two tickets to paradise (round trip). ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh most wonderfully Male Oracle, chief of the remaining Titans, > please bestow upon us mortals the answer to one of the eternal > questions. > > It's like this. You walk into the Men's room for a quick > visit. There are two urinals, with no wall separating them, and three > stalls. Another Man is using one of the urinals. Should you > A use the other urinal > B use one of the stalls > C wait for Him to finish, then use a urinal > D run screaming from the room And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } I got news for you, O-Soon-to-be-a-Eunuch, you just made a BAD mistake. } Not only is the Oracle about as far from "Male" as yer likely to find, } but her period is due late this week, and she's in the midst of a case } of PMS that would make a supernova look like a cigarette lighter. } } The answer to your chauvinist-pig breast-envy stupid-male-dominance } question is "Shoot the Other Man in the testicles." } } You owe the Oracle 50 megatons of Motrin. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Please tell me a question! And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Why should I? ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > O Oracle wizened and gnarly beyond all belief, > whose head is as crackly and brown as a leaf, > whose fillings are crafted of finest pure gold, > what is the difference 'tween mildew and mold? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Mildew's on wet things -- of this I am certain, } Like faucets and drains and that old shower curtain, } Mold is what grows on food that's gone bad, } And -- } } Oh, never mind the rhyme. Let me tell you about Moldy Bread Stew. } You're going to love it; trust me. } } Just take a slice of bread, dip it in water (or bouillon, if you're } feeling really adventurous). Leave it out on your kitchen counter } for three weeks. By then, you will have noticed that your bread is } covered in various kinds of mold of all colors. The most commonplace } mold is your basic green mold. You will have lots of that, but you } will also have some orange mold, some white mold, some blue mold and } perhaps even some purple mold. Scrape the mold off the bread } and into a pot filled with carrots, celery, potatoes, cubes of beef, } onions, eye of newt, wing of bat and leg of frog. Then, cook and } serve. Yum yum! } } The effects of Moldy Bread Stew depend on the color of mold used. } The lore of the ancients tells us that each mold color has its own } distinct properties: } } Green conformity; association with the commonplace } } Green mold stew is perfect for people interested in becoming sales } representatives for large computer companies. } } Orange fertility; passion } } Orange mold stew is useful if you and your loved one are planning on } having children, or even if you are just intending to screw like mad } minks. } } White purity; innocence } } Needless to say, mixing orange mold and white mold in a stew will lead } to confusion. (Rumor has it that just such a mixture can be found in } "mystery meat" sold in high school cafeterias.) } } Blue artistic endeavor; sadness } } Don't ask me why these two are lumped together. They just are. Go } paint a sad picture or something. } } Purple eccentricity; hallucinations } } Now, *this* I can recommend. Jimi Hendrix spoke highly of this while } he was alive (reference: "Purple Haze"). A really good batch of } purple mold stew can leave you incoherent and babbling for *days*. } Once or twice, mortals have been able to directly contact *me* using } this stuff (this is not recommended for the faint of heart). } } Bon appetit! } } You owe the Oracle a case of Pepto-Bismol and a copy of Timothy Leary's } "Diary of A Hope Fiend". ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh most fabulous and meta-omni Oracle, > Please answer your humble servant; > > SNTF??? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Oh minor and insignificant supplicant, } } To answer your humble question, the answer is definately no. } Smurfs Need The Freedom....... NOT. The little buggers need to } die a most horrible death. I would ZOT them all but there are so } many of them and they breed like rats (you'd never think so, but } Brainy is responsible for at least 100 children - luckily cats } catch them easily enough - yet another of televisions } falsehoods). } } Sell Nabisco This Friday....... probably shouldn't. The cookies, } crackers, and wafers may taste good, but that pit bull your } neighbor has doesn't seem to like them a whole lot. } } Send NSA THE File......... not a good idea. They know it was } stolen and probably will find you sometime soon. They are not } happy with you. Better eat that disk (I suggest a little Grey } Poupon) or you'll find yourself amazed just how much damage } a rubber hose can do. } } You owe the Oracle a Short Nubile Teen Fanatic. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > O mighty Oracle, endowed with the wisdom of the Universe and one > _really_ nasty babe for a main squeeze, > > Why do people think legalizing drugs is The Answer? I thought The > Answer was 42. And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } The great and mighty Oracle has deigned to give you an answer to this } question. You should offer thanks. } } Throughout time immemorial, it has been asked: What is the purpose of } human existance? } } At first this was easy. The answer was food. } } You see, back in the Paleozoooliphic, the answer to everything was } either food or rock. } } What do you want? "Food" Where do you live? "Rock" Look, that guy is } making off with your stuff, what will you do? "Rock make him food!" } } As you can see, conversation wasn't too stimulating, and philosophers } were stuck with saying things like "rock is rock" and "food is not } rock." Luckily rock candy had not been invented yet. } } Many years passed, vocab increased, and finally the ancient greeks got } back around to the question. Socrates explained how the question had no } meaning. He of course was wrong, but he was such a great pain in the } ass that people agreed with him to shut him up. Finally, they slipped } some hemlock in his tea, and that was that. } } Later, once the vocabulary had gotten all settled, the } Romans came up with another answer, one which many of us would agree } with today. This, of course was sex. It was later found, however, that } sex could not be the answer. Sex was the question. Yes was the answer. } } This whole issue got more confused around the time of Jesus. You see, } Jesus was convinced that Love was the answer. By this, he did not mean } what most people think of as love, because then he could have just } said that sex is the answer. That would lead to the problem above, } Now, Love might be a possible alternative to sex, but the Romans } were so upset by the idea that sex wasn't it, that they nailed Jesus } to a couple of planks. } } The Roman empire fell to the barbarians, and it was back to food for } most of the dark ages. } } When the Renaissance finally hit, the answer was Painting. Later on } they decided that that was just too silly, and changed it to } Enlightenment. } This worked fine for the aristocracy, but, at least in France, the } peasants revolted, and settled firmly on food again. } } Not too much after this, drugs spread out through Western culture. } Some people at this time suggested that drugs were the answer, but } Opium isn't really powerful enough to blot out all other questions, so } it was quietly shelved for a later date. } } At one point this century, the proposal "Coke is it" was widely } spread, but if Coke was it, what was New Coke? It flat and too sweet? } No, that idea was also disregarded. } } In the '60s, everything disregarded came back with a vengance (except } painting, it was still too silly) "Sex, Drugs, and Rock and Roll." } The Republicans hated this (They thought the answer was Money), and } they conspired to break the idea at its weak point; Drugs. So went the } revisionists (who ignored the fact that George Washington grew } Marijuana), and they outlawed drugs. Outlawing sex would have been } nice for them, but even they realized that Republicans, at least, had } to reproduce. } } In 197something, Douglas Adams decided that the answer to Life, the } Universe and Everything was 42. Being irrational, it made it difficult } to refute, and so was popular among young Democrats (Who had lost so } many brain cells due to drugs that they were equally irrational), and } science fiction fans (who were so weird that they could just accept } it). } } You now see where your question fits in. Some people think that the } solution is to legalize Drugs, and some think that the answer is 42. } Others think it is sex, a few still believe in Coke, and food is a } perrenial favorite. Of course the true answer is there, and has been } for a while... } } The answer is.... } } Painting. Of course. } } You owe the Oracle a Velvet Elvis. ----------------------------------------- The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh scrutable Oracle, without whom space would be incomprehensible, > without whom time would be drab, do tell me this. Does one dry cup of > rice (after being cooked) fit in a regular-size bowl? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Ahh, yes -- the perennial question of rice. You are indeed priveleged, } for the Oracle has decided to put a stop to such questions by imparting } upon a mortal some as-yet undiscovered physics. And that mortal is you! } This is a rare occurence -- it has happened only a few times this } century (Einstein's question about being late for work, and Hawking's } question about disappearing biros spring to mind) -- and thus it is } your moral and spiritual obligation to investigate and publish these } revelations for the benefit of all mankind. } } 1 Conservation of rice } ---------------------------- } Rice exists in two distinct forms: Measured Rice (M-rice), and } Estimated Rice (E-rice). Classically, these two satisfy a simple } conservation equation -- at all times the total mass of M-rice and } E-rice combined is a constant. The physical process of "cooking" (in } all its forms -- at this level of discussion there is no distinction to } be made between the effects of boiling, steaming and frying, although a } relativistic formulation may require this) allows the transfer of rice } between states. } } Thus M-rice obeys the law that the process of cooking will result in } NO MORE THAN THE EXPECTED QUANTITY OF RICE BEING PRODUCED. E-rice obeys } the converse law: NO LESS THAN THE EXPECTED QUANTITY OF RICE WILL } RESULT. Therefor, people who go to the trouble of measuring rice } exactly may end up with too little, and those who estimate the quantity } required may end up with too much. } } Fortunately, both types of people (and, consequently, both types of } rice) exist in abundance. This facilitates the free transfer between } M-rice and E-rice through preparation, and the transfer of M-rice to } E-rice through cooking. } } 2 Quantum Rice Transfer } ----------------------------- } The sharp reader may have noticed a small problem above, vis. what } happens if someone cooks some M-rice whilst no E-rice is being cooked? } A quantum mechanical approach reveals the solution to this problem by } allowing for "virtual rice" (V-rice) to exist in accordance with the } uncertainty principle. For limited periods of time, the cooking of } E-rice may result in rice increase without a corresponding rice } decrease through the cooking of M-rice. The "rice deficit" thus } produced must be made up through a subsequent M-rice cooking operation, } within a time period governed by a corollory of Heisenberg's } uncertainty principle. } } 3 Relativistic Rice Transfer } ---------------------------------- } An astute analysis of the above may lead one to the conclusion that the } transfer of M-rice in one location to E-rice in another through the } cooking operation is instantaneous, and might thus be employed as } a communications medium. This, of course, cannot be the case as such } a process defies relativity. The propagation rate is finite, and is, } of course, lower than the speed of light. Special relativity may be } employed to draw some conclusions about rice transfer rate between } similar cooking processes, however general relativity is required in } order to obtain meaningful results for transfer between dissimilar } processes (e.g. boiling and steaming). } } Well, that's a start for you -- there is plenty there to go on, and } plenty more to provide material for further research. Best of luck with } obtaining your grant! } } Oh, yes -- as for your original question, the answer is "it depends". } Clearly, a cup of M-rice will easily fit into your regular-size bowl, } however an estimated "cup" of E-rice, no matter how fine your } judgement, will not. } } You owe the Oracle an autographed copy of your PhD thesis upon } completion. ---------------------------------- The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Dear Miss Oracle, who owns all the particles in the world, > > Last week my cat returned home with a new tail. > Yesterday, when I woke up I noticed a bright blue square on my > left hand. This morning 5 small yellow dots appeared on my legs. > Now there are two cows flying around my head. What is going on? > And who are those little orange people running around? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Oh dear, you have got problems. It seems you are at the center of } localized Reality Breakdown. Let's take this one step at a time. } } First of all, you seem to have Schroedinger's cat. As your physicists } will discover in about 50 years, the resolution of that old paradox is } "the cat is alive, but it has a new tail." } } You should not have noticed this discrepancy in the cat, as it could } throw the whole timetable of scientific discovery into confusion, which } in turn would have dramatic effects on the entire future history of the } Universe. Small changes tend to cascade into big ones, and if left } unchecked this would result in a box of animal crackers being elected } president in 1996. } } So the Reality Adjusters (also called Quantum Mechanics) were sent to } fix things. These are the little orange people you see. While you } slept the night before last they attempted to remove your knowledge of } the cat's change and disable your ability to see quantum reality. They } thought they had succeeded, and stamped you with the Department of } Reality Corrections seal of quality workmanship (the blue square on } your hand). } } However, as with most civil servants they did a substandard job, and } the knowledge and perception which could alter all of Creation remained } in your head. So the Mechanics were sent to have another go at it. If } you look at the yellow dots on your legs a little more closely, you } will realize they have little groves in them. In fact, they are } screws. The mechanics were in the processes of opening the access } panels to your quantum perception center (which is in the legs, not the } brain, for reasons too complicated to go into now). However, you woke } up too early this morning and they had to leave without either } correcting the problem or covering the screws back up. } } So now not only have you glimpsed the true workings of the Universe, } you have seen the incompetence of those who run it. This has } compounded the problem a billion fold, causing further breakdown in the } structure of logic in your immediate vicinity. Hence the cows. } } I'm afraid this is only going to get worse. Next it will be elks } jumping out of your breakfast cereal, your head drifting off on } business of its own, and eventually reality will be so mucked up that } cold fusion will work, ms-dos will become useful, and Jimmy Swaggart } will become truly virtuous. } } The only way you can stop this is to dull your extra-normal perceptions } back to the dim level that most humans live at. The Oracle would } suggest several hours of "Brady Bunch" reruns and top-forty radio, } which is guaranteed to knock out all those parts of your brain that } have inconveniently started working. } } You owe the Oracle a large quark. ----------------------------------- The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh oracle, all knowing, I ask of you this question that has been > in this for some time and find myself at a loss. I heard that light is > made of microscopic particles that have nearly no weight. But, today, > one of my professors told me that as an object approaches the speed of > light, it gets heavier. Well, light GOES the speed of light, so isn't > it heavy rather that light? If so, why don't we call light "heavy"? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } That's a heavy question. } } Although it might be right to call light "light", it might be right not } to call light "light". Your Professor Wright was right, light's made } of mighty light mites, right? Right. Now light mites are light, and } fight like mighty light mites. If one takes fright and takes flight, } the fighting mite might follow right behind the mite with fright. If } the fighting mite gets right up with the flighty mite, it might take a } bite from the flighty mite's right leg, lightening the flighty mite. } Now as the fighting mite and the flighty mite get right up to the speed } of light, if the fighting mite likes biting the flighty might the } flighty mite gets lighter, so it can be flightier. So when the flighty } might is right at the speed of light it's actually quite light, right? } Right. } } If light were called "heavy" I wouldn't have been able to write that } paragraph. } } You owe the Oracle every light bulb joke ever. Right? --------------------------------------- The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > why ask why? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } why not? } } You owe the Oracle a non-recursive question. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Eh... (munch, munch, munch) ... what's up, doc? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Heh, heh, heh I finawy got that wascal wabit! ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > ...calling International rescue... calling International Rescue... come > in please... we are stranded on the Internet and out terminal is > down... we have been nearly kill -9'd several times... we need help... > come in please... calling International rescue... And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Great Scott! It's the bitalarm, and someone's in trouble! I've got to } duck out of this charity ball as quietly as possible and get to the } Bitcave.... Pardon.... 'Scuse me.... Hello, Michelle, love the } outfit... Pardon.... } } MEANWHILE, IN AN UNDERGROUND CAVERN FAR BENEATH } THE QUIET STREETS OF THE CITY.... } } "we need help... come in please... calling International } rescue..." } } "Mmmbahaha! Listen to the poor stranded ninny. Did someone change } his domain name while he was out touring the Internet? Ha! Now maybe } he'll learn not to say no when I ask for root privileges on his } systems. Turn off that scanner, I've heard enough of his whining!" } } [The scanner is shut off.] } } "What to do, what to do? Shall I unplug his machine without executing } a smooth powerdown, or just 'rm /etc/*'? Oooo, I love this part! I } think tonight I'll warm up with an 'alias vi emacs.'" } } Not so fast, PowerUser. Tonight I shut you down. } } "Bitman! How did you get here?" } } I've written a Bitmail program which was able to reply to your } extortion letters. It was a simple matter of tracing down } evil.hideout.com. } } "Vey clever, bitbrain. But this postmaster is about to reject } your letter. Get him, boys!" } } [Bam! Pow! ! Biff!] } } So much for your multitasking, PowerUser. From now on, the only } program you'll be executing is the physical fitness regimen at } the state pen. } } "I don't think so, Bitman. Or should I say,.... Oracle!" } } What?!? What do you mean? } } "I've discovered your secret identity, Bitman. You forgot yourself } in the heat of battle. Who but the Usenet Oracle would be able to zot } a henchman like that?" } } What's your point, PowerUser? } } "If you turn me in, I'll have a trial. A very public trial, one in } which I can guarantee that the name Usenet Oracle will figure } prominently." } } It's more of a title than a name. } } "Whatever. But of course, there's another choice, isn't there? You } leave me alone, and I'll leave you alone. Both of you." } } First, restore the sysop's domain name and terminal. } } "Perhaps you don't understand -" } } NOW! } } "Yes, yes, very well.... There. He's fine, though why you take } such interest in -- what are you doing with that cable?" } } I'm rewiring you, PowerUser. The Internet is dangerous enough } without scalliwags like you running around. From now on, if you } want to read talk.crime.costumes, you'll have to do it the old } fashioned way. By LISTSERV. } } "What?" } } I've converted your host, PowerUser. You're now on BITNET -- } } "BITNET! You wouldn't dare. I know who you are!" } } -- and you're on a VM machine. } } "No! Not VM! Please! I'll never tell! I'll never reveal your identity! } But please, please give me back Unix!" } } Too late, PowerUser. The conversion's done. I usually charge extra } for field service after hours, but this time, you only owe Bitman } the merchandizing rights for the sequel. } } "And people think I'm evil! You're a fiend, Bitman." } } One last thing. If you have any problems, give IBM tech support a call. } } "NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!" ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh, most wise oracle, who's feet I am not worthy to drool upon, please > answer my most humble question: > > What happens to my socks that disappear between putting them in the > washer and not finding them in the dryer? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } THE INVESTIGATIVE REPORTERS' GROUP } in conjunction with } RIVERA PRODUCTIONS } present a } GERALDO RIVERA SPECIAL REPORT: } } DRYERS: } Household Appliance or Gateway to Hell? } } "Hello, this is Geraldo Rivera." } } } } "As you may or may not be aware, for years there have been mysterious } disappearances stemming from this device..." } } } } "The common theory is that forgetful people accidentally drop things } while inserting or removing clothing from the dryer. But Dr. Jack } Shyster of Cypress Community College has a different theory. We have } him with us in the studio tonight via a satellite downlink. Dr. } Shyster?" } } } } Shyster: "Hello, Geraldo!" } } "Hello, Dr. Shyster. I'm sure the audience is on tenterhooks waiting } for you to reveal your theory." } } Shyster: "Well, it's quite simple, Geraldo. The electrons produced } from the static electricity all garments have, combined with the } rotational property of the dryer's drum, turns every household dryer } into a cyclotron." } } "Fascinating, Doctor. But how does this explain the disappearance?" } } Shyster: "This particle acceleration disrupts the local space-time } continuum, effectively..." "...opening a } gateway into another dimension!!" } } Audience: "Ooooooooooohh..." } } "Thank you for that report, Dr. Shyster." } } } } "Tonight, we're going to put Dr. Shyster's theory to the test. I'm } going to be loaded-- along with some wool socks-- into this dryer." } } Audience: "Ooooooooooohh..." } } "When the dryer is in motion, I'll be reporting what I see to you via } this surgically implanted microphone." } } Audience: "Ooooooooooohh..." } } } } "A bit cramped, but I'll manage." } } } } "A bit disorient ing, but I think I can manage..." } } } } "I see something! It's like a dirty window being } washed, clearing right before my eyes!" } } } } "Socks! I see socks! Thousands of socks! Cover ing } everything! Wait! Something's moving, coming } closer!" } } } } "Why, It's Snuggles, the fabric softener bear! He's } walking this way! Wait, no, he's licking his lips! } Please! No! Oh, } my God! Aaaaaargh!" } } ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > I'll say, I brought the fight near the Keep, struggled valiantly, and > gave you the perfect oppurtunity to cast your spells. What took you so > long? And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } I'm sorry all of our lines are busy, please stay on the line and your } call will be answered in the order it was received. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Yes, most definitely. There are four of them in Europe, two in North } America, and one in Australia. The Australian one is by far the } biggest, but the least effective. Two of the European ones, in } Amsterdam and Dubrovnic, are identical; some say that is by far the } best possibility. However, you should realize the possible dangers } associated with this particular pastime: serious rashes, internal } bleeding, and powerful hallucinations. } } (it's a good thing the Oracle reads American sign language, isn't it?) } } You owe the Oracle a volume control. ------------------------------ The Usenet Oracle has pondered your question deeply. Your question was: > Oh, grand, exultant, imperial, all-mighty, omnipotent, invincible > Oracle, I humbly beg that you answer my question. Why is my life so > bloody unexciting?! And in response, thus spake the Oracle: } Everyone gets the same amount of excitement in their lives, but it is } distributed differently along their lifetimes. Some people have a } constant stream of excitement, so they tend to ignore it. Some people } get it in lumps; these people are the so-called "exciting" people. And } some people get it in one big burst. This final category is where you } fall in. } } You owe the Oracle front-row seats to see the 2.7 kilometer diameter } asteroid that crashes smack-dab into your bedroom tonight. } The Oracle has spoken. ------------------------------