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(All jokes and
graphics are believed to be in the public domain. If you feel one of
these belongs to you, please and I will either remove the material or provide a link at
your request.)
Murphy's Laws:
Computers
- Any given program, when running, is obsolete.
- Any given program costs more and takes longer
each time it is run.
- If a program is useful, it will have to be
changed.
- If a program is useless, it will have to be
documented.
- Any given program will expand to fill all the
available memory.
- The value of a program is inversely
proportional to the weight of its output.
- Program complexity grows until it exceeds the
capability of the programmer who must maintain it.
- Every non trivial program has at least one
bug
Corollary 1 - A sufficient condition for program triviality is
that it have no bugs.
Corollary 2 - At least one bug will be observed after the author
leaves the organization.
- Bugs will appear in one part of a working
program when another 'unrelated' part is modified.
- The subtlest bugs cause the greatest damage
and problems.
Corollary - A subtle bug will modify storage thereby
masquerading as some other problem.
- Lulled into Security Law
A 'debugged' program that crashes will wipe out source files on
storage devices when there is the least available backup.
- A hardware failure will cause system software
to crash, and the customer engineer will blame the programmer.
- A system software crash will cause hardware
to act strangely and the programmers will blame the customer
engineer.
- Undetectable errors are infinite in variety,
in contrast to detectable errors, which by definition are
limited.
- Adding manpower to a late software project
makes it later.
- Make it possible for programmers to write
programs in English, and you will find that programmers can not
write in English.
- The documented interfaces between standard
software modules will have undocumented quirks.
- The probability of a hardware failure
disappearing is inversely proportional to the distance between
the computer and the customer engineer.
- A working program is one that has only
unobserved bugs.
- No matter how many resources you have, it is
never enough.
- Any cool program always requires more memory
than you have.
- When you finally buy enough memory, you will
not have enough disk space.
- Disks are always full. It is futile to try to
get more disk space. Data expands to fill any void.
- If a program actually fits in memory and has
enough disk space, it is guaranteed to crash.
- If such a program has not crashed yet, it is
waiting for a critical moment before it crashes.
- No matter how good of a deal you get on
computer components, the price will always drop immediately
after the purchase.
- All components become obsolete.
- The speed with which components become
obsolete is directly proportional to the price of the component.
- Software bugs are impossible to detect by
anybody except the end user.
- The maintenance engineer will never have seen
a model quite like yours before.
- It is axiomatic that any spares required will
have just been discontinued and will be no longer in stock.
- Any VDU, from the cheapest to the most
expensive, will protect a twenty cent fuse by blowing first.
- Any manufacturer making his warranties
dependent upon the device being earthed will only supply power
cabling with two wires.
- If a circuit requires n components, then
there will be only n - 1 components in locally-held stocks.
- A failure in a device will never appear until
it has passed final inspection.
- Adding manpower to a late software project
makes it later.
- A program generator creates programs that are
more buggy than the program generator.
- A part dropped from the workbench will roll
to a degree of un-reachability proportional to its importance.
- In a transistor circuit protected by a fuse,
the transistor will always blow to protect the fuse.
- The best way to see your boss is to access
the Internet.
Or...
No matter how hard you work, the boss will only appear when you
access the Internet.
- The hard drive on your computer will only
crash when it contains vital information that has not been
backed up.
- Computers don't make errors-What they do they
do on purpose.
- Gumption's Law (?)
Any problem, no matter how complex, can be found by simple
inspection.
Corollary: A nagging intruder with unsought advice will spot it
immediately.
- Each computer code has five bugs, and this
number does not depend on how many bugs have been already found
(it is conservative).
- Profanity is one language all computer users
know.
- The number of bugs always exceeds the number
of lines found in a program.
- The most ominous words for those using
computers: "Daddy, what does 'Now formatting Drive C mean'?"
- When putting something into memory, always
remember where you put it.
- Every non-trivial program contains at least
one bug.
- Every non-trivial program can be simplified
by at least one line of code.
The conclusion of the last two laws: Every non trivial program
can be simplified to one line of code, and it will contain a
bug.
An expert is someone brought in at the last minute to share the
blame.
- Debugging is at least twice as hard as
writing the program in the first place.
So if your code is as clever as you can possibly make it, then
by definition you're not smart enough to debug it.
- For any given software, the moment you manage
to master it, a new version appears.
The new version always manages to change the one feature you
need most.
- Most computer errors can be attributed to a
similar problem - a screw loose behind the keyboard.
- Whenever you need a crucial file from the
server, the network will be down.
- Whenever you need a crucial file from your
hard drive, your computer will crash.
- E-mailed tasking will always come just before
you log off.
- A quarantined virus - will be opened.
- A chain letter - will be sent. To global. A
dozen times.
- The chance of a virus infecting your network
is directly proportional to the amount of damage it does.
- The chances of getting off work on time is
inversely proportional to how much e-mail the boss leaves for
until end of the day.
- The faster you need a hardcopy, the more
people will be using the only office printer.
- General Fault Errors are the "Check Engine"
light of computers. If it can be fixed, chances are it's not by
you.
- A patch is a piece of software which replaces
old bugs with new bugs.
- The chances of a program doing what it's
supposed to do is inversely proportional to the number of lines
of code used to write it.
- The probability of forgetting your password
is directly proportional to the frequency of changing it.
- No matter how fantastic your latest and
greatest PC is, you will be able to buy it for half the price in
12 months.
- The longer it takes to download a program the
more likely it won't run.
- Failure is not an option, it's included with
the software.
- A program is good when it's bug free - which
is impossible.
- If you forget to save you're work every 5
minutes, it will break down after you've been at it for an hour.
- It's not a bug, it's an undocumented feature.
- The amount of time taken to successfully
complete a software project is in direct proportion to the
amount of Marketing input.
Corollary: Marketing should not be located in the same city -
much less on the same campus - as Engineering and/or
Programming.
- The only thing worse than an end-user without
a clue is an end-user who has a clue - usually the wrong one.
- According to most Tech Support people, the
most common user error message (regardless of Operating System)
is ID 10T.
End-users' Corollary 1: most application failures occur between
the hours of 2 and 4 am on a Sunday night - with a 6 am Monday
deadline for the project.
End-users' Corollary 2: On the graveyard shift, there's no Tech
Support to hear you scream!
- Bugs mysteriously appear when you say, "Watch
this!"
corollary: If you call another programmer over to see if he
knows what's wrong the bug disappears.
- The probability of bugs appearing is directly
proportional to the number and importance of people watching.
- An employee rank is in inverse proportion to
his use of a computer, and in proportion to its performance.
- The only program that runs perfectly every
time, is a virus
- If a project is completed on schedule, it
wasn't debugged properly.
- Non Crash Operating System aren't.
- The worst bugs in your program will show up
only during the final review.
- The people who say that computers are simple
to use are the same people who tell you how to build a watch
when you ask what time it is.
If it works, it's production. If it doesn't, it's a test.
- Real programmers don't comment their code. If
it was hard to write, it should be hard to understand.
- Format C: fixes all
- Law of Computer Generated Aerodynamics
Computers suck.
- Law of Recycling
A computer that has been on the market for 6 weeks is still
usable as a boat anchor.
- Law of Anti-security
The best way past a pesky security feature is a 13-year-old.
- Law of Acceleration
A computer that has surpassed its user's frustration capacity
(FC) will accelerate downwards at 9.8 meters per second squared.
- Computers let you waste time efficiently
- Make a system even a moron can use and a
moron will use it.
- Make one that requires training or
intelligence and only a moron will use it, but there will be
more help desk calls.
- The likelihood of problems occurring is
inversely proportional to the amount of time remaining before
the deadline.
- You will always discover errors in your work
after you have printed/submitted it.
- 90% of a programmer errors come from data
from other programmers.
- 'Illegal Error' messages only happen when you
forget to save your work
- If you make the letters in your Word document
bigger and then you print it out, you'll have everything on the
first page and only one line on the second.
- the OEM did not actually manufacture the part
you need to replace
- By the time you learn your new computer
you'll need a new one.
- After a software is released, the first bug
found will be by a person who normally does not use that portion
of the program but was wondering why he can't do something he
normally would not do.
- When the Downloading Window says
"99%complete", there will be a fluctuation in the voltage and
you'll have to start all over again.
- Millions of people believe they are animals,
but I have yet to meet one that believe in Windows' stability.
Even human stupidity has limits
- The troubleshooting guide contains the answer
to every problem except yours.
- Plugins Law
Whenever you install a group of plugins one by one just to find
out which one can make your software work, you either haven't
gotten the right one, or have accidentally skipped the right one
or it has become the last one installed.
- No matter what problem you have with your
computer - Its Always Microsoft's fault
Corollary: If its not their fault - Blame them anyway :-)
- You will get disconnected from the Internet
or experience a computer crash when you are downloading. If you
don't experience one within 80% completion, then it will happen
at 99%. If you do manage to get the file, then it will turn out
to be completely useless and/or invalid.
- You'll always receive an e-mail from a web
site that you never visit before.
- 75% of the bugs laws in this page can be
applied to MS Windows (Any version).
- Auto Correct - isn't
- Microsoft excel- doesn't
- If you need to shutdown your PC ASAP, It will
restart.
- The quickest way to shutdown a PC is to
unplug it.
Corollary: ACPI shutdown (sometimes faster to get to than the
plug) does not always work.
Corollary: ACPI shutdown will fail most frequently when you run
the risk of being caught doing something.
- No matter how big a hard drive you buy,
you'll need to double it in a year.
- Complete computer breakdown will happen
shortly after the maintenance person has left.
- A virus will be erased when the hard drive
crashes, making it useless for antivirus program to fix it.
- The problem always exists between one
keyboard and it's respective chair.
- A program that compiles on the first run has
an error in the algorithm
- Walking on water and developing software to
specification are easy as long as both are frozen.
- The smaller the size of your email account,
the more junk mail you will get
- The boss will always come to your workspace
when you accidentally open an adult link
- The more pop-up screens you have, the more
likely the boss will come by
- A computer is only as smart as the person
using it
- If it ain't broke, Overclock it!
- If you're in a hurry, your computer will
crash, a hard drive will become corrupted, or your files will be
erased. Any way, you're screwed if you have a deadline.
- Software Reliability:
Investment in software reliability will increase until it
exceeds the probable cost of errors.
- Computer sadism: When the computer causes
physical or mental damage to a person and can't receive such a
return favor (due to management rules).
- Computer masochism: When a computer takes all
the abuse you think you can give it and continues working as it
should.
- The sound of grinding metal or the sight of
smoke coming from a case is a warning that you are trying to do
too much with too little.
- The survivability of a system is directly
proportional to the price of the cooling system applied to it
and inversely proportional to the amount of use it sees.
- Antivirus systems only effectively work on a
virus after given virus has passed its prime.
- The most frightening of viruses is the virus
you do not know is already there.
- The amount of damage that a string of code
can do is inversely proportional to the length of the string
- You only receive instant messaging, when
working on a project that's due instantly
- When designing a program to handle all
possible dumb errors, nature creates a dumber user
- There is an inverse relationship between an
organization's hierarchy and its understanding of computers.
- Pioneers get arrows
- The smallest problems will immediately be
brought to the attention of the CEO, but the big problems will
be ignored until the affected system goes down.
- Leet speak is nothing more than some poor
fool's attempt to type really, really fast.
- Computers never work the way they are
supposed to. Especially when nothing is wrong with them.
- A program will work the you think is should
only when you don't care if it does.
- Software does not fail when the technician is
in the room.
- as soon as you download a big file, your
computer with shut down
- The longer the e-mail, the greater the chance
it will not make it to its destination, for whatever reason
- If you were preventive enough to save a copy
of anything, you will not need it. Therefore - Not saving a copy
of anything is directly proportional to the value of the
information lost and the amount of time invested in gathering
and typing it
- Proof-read all e-mails three or four times
before sending it. All errors are detected immediately after
being sent
- Murphy works for Microsoft. In fact, he is in
charge of their QA
- the chance to lose data is inversely
proportional to the number people in the room when updating a
simple server program
- Good enough - isn't, unless there is a
deadline.
- Don't take it personally, stupid
If you have any specific questions, please do
not hesitate to
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