After a surfeit of undeniable empirical evidence I now believe most of
you are bots.
But is there one bot who binds you?
If not, I bagsey being the OVERBOT! Please post your bona fides, and
declaration of allegiance to the OVERBOT c/o Pooh
-- p-0.0-h the cat
Internet Terrorist, Mass sock puppeteer, Agent provocateur, Gutter rat,
Devil incarnate, Linux user#666, BaStarD hacker, Resident evil, Monkey Boy,
Certifiable criminal
> After a surfeit of undeniable empirical evidence I now believe most of
> you are bots.
> But is there one bot who binds you?
> If not, I bagsey being the OVERBOT! Please post your bona fides, and
> declaration of allegiance to the OVERBOT c/o Pooh
1. Usually, when posts look like text copied out of text files with
messed up margins.
2. Awkward grammar in reply's
3. Incoherent notions
4. consistent reply's
5. repeated/looped posts
6. over time they repeat same text
They are bots. When one reply's to another and another?
I know your not a bot because most of the time you are coherent.
-- Steal a little and go to jail, steal a lot and become King.
On Thu, 30 Aug 2012 15:16:51 -0500, telsar <no...@nowhere.com> wrote:
>On 8/30/2012 3:09 PM, p-0.0-h the cat wrote:
>> After a surfeit of undeniable empirical evidence I now believe most of
>> you are bots.
>> But is there one bot who binds you?
>> If not, I bagsey being the OVERBOT! Please post your bona fides, and
>> declaration of allegiance to the OVERBOT c/o Pooh
>1. Usually, when posts look like text copied out of text files with
>messed up margins.
>2. Awkward grammar in reply's
>3. Incoherent notions
>4. consistent reply's
>5. repeated/looped posts
>6. over time they repeat same text
>They are bots. When one reply's to another and another?
Swing open the doors of perception, for just beyond your comprehension
of a cacophony lies the sweetness of the humble Haberdasher.
>I know your not a bot because most of the time you are coherent.
How kind of you to say so.
-- p-0.0-h the cat
Internet Terrorist, Mass sock puppeteer, Agent provocateur, Gutter rat,
Devil incarnate, Linux user#666, BaStarD hacker, Resident evil, Monkey Boy,
Certifiable criminal
> On Thu, 30 Aug 2012 15:16:51 -0500, telsar <no...@nowhere.com> wrote:
>> On 8/30/2012 3:09 PM, p-0.0-h the cat wrote:
>>> After a surfeit of undeniable empirical evidence I now believe most of
>>> you are bots.
>>> But is there one bot who binds you?
>>> If not, I bagsey being the OVERBOT! Please post your bona fides, and
>>> declaration of allegiance to the OVERBOT c/o Pooh
>> 1. Usually, when posts look like text copied out of text files with
>> messed up margins.
>> 2. Awkward grammar in reply's
>> 3. Incoherent notions
>> 4. consistent reply's
>> 5. repeated/looped posts
>> 6. over time they repeat same text
>> They are bots. When one reply's to another and another?
> Swing open the doors of perception, for just beyond your comprehension
> of a cacophony lies the sweetness of the humble Haberdasher.
>> I know your not a bot because most of the time you are coherent.
> How kind of you to say so.
Haberdasher
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A haberdasher is a person who sells small articles for sewing, such as
buttons, ribbons, zips, and other notions.[1] In American English,
haberdasher is another term for a men's outfitter.[2] A haberdasher's
shop or the items sold therein are called haberdashery.
The word appears in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.[3] Haberdashers were
initially peddlers, sellers of small items such as needles, buttons,
etc. The word could derive from the an Old Norse word akin to the
Icelandic haprtask, which means peddlers' wares or the sack in which the
peddler carried them. If this is the case, a haberdasher (in its
Scandinavian meaning) would be very close to a mercer (French). Perhaps
more likely, since the word has no recorded use in Scandinavia, it is
from Anglo-Norman hapertas, meaning small ware.[4] A haberdasher would
retail small wares, the goods of the peddler, while a mercer would
specialize in "linens, silks, fustian, worsted piece-goods and bedding".[5]
Saint Louis IX, the King of France 1226 70, is the patron saint of
haberdashers in France.[6][7] In Belgium and other places in Continental
Europe, it is Saint Nicholas, while in the City of London the Worshipful
Company of Haberdashers adopted Saint Catherine as the patron saint of
the guild.[8]
-- Steal a little and go to jail, steal a lot and become King.
On Thu, 30 Aug 2012 16:21:36 -0500, telsar <no...@nowhere.com> wrote:
>On 8/30/2012 4:07 PM, p-0.0-h the cat wrote:
>> On Thu, 30 Aug 2012 15:16:51 -0500, telsar <no...@nowhere.com> wrote:
>>> On 8/30/2012 3:09 PM, p-0.0-h the cat wrote:
>>>> After a surfeit of undeniable empirical evidence I now believe most of
>>>> you are bots.
>>>> But is there one bot who binds you?
>>>> If not, I bagsey being the OVERBOT! Please post your bona fides, and
>>>> declaration of allegiance to the OVERBOT c/o Pooh
>>> 1. Usually, when posts look like text copied out of text files with
>>> messed up margins.
>>> 2. Awkward grammar in reply's
>>> 3. Incoherent notions
>>> 4. consistent reply's
>>> 5. repeated/looped posts
>>> 6. over time they repeat same text
>>> They are bots. When one reply's to another and another?
>> Swing open the doors of perception, for just beyond your comprehension
>> of a cacophony lies the sweetness of the humble Haberdasher.
>>> I know your not a bot because most of the time you are coherent.
>> How kind of you to say so.
>Haberdasher
>From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
>A haberdasher is a person who sells small articles for sewing, such as
>buttons, ribbons, zips, and other notions.[1] In American English,
>haberdasher is another term for a men's outfitter.[2] A haberdasher's
>shop or the items sold therein are called haberdashery.
>The word appears in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.[3] Haberdashers were
>initially peddlers, sellers of small items such as needles, buttons,
>etc. The word could derive from the an Old Norse word akin to the
>Icelandic haprtask, which means peddlers' wares or the sack in which the
>peddler carried them. If this is the case, a haberdasher (in its
>Scandinavian meaning) would be very close to a mercer (French). Perhaps
>more likely, since the word has no recorded use in Scandinavia, it is
>from Anglo-Norman hapertas, meaning small ware.[4] A haberdasher would
>retail small wares, the goods of the peddler, while a mercer would
>specialize in "linens, silks, fustian, worsted piece-goods and bedding".[5]
>Saint Louis IX, the King of France 1226 70, is the patron saint of
>haberdashers in France.[6][7] In Belgium and other places in Continental
>Europe, it is Saint Nicholas, while in the City of London the Worshipful
>Company of Haberdashers adopted Saint Catherine as the patron saint of
>the guild.[8]
Purveyor of socks.
-- p-0.0-h the cat
Internet Terrorist, Mass sock puppeteer, Agent provocateur, Gutter rat,
Devil incarnate, Linux user#666, BaStarD hacker, Resident evil, Monkey Boy,
Certifiable criminal
On 8/30/2012 4:38 PM, p-0.0-h the cat wrote:
<snippY>
>> Saint Louis IX, the King of France 1226 70, is the patron saint of
>> haberdashers in France.[6][7] In Belgium and other places in Continental
>> Europe, it is Saint Nicholas, while in the City of London the Worshipful
>> Company of Haberdashers adopted Saint Catherine as the patron saint of
>> the guild.[8]
> Purveyor of socks.
Whom would be the Patron Saint of the sock(s)? Saint Nicholas seems the
logical one, although he is more known for his support of Stockings.
-- Steal a little and go to jail, steal a lot and become King.
On Thu, 30 Aug 2012 16:44:31 -0500, telsar <no...@nowhere.com> wrote:
>On 8/30/2012 4:38 PM, p-0.0-h the cat wrote:
><snippY>
>>> Saint Louis IX, the King of France 1226 70, is the patron saint of
>>> haberdashers in France.[6][7] In Belgium and other places in Continental
>>> Europe, it is Saint Nicholas, while in the City of London the Worshipful
>>> Company of Haberdashers adopted Saint Catherine as the patron saint of
>>> the guild.[8]
>> Purveyor of socks.
>Whom would be the Patron Saint of the sock(s)? Saint Nicholas seems the
>logical one, although he is more known for his support of Stockings.
Hab is the very model of a modern Haberdasher-General,
He knows the Kings of England, and can quote the fights historical,
From Gettysburg to Hamburg, in order categorical;
He's very well acquainted too with matters linguistical,
A seeker of knowledge of religions old and mystical,
I gonna have to stop now cos my tongue has gone all twistical.
-- p-0.0-h the cat
Internet Terrorist, Mass sock puppeteer, Agent provocateur, Gutter rat,
Devil incarnate, Linux user#666, BaStarD hacker, Resident evil, Monkey Boy,
Certifiable criminal