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127 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
127 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
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(IBM)
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In the beginning, there was chaos and the Universe was without form and
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void. The Lord looked upon His domain and decided to declare His presence. "I
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be" he said, then to correct his grammar added "am."
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If the Lord had decided to work on irregular verb conjugation first,
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this wouldn't have happened. God would later curse the English language for
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its part, but in that moment IBM came into being.
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The Lord looked out upon the IBM He had created and said "This is good."
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That's what He said, but He shook his head, wondered what the boys at the
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User Group would say, split the light from the dark and went to bed. Thus
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passed the Beginning and the end of the first day.
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On the second day, the Lord summoned IBM unto His presence. "There is
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chaos out there, and the Universe is without form and void. I must correct
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this and I can use your help. Is there anything you can do for me?"
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"I can take care of form," IBM replied. "Put me in charge of computers
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and I will take care of form for you."
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The Lord thought that this was good and said "Let there be computers.
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Let IBM have my powers of creation that pertain to computers and form." Thus
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saying, the Lord went off to His second day's work while IBM created the 1401.
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On the third day, while the Lord was out, IBM decided to subdivide the
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assgined task. "Let there be systems that make the computer work and let them
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be called Operating Systems. Let there also be systems that make use of the
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computer and let them be called Application Systems." Thus, there came into
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being both Operating Systems and Application Systems, but there were no pro-
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grammers.
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The next morning IBM had to give the Lord a status report.
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"What did you do yesterday?" the Lord asked.
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"I invented the operating system" IBM replied.
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"You did?" the Lord shuddered. "Oh dear."
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"Yes I did," IBM confirmed, "but I find I need something you alone can
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provide."
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"And what is that?"
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"I need programmers to use my computers, to operate my operation system
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and to apply my applications."
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"That can't be done now," said the Lord. "This is only the fourth day
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and there won't be people until the sixth day."
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"I need programmers and I need them now. If they can't be people they
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can't be people, but we have to work this out today."
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"Give me some specifications and I'll see what I can do." IBM hastily
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worked up specs for programmers (are specs ever anything other than hasty) and
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the Lord reviewed them.
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The Lord knew the specs weren't sufficient but followed them anyway. He
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also made some programmers that did just what programmers were supposed to
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do, just to spite IBM. The programmers and IBM spent the rest of the day
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creating the Assembler and FORTRAN. On the morning of the fifth day, IBM re-
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ported to the Lord once again.
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"The programmers you created for me have a problem. They want a pro-
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gramming language that is easy to use and similar to English. I told them you
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had cursed English, though I still don't know why. They wanted me to ask
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your indulgence on this."
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The Lord had cursed English for good reason, but didn't want to explain
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this to IBM. He said "let there be COBOL" and that was that.
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On the status report of the next day IBM announced that computers had gone
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forth and multiplied. Unfortunately, the computers still weren't big enough
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or fast enough to do what the programmers wanted. The Lord liked the idea of
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going forth multiplying, and used the line Himself later on that day. This
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sixth day being particularly busy, He declared "Let there be MVS" and there
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was MVS.
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On the seventh day God had finished creation and computers had COBOL and
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MVS. The Lord and IBM took the day off to go fishing. IBM hung a sign on the
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door to help programmers in his absence.
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IF AT FIRST YOU DON'T SUCCEED, TRY, TRY AGAIN - AND HAVE THE FOLLOWING
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READY BEFORE CALLING IBM.
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On the start of the second week the programmers went over IBM's cathode
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ray tube directly to God.
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"We have a horrible problem," they complained. "Our users want systems
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that perform according to their expectations."
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"USERS!" the Lord bellowed. "Who said that you should have users! Users
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are the difference between good and bad applications, a function I have
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reserved unto myself! Who authorized you to have users?"
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"Well, IBM..."
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"IBM!! You!! You did this to my programmers! You gave them the knowledge
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of good and evil. For that you shall suffer through eternity!
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"Let there be competition. Let it be called Anacom, and Burroughs, and
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CDC."
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The Lord went through the alphabet several times. "With all this compe-
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tition you shall still suffer the pain of antitrust legislation all the days
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of your existence."
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This was the start of the second week, and it seems an appropriate place
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to conclude our report. In case you missed something, a summary of key points
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follows.
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Users and their needs are and always have been a subject of dispute.
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Nobody can learn English because it is cursed by God. IBM manuals are doubly
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cursed and therefore twice as hard to understand. Of the programming lang-
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uages, only COBOL can claim divine origin. People are people, but programmers
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are something else.
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Computers may be a gift from heaven, but there's no divine help in get-
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ting them to work. Because of IBM's initial assignment, there are more forms
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than anyone knows what to do with. Finally, chaos was part of the original
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state of the Universe and not a product of the data processing industry.
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