> >YESTERDAY > >Yesterday, >All those backups seemed a waste of pay. >Now my database has gone away. >Oh I believe in yesterday. > >Suddenly, >There's not half the files there used to be, >And there's a milestone hanging over me >The system crashed so suddenly. > >I pushed something wrong >What it was I could not say. > >Now all my data's gone >and I long for yesterday-ay-ay-ay. > >Yesterday, >The need for back-ups seemed so far away. >I knew my data was all here to stay, >Now I believe in yesterday. > >=========================================== > >ELEANOR RIGBY > >Eleanor Rigby >Sits at the keyboard >And waits for a line on the screen >Lives in a dream >Waits for a signal >Finding some code >That will make the machine do some more. >What is it for? > >All the lonely users, where do they all come from? >All the lonely users, why does it take so long? > >Guru MacKenzie >Typing the lines of a program that no one will run; >Isn't it fun? >Look at him working, >Munching some chips as he waits for the code to compile; >It takes a while... > >All the lonely users, where do they all come from? >All the lonely users, why does it take so long? > >Eleanor Rigby >Crashes the system and loses 6 hours of work; >Feels like a jerk. >Guru MacKenzie >Wiping the crumbs off the keys as he types in the code; >Nothing will load. > >All the lonely users, where do they all come from? >All the lonely users, why does it take so long? > >================================== > >UNIX MAN (Nowhere Man) > >He's a real UNIX Man >Sitting in his UNIX LAN >Making all his UNIX plans >For nobody. > >Knows the blocksize from du(1) >Cares not where /dev/null goes to >Isn't he a bit like you >And me? > >UNIX Man, please listen(2) >My lpd(8) is missin' >UNIX Man >The wo-o-o-orld is at(1) your command. > >He's as wise as he can be >Uses lex and yacc and C >UNIX Man, can you help me At all? > >UNIX Man, don't worry >Test with time(1), don't hurry >UNIX Man >The new kernel boots, just like you had planned. > >He's a real UNIX Man >Sitting in his UNIX LAN >Making all his UNIX plans For nobody ... >Making all his UNIX plans For nobody. > >================================= > >WRITE IN C ("Let it Be") > >When I find my code in tons of trouble, >Friends and colleagues come to me, >Speaking words of wisdom: >"Write in C." > >As the deadline fast approaches, >And bugs are all that I can see, >Somewhere, someone whispers: >"Write in C." > >Write in C, Write in C, >Write in C, oh, Write in C. >LOGO's dead and buried, >Write in C. > >I used to write a lot of FORTRAN, >For science it worked flawlessly. >Try using it for graphics! >Write in C. > >If you've just spent nearly 30 hours, >Debugging some assembly, >Soon you will be glad to >Write in C. > >Write in C, Write in C, >Write in C, yeah, Write in C. >BASIC's not the answer. >Write in C. > >Write in C, Write in C >Write in C, oh, Write in C. >Pascal won't quite cut it. >Write in C. > >======================== > >SOMETHING > >Something in the way it fails, >Defies the algorithm's logic! >Something in the way it coredumps... >I don't want to leave it now >I'll fix this problem somehow > >Somewhere in the memory I know, >A pointer's got to be corrupted. >Stepping in the debugger will show me... >I don't want to leave it now >I'm too close to leave it now > >You're asking me can this code go? >I don't know, I don't know... >What sequence causes it to blow? >I don't know, I don't know... > >Something in the initializing code? >And all I have to do is think of it! >Something in the listing will show me... >I don't want to leave it now >I'll fix this tonight I vow! > >