fortune index all fortunes
| #1611 | | APL is a mistake, carried through to perfection. It is the language of the future for the programming techniques of the past: it creates a new generation of coding bums. -- Edsger W. Dijkstra, SIGPLAN Notices, Volume 17, Number 5
| | #1612 | | APL is a natural extension of assembler language programming; ...and is best for educational purposes. -- A. Perlis
| | #1613 | | APL is a write-only language. I can write programs in APL, but I can't read any of them. -- Roy Keir
| | #1614 | | Are we running light with overbyte?
| | #1615 | | Around computers it is difficult to find the correct unit of time to measure progress. Some cathedrals took a century to complete. Can you imagine the grandeur and scope of a program that would take as long? -- Epigrams in Programming, ACM SIGPLAN Sept. 1982
| | #1616 | | As a computer, I find your faith in technology amusing.
| | #1617 | | As far as we know, our computer has never had an undetected error. -- Weisert
| | #1618 | | As in certain cults it is possible to kill a process if you know its true name. -- Ken Thompson and Dennis M. Ritchie
| | #1619 | | As in Protestant Europe, by contrast, where sects divided endlessly into smaller competing sects and no church dominated any other, all is different in the fragmented world of IBM. That realm is now a chaos of conflicting norms and standards that not even IBM can hope to control. You can buy a computer that works like an IBM machine but contains nothing made or sold by IBM itself. Renegades from IBM constantly set up rival firms and establish standards of their own. When IBM recently abandoned some of its original standards and decreed new ones, many of its rivals declared a puritan allegiance to IBM's original faith, and denounced the company as a divisive innovator. Still, the IBM world is united by its distrust of icons and imagery. IBM's screens are designed for language, not pictures. Graven images may be tolerated by the luxurious cults, but the true IBM faith relies on the austerity of the word. -- Edward Mendelson, "The New Republic", February 22, 1988
| | #1620 | | As long as there are ill-defined goals, bizarre bugs, and unrealistic schedules, there will be Real Programmers willing to jump in and Solve The Problem, saving the documentation for later.
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