<sigh>
> If Salvador Dali had designed a network stack, this is what it would
> look like.
Only on the surface. His network stack would work.
--
Joe Zeff -- The Guy With The Sideburns:
http://www.zeff.us http://www.lasfs.info
"I meant what I said, and I said what I meant,
A sysprog is faithful, 100%" (Horton Hears an IPL)
> On Fri, 18 Dec 2009 01:34:58 +0000, Scott wrote:
>
> > If Salvador Dali had designed a network stack, this is what it would
> > look like.
>
> Only on the surface. His network stack would work.
Not, admittedly, in the way you would expect it to, though. The packets
would appear to be routed via someone else's localhost and come from the
future.
Jim
--
http://www.ursaMinorBeta.co.uk http://twitter.com/GreyAreaUK
No. That's the Calder-and-Tingueley network stack. And who was that
wonderful British cartoonist whose assemblages made Rube Goldberg look
like an absolute beginner? I can see the cartoon, but can't bring the
name to mind.
--
"It is by the beans of Java that I put my mind in motion... It is by
the juice of Sanborn that thoughts acquire speed ... the teeth acquire
stains, the stains become a BMW (in my dentist's driveway) ... It is
by the beans of Java I put my mind in motion."
Heath Robinson, at a guess.
"Get over here. Now. Might be advisable to wear brown trousers
and a shirt the colour of blood." Malcolm Tucker, "The Thick of It"
Yes. I just successfully Giggled for him, and was about to post an
update. Robinson's work is so much more esthetically satisfying -- to
me, at least -- than Goldberg's.
--
Galveston Bay:
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>I just successfully Giggled for him, and was about to post an
>update. Robinson's work is so much more esthetically satisfying -- to
>me, at least -- than Goldberg's.
I also like the work of Rowland Emmett, especially the Far Tottering
and Oyster Creek Railway.
Guy
--
http://www.chapmancentral.co.uk/
The usenet price promise: all opinions offered in newsgroups are guaranteed
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>
> Yes. I just successfully Giggled for him, and was about to post an
> update. Robinson's work is so much more esthetically satisfying -- to
> me, at least -- than Goldberg's.
We Brits tend to have a far more interesting set of eccentrics, but then
we've had longer to practice and get it right. Emperor Norton got close
though, I must admit.
One of my personal favourites though (given I worked with patents for a
while) is Arthur Pedrick. His patent for a "Photon Push-Pull Radiation
Detector For Use In Chromatically Selective Cat Flap Control And 1000
Megaton Earth-Orbital Peace-Keeping Bomb" is a work of genius, not least
due to the fact most of it is written in the form of a conversation
between himself and his cat.
J
A friend of mine modelled that in HO, fairly intensively:
http://www.picturetrail.com/sfx/album/view/125490
The 0-2-0 loco (Hero) is a particular favourite.
--
Mark
Real email address | Einstein discovered that time and space are interchangeable
is mark at | when he showed up three miles late for a meeting.
ayliffe dot org |
I was aware of him, giggled to find some pics... and discovered
there's a firm in Victoria called "Heath Robinson Consulting
Engineers".
Alas they don't have a website so it's not easy to tell just why
they are so named.
Zebee
> I also like the work of Rowland Emmett, especially the Far Tottering
> and Oyster Creek Railway.
In my days of JCL and coding sheets I admired The Aqua Horological
Tintinnabulator many lunchtimes.
Come to think of it, CDC's JCL rather resembled it, in some ways.
Mike
--
Mike Causer
Yes. As featured in the Professor Branestawm (sic?) books, which I
highly recommend.
--
W
. | ,. w , "Some people are alive only because
\|/ \|/ it is illegal to kill them." Perna condita delenda est
---^----^---------------------------------------------------------------
>Yes. As featured in the Professor Branestawm (sic?) books, which I
>highly recommend.
+1 for that and yes I think you spelled it correctly.
I believe you've just filled in a gap in my memory. Back in elementary
school, my class took a field trip to a local art museum[0], where there
was an exhibit of some very intricate kinetic sculpture. One I remember
particularly was in a glass case a couple of feet on a side and had lots
of whirring, spinning, flapping bits. Some quick Googling suggests it
may well have been one of the S.S. Pussie-Willows. -- Joe
ObDanglingPointer:
[0] The Chrysler Museum in Norfolk, VA.