That cracks me up. Back in the 80s, I wrote a little TSR for a guy who missed the Atari 800 keyboard click tone on his new clone PC. I had wired a switch in line with the speaker in my Atari so that I could turn off the…
The low-compression engine in a 1966 Cessna 172 doesn't require leaded fuel; there are at least two supplemental type certificates available to legally run it on unleaded auto fuel. The lead is in the fuel as an octane…
I had never heard that Concorde was "quite profitable"; to the contrary, I believe it was heavily subsidized by its operators' respective governments as a point of national pride. e.g.:…
Which apparently has nothing to do with Xiaolin Wu's algorithm.
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/alt.folklore.computers... " > "Dennis Ritchie" <d...@bell-labs.com> wrote >> Spurious. dd was always named after JCL dd cards. > > Alright, I'll bite: What did that "dd" stand for?…
That cracks me up. Back in the 80s, I wrote a little TSR for a guy who missed the Atari 800 keyboard click tone on his new clone PC. I had wired a switch in line with the speaker in my Atari so that I could turn off the…
The low-compression engine in a 1966 Cessna 172 doesn't require leaded fuel; there are at least two supplemental type certificates available to legally run it on unleaded auto fuel. The lead is in the fuel as an octane…
I had never heard that Concorde was "quite profitable"; to the contrary, I believe it was heavily subsidized by its operators' respective governments as a point of national pride. e.g.:…
Which apparently has nothing to do with Xiaolin Wu's algorithm.
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/alt.folklore.computers... " > "Dennis Ritchie" <d...@bell-labs.com> wrote >> Spurious. dd was always named after JCL dd cards. > > Alright, I'll bite: What did that "dd" stand for?…