@ Firestone's Law of Forecasting: Chicken Little only has to be right once. @ Manly's Maxim: Logic is a systematic method of coming to the wrong conclusion with confidence. @ Grizzard's truism: The trouble with most jobs is the job holder's resemblance to being one of a sled dog team. No one gets a change of scenery except the lead dog. @ Cannon's Comment: If you tell the boss you were late for work because you had a flat tire, the next morning you will have a flat tire. @ MURPHY'S LAW: If anything can go wrong, it will. @ Murphy's First Corollary: Left to themselves, things tend to go from bad to worse. @ Murphy's Second Corollary: It is impossible to make anything foolproof because fools are so ingenious @ Murphy's Constant: Matter will be damaged in direct proportion to its value @ Quantized Revision of Murphy's Law: Everything goes wrong all at once. @ O'Toole's Commentary: Murphy was an optimist. @ Scott's Second Law: When an error has been detected and corrected, it will be found to have been correct in the first place. @ Finagle's First Law: If an experiment works, something has gone wrong. @ Finagle's Second Law: No matter what the experiment's result, there will always be someone eager to: (a) misinterpret it. (b) fake it. or (c) believe it supports his own pet theory. @ Finagle's Third Law: In any collection of data, the figure most obviously correct, beyond all need of checking, is the mistake. @ Finagle's Fourth Law: Once a job is fouled up, anything done to improve it only makes it worse. @ Gumperson's Law: The probability of anything happening is in inverse ratio to its desirability. @ Rudin's Law: In crises that force people to choose among alternative courses of action, most people will choose the worst one possible. @ Ginsberg's Restatement of the Three Laws of Thermodynamics: You can't win. You can't break even. You can't quit. @ Ehrman's Commentary Things will get worse before they will get better. Who said things would get better? @ Commoner's Second Law of Ecology: Nothing ever goes away. @ Howe's Law: Everyone has a scheme that will not work. @ Zymurgy's First Law of Evolving Systems Dynamics: Once you open a can of worms, the only way to recan them is to use a bigger can. @ Non-Reciprocal Law of Expectations: Negative expectations yield negative results. Positive expectations yield negative results. @ Klipstein's Law: Tolerances will accumulate unidirectionally toward maximum difficulty of assembly. @ Interchangeable parts won't. @ You never find a lost article until you replace it. @ Glatum's Law of Materialistic Acquisitiveness: The perceived usefulness of an article is inversely proportional to its actual usefulness once bought and paid for. @ Lewis' Law: No matter how long or hard you shop for an item, after you've bought it, it will be on sale somewhere cheaper. @ If nobody uses it, there's a reason. @ You get the most of what you need the least. @ The Airplane Law: When the plane you are on is late, the plane you want to transfer to is on time. @ Etorre's Observation: The other line moves faster. O'Brien's Variation: If you change lines, the one you just left will start to move faster than the one you are now in. The Queue Principal: The longer you wait in line, the greater the likelihood that you are in the wrong line. @ First Law of Revision: Information necessitating a change of design will be conveyed to the designer after - and only after - the plans are complete. (Often called the 'Now They Tell Us' Law) Corollary I: In simple cases, presenting one obvious right way versus one obvious wrong way, it is often wiser to choose the wrong way so as to expedite subsequent revision. H.B. Fyfe @ Second Law of Revision: The more innocuous the modification appears to be, the further its influence will extend and the more plans will have to be redrawn. H.B. Fyfe @ Third Law of Revision: If, when completion of a design is imminent, field dimensions are finally supplied as they actually are -- instead of as they were meant to be -- it is always simpler to start all over. Corollary I: It is usually impractical to worry beforehand about interferences -- if you have none, someone will make one for you. H.B. Fyfe @ LAWS OF COMPUTER PROGRAMMING: I. Any given program, when running, is obsolete. @ LAWS OF COMPUTER PROGRAMMING: II. Any given program costs more and takes longer. @ LAWS OF COMPUTER PROGRAMMING: III. If a program is useful, it will have to be changed. @ LAWS OF COMPUTER PROGRAMMING: IV. If a program is useless, it will have to be documented. @ LAWS OF COMPUTER PROGRAMMING: V. Any program will expand to fill available memory. @ LAWS OF COMPUTER PROGRAMMING: VI. The value of a program is proportional to the weight of its output. @ LAWS OF COMPUTER PROGRAMMING: VII. Program complexity grows until it exceeds the capabilities of the programmer who must maintain it. @ LAWS OF COMPUTER PROGRAMMING: VIII. Any non-trivial program contains at least one bug. @ LAWS OF COMPUTER PROGRAMMING: IX. Undetectable errors are infinite in variety, in contrast to detectable errors, which by definition are limited. @ LAWS OF COMPUTER PROGRAMMING: X. Adding manpower to a late software project makes it later. @ Lubarsky's Law of Cybernetic Entomology: There's always one more bug. @ Shaw's Principle: Build a system that even a fool can use, and only a fool will want to use it. @ Law of the Perversity of Nature: You cannot successfully determine beforehand which side of the bread to butter. @ Law of Selective Gravity: An object will fall so as to do the most damage. @ Jennings' Corollary to the Law of Selective Gravity: The chance of the bread falling with the butter side down is directly proportional to the value of the carpet. @ Wyszkowski's Second Law: Anything can be made to work if you fiddle with it long enough. @ Sattinger's Law It works better if you plug it in. @ Lowery's Law: If it jams - force it. If it breaks, it needed replacing anyway. @ Schmidt's Law: If you mess with a thing long enough, it'll break. @ Anthony's Law of Force Don't force it - get a bigger hammer. @ Cahn's Axiom: When all else fails, read the instructions. @ Gordon's First Law: If a project is not worth doing at all, it's not worth doing well. @ Law of Research: Enough research will tend to support your theory. @ Maier's Law: If the facts do not conform to the theory, they must be disposed of. @ Peer's Law: The solution to the problem changes the problem. @ Beware of the man who works hard to learn something, learns it, and finds himself no wiser than before. He is full of murderous resentment of people who are ignorant without having come by their ignorance the hard way. - Bokonon @ Help a man when he is in trouble and he will remember you when he is in trouble again. @ You can lead a man to slaughter, but you can't make him think. @ Don't get mad, get even. @ Carson's Law: It's better to be rich and healthy than poor and sick. @ The Golden Rule: He who has the gold, makes the rules. @ Mark's mark: Love is a matter of chemistry; sex is a matter of physics. @ Korman's conclusion: The trouble with resisting temptation is it may never come your way again. @ Lennon's Law: Life is what happens while you are making other plans. Thomas la Mance @ Maugham's Thought: Only a mediocre person is always at his best. @ Krueger's Observation: A taxpayer is someone who does not have to take a civil service exam in order to work for the government. @ Benchley's Law of Distinction: There are two kinds of people in the world, those who believe there are two kinds of people in the world and those who don't. @ Harver's Law: A drunken man's words are a sober man's thoughts. @ Schmidt's Observation: All things being equal, a fat person uses more soap than a thin person. @ Gibb's Law: Infinity is one lawyer waiting for another. @ Fools rush in where fools have been before. @ Rule of Accuracy: When working toward the solution of a problem, it always helps if you know the answer. @ Inside every small problem is a large problem struggling to get out. @ Wyszowski's Law: No experiment is reproducible. @ Fett's Law: Never replicate a successful experiment. @ Brooke's Law: Whenever a system becomes completely defined, some damn fool discovers something which either abolishes the system or expands it beyond recognition. @ The first Myth of Management: It exists. @ Spend sufficient time confirming the need and the need will disappear. @ Peter's Placebo: An ounce of image is worth a pound of performance. @ Zymurgy's Law of Volunteer Labour: People are always available for work in the past tense. @ Wiker's Law: Government expands to absorb revenue and then some. Tom Wicker @ Clarke's First Law: When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong. @ Clarke's Second Law: The limits of the possible can only be defined by going beyond them into the impossible. @ Clarke's Third Law: Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. @ The important thing is never to stop questioning. Albert Einstein @ Segal's Law: A man with a watch knows what time it is. A man with two watches is never sure. @ Weiler's Law: Nothing is impossible for the man who does not have to do it himself. @ Weinberg's Second Law: If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, the first woodpecker to come along would destroy civilization. @ Hartley's Second Law: Never go to bed with anybody crazier than you are. @ Beckhap's Law: Beauty times brains equals a constant. @ Katz's Law: Men and women will act rationally when all other possibilities have been exhausted. @ Cole's Axiom: The sum of the intelligence on the planet is a constant; the population is growing. @ Vique's Law: A man without a religion is like a fish without a bicycle. @ Jones' Motto: Friends come and go but enemies accumulate. McClaughry's Codicil: To make an enemy, do someone a favour. @ Churchill's commentary on man: Man will occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of the time he will pick himself up and continue on. @ The ultimate Law: All general statements are false. @ The Unspeakable Law: As soon as you mention something; if it is good, it goes away. if it is bad, it happens. @ The Whispered Rule: People will believe anything if you whisper it. @ The First Law of Wing Walking: Never let hold of what you've got until you've got hold of something else. @ Eat a live toad the first thing in the morning and nothing worse will happen to you the rest of the day. @ Farnsdick's corollary: After things have gone from bad to worse, the cycle will repeat itself. @ Lynch's Law: When the going gets tough, everybody leaves. @ Law of Revelation: The hidden flaw never remains hidden. @ Langsam's Law: Everything depends. @ Hellrung's Law: If you wait, it will go away. Shevelson's Extension: ... having done its damage. Grelb's Addition: ... if it was bad, it will be back. @ Grossman's Misquote: Complex problems have simple, easy to understand wrong answers. @ Ducharme's Precept: Opportunity always knocks at the least opportune moment. @ First Postulate of Isomurphism: Things equal to nothing else are equal to each other. @ The Unapplicable Law: Washing your car to make it rain doesn't work. @ Witten's Law: Whenever you cut your fingernails, you will find a need for them an hour later. @ Perkin's postulate: The bigger they are, the harder they hit. @ Harrison's Postulate: For every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism. @ Conway's Law: In every organization there will always be one person who knows what is going on. This person must be fired. @ Stewart's Law of Retroaction: It is easier to get forgiveness than permission. @ MacDonald's Second Law: Consultants are mystical people who ask a company for a number and give it back to them. @ First Law of Laboratory Work: Hot glass looks exactly the same as cold glass. @ Handy Guide to Modern Science: 1. If it's green or it wiggles, it's biology. 2. If it stinks, it's chemistry. 3. If it doesn't work, it's physics. 4. If it's incomprehensible, it's mathematics. 5. If it doesn't make sense, it's either economics or psychology. @ To err is human, but to really foul things up requires a computer. @ The Sausage Principle: People who love sausage and respect the law should never watch either one being made. @ Horngren's Observation: (generalized) The real world is a special case. @ Merkin's Maxim: When in doubt, predict that the present trend will continue. @ Hawkin's Theory of Progress: Progress does not consist of replacing a theory that is wrong with one that is right. It consists of replacing a theory that is wrong with one that is more subtly wrong. @ Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity. @ Matz's warning: Beware of the physician who is great at getting out of trouble. @ Gold's Law: If the shoe fits, it's ugly. @ Lewis' Law: People will buy anything that's one to a customer. Sinclair Lewis @ Law of Reruns: If you have watched a TV series only once, and you watch it again, it will be a rerun of the same episode. @ Shirley's Law: Most people deserve each other. @ Forgive and remember. @ Woltman's Law: Never program and drink beer at the same time. @ Gallois' Revelation: If you put tomfoolery into a computer, nothing comes out but tomfoolery. But this tomfoolery, having passed through a very expensive machine, is somehow enobled, and no one dares to criticize it. @ Galbraith's Law of Political Wisdom: Anyone who says he is not going to resign, four times, definitely will. @ Allen's Law: Almost anything is easier to get into than out of. @ Allen's Distinction: The lion and the calf shall lie down together, but the calf won't get much sleep. @ You can lead a horticulture, but you can't make her think. Dorothy Parker @ Avery's Observation: It does not matter if you fall down as long as you pick up something from the floor while you get up. @ Berra's Law: You can observe a lot just by watching. @ Bicycle Law: All bicycles weigh 50 pounds: A 30 pound bicycle needs a 20 pound lock. A 40 pound bicycle needs a 10 pound lock. A 50 pound bicycle doesn't need a lock. @ Cohen's Law: What really matters is the name you succeed in imposing on the facts, not the facts themselves. @ Colson's Law: When you've got them by the balls, their hearts and minds will follow. @ Comins' Law: People will accept your idea much more readily if you tell them Benjamin Franklin said it first. @ Fourth Law of Thermodynamics: If the probability of success is not almost one, then it is damned near zero. @ Gerrold's Laws of Infernal Dynamics: 1. An object in motion will be heading in the wrong direction. 2. An object at rest will be in the wrong place. @ Goldwyn's Law of Contracts. A verbal contract isn't worth the paper it's written on. @ Jacquin's Postulate on Democratic Government: No man's life, liberty, or property are safe while the legislature is in session. @ Jones' Principle: Needs are a function of what other people have. @ Langin's Law: If things were left to chance, they'd be better. @ In America, it's not how much an item costs that matters, it's how much you save. @ If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs, maybe you just don't understand the situation. @ Mencken's Metalaw: For every human problem, there is a neat, simple solution; and it is always wrong. @ Sevareid's Law: The chief cause of problems is solutions. @ Thoreau's Law: If you see a man approaching you with the obvious intention of doing you good, you should run for your life. @ Peer's Law: The solution to the problem changes the problem. @ Never play leapfrog with a unicorn. @ Lyall's Conjecture: If a computer cable has one end, then it has another. @ Lyall's Fundamental Observation: The most important leg of a three legged stool is the one that's missing. @ Pournelle's Law of Costs and Schedules: Everything costs more and takes longer. @ Klipstein's Lament: All warranty and guarantee clauses are voided by payment of the invoice. @ Klipstein's Observation: Any product cut to length will be too short. @ Sueker's Note: If you need n items of anything, you will have n - 1 in stock. @ Rosenfield's Regret: The most delicate component will be dropped. @ de la Lastra's Law: After the last of 16 mounting screws has been removed from an access cover, it will be discovered that the wrong access cover has been removed. de la Lastra's Corollary: After an access cover has been secured by 16 hold-down screws, it will be discovered that the gasket has been ommitted. @ Design flaws travel in groups. @ You can't fight the law of conservation of energy but you sure can bargain with it. @ Gerrold's Fundamental Truth: It's a good thing money can't buy happiness. We couldn't stand the commercials. @ Gerrold's Law: A little ignorance can go a long way. Lyall's Addendum: ... in the direction of maximum harm. @ Gerrold's Pronouncement: The difference between a politician and a snail is that a snail leaves its slime behind. @ When a man laughs at his misfortunes, he loses a great many friends. They never forgive the loss of their perogative. H. L. Mencken @ An idealist is one who, on noticing that roses smell better than a cabbage, concludes that it will also make better soup. H. L. Mencken @ Whenever you hear a man speak of his love for his country, it is a sure sign he expects to be paid for it. H. L. Mencken @ Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want and deserve to get it good and hard. H.L. Mencken @ A judge is a law student who marks his own examination papers. H. L. Mencken @ Arcana Ecclesiastica: Archbishop - A Christian ecclesiastic of a rank superior to that obtained by Christ. Puritanism - The haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy. H. L. Mencken @ Adultery is the application of democracy to love. H. L. Mencken @ Sin is a dangerous toy in the hands of the virtuous. It should be left to the congenitally sinful who know when to play with it and when to leave it alone. H.L. Mencken @ In human history, a moral victory is always a disaster for it debauches and degrades both the victor and the vanquished. H.L. Mencken @ There is only one sound argument for democracy, and that is the argument that it is a crime for any man to hold himself out as better than other men, and, above all, a most heinous crime for him to prove it. H.L. Mencken @ The Arithmetic of Cooperation: When you're adding up committees there's a useful rule of thumb: that talents make a difference, and follies make a sum. Piet Hein @ The Ultimate Wisdom Philosophers must ultimately find their true perfection in knowing all the follies of mankind by introspection. Piet Hein @ Murphy's Military Laws: 1. Never share a foxhole with anyone braver than you are. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 2. No battle plan ever survives contact with the enemy. Field Marshall Helmuth Carl Bernard von Moltke @ Murphy's Military Laws: 3. Friendly fire ain't. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 4. The most dangerous thing in the combat zone is an officer with a map. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 5. The problem with taking the easy way out is that the enemy has already mined it. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 6. The buddy system is essential to your survival; it gives the enemy somebody else to shoot at. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 7. The further you are in advance of your own positions, the more likely your artillery will shoot short. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 8. Incoming fire has the right of way. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 9. If your advance is going well, you are walking into an ambush. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 10. The quartermaster has only two sizes, too large and too small. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 11. If you really need an officer in a hurry, take a nap. @ Murphy's Miltary Laws: 12. The only time suppressive fire works is when it is used on abandoned positions. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 13. The only thing more accurate than incoming enemy fire is incoming friendly fire. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 14. There is nothing more satisfying than having someone take a shot at you, and miss. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 15. Don't be conspicuous. In the combat zone, it draws fire. Out of the combat zone, it draws sergeants. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 16. If your sergeant can see you, so can the enemy. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 17. Never worry about the bullet with your name on it. Instead, worry about shrapnel addressed to 'occupant'. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 18. All battles are fought at the junction of two or more map sheets. 18.1 ...uphill. 18.2 ...and in the rain. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 19. Logistics is the ball and chain of armoured warfare. Heinz Guderian @ Murphy's Military Laws: 20. The army with the smartest dress uniform will lose. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 21. What gets you promoted from one rank gets you killed in the next rank. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 22. A good plan today is better than a perfect plan tomorrow. George Patton @ Murphy's Military Laws: 23. If orders can be misunderstood, they have been. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 24. Tracer works both ways. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 25. If the enemy is in range, so are you. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 26. War is like love. To triumph, you must make contact. Attributed to Napoleon @ Murphy's Military Laws: 27. Boldness becomes rarer, the higher the rank. Karl von Clausewitz @ Murphy's Military Laws: 28. Never reinforce failure. Failure reinforces itself. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 29. Only 5% of an intelligence report is accurate. The trick of a good commander is to isolate the 5%. Douglas MacArthur @ Murphy's Military Laws: 30. Tactics is for amateurs; professionals study logistics. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 31. When a front line soldier overhears two General Staff officers conferring, he's fallen back too far. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 32. It isn't necessary to be an idiot to be a senior officer, but it sure helps. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 34. No captain can do very wrong who places his ship alongside that of the enemy. Vice Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson @ Murphy's Military Laws: 33: Only numbers can annihilate. Vice Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson @ Murphy's Military Laws: 34a. Always know when it's time to get out of Dodge. 34b. Always know how to get out of Dodge. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 35. Your equipment was made by he lowest bidder. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 36. Priorities are made by officers, not God. There's a difference. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 37. Always honour a threat. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 38. The weight of all of your equipment is proportional to the cube of the time you have been carrying it. @ Murphy's Military Laws: 39. Hell hath no fury like a non-combatant. Charles Edward Montague @ Murphy's Military Laws: 40. Fighter pilots make movies; attack pilots make history. @ Technologie don't transfer. Conrad Stenton @ Blessed are the young, for they shall inherit the national debt. Herbert Hoover @ There are four things that hold back human progress; ignorance, stupidity, committees, and accountants. Charles J.C. Lyall @ There is something to be said for every error; but, whatever may be said for it, the most important thing to be said about it is that it is erroneous. G. K. Chesterton @ Be kind to everyone you talk with. You never know who's going to be on the jury. Tiger Goldstick @ The only time the world beats a path to your door is when you are in the bathroom. @ When all is said and done, more is said than done. @ Finance is the study of money and how it violates the rules of mathematics and common sense. @ Horwood's First Law: Good data is the data you already have. @ Horwood's Second Law: Bad data drives out good. @ Horwood's Third Law: The data you have for the present crisis was collected to relate to the previous one. @ Horwood's Fourth Law: The respectability of existing data grows with elapsed time and distance from the data source to the investigator. @ Horwood's Fifth Law: Data can be moved from one office to another but it cannot be created or destroyed. @ Horwood's Sixth Law: If you have the right data you have the wrong problem; and vice versa. @ Horwood's Seventh Law: The important thing is not what you do, but how you measure it. @ Horwood's Eighth Law: In complex systems, there is no relationship between information gathered and decisions made. @ Horwood's Ninth Law: Acquisition of knowledge from experience is an exception. @ Horwood's Tenth Law: Knowledge grows at half the rate at which academic courses proliferate. @ Cheops Law: No project was ever completed on time and within budget. @ No man knows what true happiness is until he gets married. By then, of course, its too late. @ The best scale for an experiment is 12 inches to the foot. John Fisher First Sea Lord @ What's source for the goose is object for the gander. Stan Kelly-Bootle @ Kelly-Bootle's Law of Programming: The sooner you start coding, the longer it is going to take. @ Gershwin's Law: It ain't necessarily so. @ Kelly-Bootle's pith poor law: Terseness is not enough. @ Science is to computer science as hydraulics is to plumbing. Stan Kelly-Bootle @ The Seven Catastrophes of Computing: The user, the manufacturer, the model, the salesperson, the operating system, the language, and the application. Stan Kelly-Bootle @ Critics are like eunuchs in a harem: they know how it is done, they've seen it done every day, but they're unable to do it themselves. Brendan Behan @ Alinsky's Rule for Radicals Those who are the most moral are furthest from the problem. @ Where there's a will, there's a won't. @ Olivier's Law Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it. @ Weiner's Law of Libraries: There are no answers, only cross-references. @ Searle's Third Law: You win a few, you loose a lot. @ Sodd's Second Law: Sooner or later, the worst possible set of circumstances is bound to occur. @ Berra's Second Law: Anyone who is popular is bound to be disliked. @ Heise's Law of Anatomy: When the mouth opens, the ears slam shut. @ Foster's Law: The only people who find what they are looking for in life are the fault finders. @ There are two kinds of people in any organization: those who fix the problems, and those who fix the blame. The latter are called managers. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Weatherwax's Postulate: The degree with which you overreact to information will be in inverse proportion to its accuracy. @ Schopenhauer's Law of Entropy: If you put a spoonful of wine in a barrel of sewage, you get sewage. If you put a spoonful of sewage in a barrel of wine, you get sewage. @ Munder's Theorem: For every '10', there are ten '1's. @ Levy's Eighth Law: No amount of genius can overcome a preoccupation with detail. Strong's Reply: Genius cannot be fruitful without due consideration and attention to detail. @ Zappa's Law: There are two things which are truly universal: hydrogen and stupidity. @ Fagin's observation: Hindsight is an exact science. @ First rule of History: History doesn't repeat itself; historians merely repeat one another. @ Ehler's First Law: When you find out how far you can go, you've gone too far. @ Good's Rule of Bureaucracies: When the government's remedies do not solve the problem, you modify the problem, not the remedy. @ Sigstad's Law: When it gets to be your turn, they change the rules. @ Roger's Law: As soon as the stewardess serves coffee, the aircraft encounters turbulence. Davis' Explanation: Serving coffee on aircraft causes turbulence. @ Bachman's Law: The greater the cost of putting a plan into operation, the less chance of abandoning it. Bachman's Corollary: The higher the level of prestige accorded the people behind a plan, the less chance of abandoning it. @ Cohn's First Law: In any bureaucracy, paperwork increases as you spend more and more time reporting on the less and less you are doing. Cohn's Second Law: In any bureaucracy, stability is achieved when you spend all of your time reporting on the nothing you are doing. @ Kushner's Law: The chances of anybody doing anything are inversely proportional to the number of other people who are in a position to do it instead. @ Law of Probable Distribution: Whatever hits the fan will not be evenly distributed. @ Gourd's Axiom: A meeting is an event at which the minutes are kept and the hours are lost. @ Wethern's Law: Assumption is the mother of all screwups. @ Steinbach's Advice to Systems Programmers: Never test for an error you don't know how to handle. @ Rule of Defactualization: Information deteriorates upward through bureaucracies. @ Maier's Second Law: The bigger the theory, the better. @ Only adults have difficulty with child proof bottles. @ Barach's Rule: An alcoholic is a person who drinks more than his physician. @ Matz's Medication Rule: A drug is that substance which, when injected into a rat, will produce a scientific report. @ G.B. Shaw's Law: Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach. Martin's Extension: Those who can't teach, administrate. Lyall's Insight: The above completely explains sex education. @ Conner's Second Law: If something is confidential, it will be left in the copier. @ Hane's Law: There is no limit to how bad things can get. @ Edward's Law: If it weren't for the last minute, nothing would get done. @ Boren's Laws: When in doubt, mumble. When in trouble, delegate. When in charge, ponder. @ Forsyth's Law: Just when you see the light at the end of the tunnel, the roof caves in on you. @ Variables won't; constants aren't. @ The one language spoken by all programmers is profanity. @ The only two things a pirate will run for is money and public office. Yosimite Sam @ If it can't be expressed in figures, it is not science, it is opinion. Robert A. Heinlein @ Taxes are not levied for the benefit of the taxed. Robert A. Heinlein @ Ninety percent of everything is crud. Theodore Sturgeon @ One good turn gets most of the blanket. @ A virtual data base is a segment of your imagination. @ On a clear disk, you can seek forever. @ Octal is just like base 10, really, if you're missing two fingers. Tom Lehrer @ Disks travel in packs. @ I believe in computer dating, but only if the computers are truly in love. Groucho Marx @ Reciprocity works both ways. @ The Universe is not user friendly. Kelvin Throop @ Science policy is to science as bird shot is to birds. Petr Beckman @ Remember, a rut is simply a coffin with the ends knocked out. Earl Nightengale @ Computer programs are ninety percent debugged, fifty per cent of the time. @ To err is human, but to REALLY foul things up, it takes a computer driven by a programmer who only thinks he knows what he is doing. Walter Aiello @ Tusseman's Law: Nothing is an inevitable as a mistake whose time has come. @ One can never underestimate the intelligence of the electorate. Walter Aiello @ Any given container designed to hold water, will leak, and any given orifice designed to drain water, will plug up. Walter Aiello @ You don't learn less and less, you learn more and more. Hence you should not call them lessons but rather morons. Lewis Carroll @ If people behaved like governments, you'd call the cops. Kelvin Throop @ Alcoholism is what happens when good liquor falls into the hands of amateurs. Spider Robinson @ If God had really intended man to fly, he would have made it easier to get to the airports. @ It may be that the race is not always to the swift, nor the battle to the strong -- but thats the way to bet it. Damon Runyon @ All of life is seven to five against. Damon Runyon @ Don't be afraid to take a big step. You can't cross a chasm in two small jumps. David Lloyd George @ No one ever raised a statue to a critic. Jean Sibelius @ Originality is the art of concealing your source. Franklin P. Jones @ Great ideas need landing gear as well as wings. C.D. Jackson @ Old programming wizards never die, they just recurse. Allen Supynuk @ If all the economists in the world were laid end to end, they wouldn't reach a conclusion. Lewis Carroll @ Those who live by the crystal ball must be prepared to eat crushed glass. Larry Long @ There is nothing more frightening than ignorance in action. Goethe @ If the only tool you have is a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail. Abraham Maslow @ A closed mouth gathers no foot. @ First Rule of Intelligent Tinkering: Save all the parts. @ Hofstadter's Law: The time and effort required to complete a project are always more than you expect, even when you take into account Hofstadter's Law. @ Incompetence knows no barriers of time and place. @ Make it possible to write programs in English and you will find that most programmers cannot write in English. @ Block's Bombshell: A conclusion is the place where you got tired of thinking. Arthur Block @ Murphy's Law of Thermodynamics: Things get worse under pressure. @ Ogden's Law: The sooner you fall behind, the more time you have to catch up. @ Shick's Law: There is no problem a good miracle can't solve. @ Spencer's Laws of Data: Anyone can make a good decision given enough facts. A good manager can make a decision without enough facts. A perfect manager can operate in perfect ignorance. @ Statistics are like bikinis: what they reveal is suggestive, what they conceal is vital. @ The average woman would rather have beauty than brains because the average man can see better than he can think. @ Organizations are like wine; the bottleneck is always at the top. @ The plural of spouse is spice. Edgar Pangborn @ In theory, the difference between theory and practice is small. In practice, the difference between theory and practice is large. @ Two wrongs do not make a right; it usually takes three or four. @ Mayhis Rule: It is bad luck to be superstitious. Andrew Mathis @ Bureaucaracy defends the status quo long past the time when the quo has lost its status. Laurence J. Peter @ One should forgive one's enemies, but not before they are hanged. Heinrich Heine @ It is useless for sheep to pass resolutions in favour of vegetarianism while wolves remain of a different opinion. William Ralph Inge @ Rascality has limits; stupidity has none. Napoleon @ Politics is occupational therapy for the morally handicapped. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Fundamental Tenet of Reform: Reforms come from below. No man who has four aces ever calls for a new deal. John F. Parker @ Beauregard's Law: When you are up to your eyeballs in it, keep your mouth shut. @ Murchison's Law of Money: Money is like manure. If you spread it around, it does a lot of good. If you pile it up in one place, it stinks. @ When all else fails, blame it on the oil industry. @ Laotion Proverb: When drowning, it is all right to be a fatalist, but one should still move one's feet. @ He who hesitates is smart. @ It is only when you need to knock on wood that you realize that the world is entirely made up of aluminum and plastic. @ A person who says that something can't be done shouldn't interrupt the person doing it. @ The difference between an amateur and a professional in the computer business is the number of backups they make. @ The secret to dealing successfully with people is sincerity. Once you can fake sincerity, you've got it made. George Burns @ The person who offers unsolicited advice usually discovers its value. @ Modern journalists are much like modern novelists; they both write fiction. The difference is that the novelists are honest about it. Charles J.C. Lyall @ It is easy to tell when a politician is lying. Watch his lips. If they move, he's lying. Gracie Allen @ Hell is the place where everything test perfectly and nothing works. John W. Campbell Jr. @ Fleas can be taught nearly everything that a congressman can. Mark Twain @ In the first place God made idiots; this was for practice; then he made school boards. Mark Twain @ Of course, America had been discovered before Columbus, but it had always been hushed up. Oscar Wilde @ American women expect to find in their husbands the perfection that the English women only hope to find in their butlers. W. Somerset Maugham @ Canadians could have enjoyed: English Government, French Culture, and American know-how. Instead they ended up with: English know-how, omerset Maugham @ Canadians could have enjoyed: English Government, French Culture, and American know-how. Instead they ended up with: English know-how, French Government, and American culture. John Robert Colombo @ Heaven for climate; hell for society. Mark Twain @ Put not your trust in princes. Psalms 146:3 @ Democracy is a form of religion. It is the worship of jackals by jackasses. H.L. Mencken @ You just can't tell about women; and if you can, you shouldn't. Charles M.M. Lyall @ Maxey's Maxim: No matter what happens, there is always someone who knew it would. @ Sprinkle's Law: Things fall at right angles. @ The finer a highway is, the more people crowd it to unusability. John W. Campbell Jr. @ Always leave a way out. John W. Campbell Jr. @ Myer's First Law: Do not believe in miracles -- rely on them. @ Myer's Second Law: Experiments must be reproducible -- they should fail the same way. @ Myer's Third Law: Always verify your witchcraft. @ Myer's Fourth Law: First draw your curves -- then plot your readings. @ Myer's Fifth Law: Be sure to obtain meteorological information before leaving on vacation. @ Myer's Sixth Law: A record of data is useful -- it indicates that you have been working. @ Myer's Seventh Law: Experience is directly proportional to equipment ruined. @ Myer's Eighth Law: To study a subject best, understand it thoroughly before you start. @ Myer's Ninth Law: In case of doubt, make it sound convincing. @ In an experiment, nothing can go wrong; we can always rely on the physical universe to run as designed. Wayne Batteau @ Alma Hill's Corollary's to Murphy's Law: - If we loose much by having things go wrong, take all possible care. - If we have nothing to loose by change, relax. - If we have everything to gain by change, relax. - If it doesn't matter - it does not matter. @ If you can't detect it, why worry? John W. Campbell @ Rothstein's Observation: The one part that the fabrication plant forgot to ship you supports seventy five per cent of the balance of the shipment. Rothstein's Corollory: Not only did they forget to ship it; fifty per cent of the time they haven't even made it.. @ Rothstein's Note: Truck deliveries that normally take one day will take five when you're waiting for the truck. @ Rothstein's Advice: The eye of the Chief Inspecting Engineer is more accurate than the finest instrument. @ Nobody likes being proven wrong. A scientist is a man who develops powerful proofs. Therefore, nobody likes scientists. John W. Campbell Jr. @ Law of the Too, Too Solid Point: In any collection of data, the figure that is most obviously correct -- beyond any need of checking -- is the mistake. Corollary I: No one whom you ask for help will see it either. Corollary II: Everyone who stops by with unsought advice will see it immediately. H.B. Fyfe @ If the liberal arts do nothing else, they provide engaging metaphors for the thinking they displace. Roger Zelazny @ The only thing wrong with doing nothing is that you never know when you are finished. @ Remember, the absent are always wrong. @ Coffee makes a worker wise and able to see through half closed eyes. @ Indecision is the key to flexibility. @ Nothing motivates an employee more than to see the boss do an honest day's work. @ Law of Forgetfulness: The chance of forgetting something is directly proportional to ... proportional to ... to ... . @ Nine tenths of a woman's intuition is suspicion. Bob Edwards @ Blessed are the pretty girls, for they shall inherit the men. Bob Edwards @ A woman's idea of heaven is a place where she won't have to wash the dishes. Bob Edwards @ It's awfully hard for a woman to pretend not to know the things she ought to know. Bob Edwards @ We actually need women in provincial politics. Women could never possibly participate in any graft system, owing to their inability to keep a secret. As publicity is the remedy for most political ills, women in politics should function admirably. Bob Edwards (1911) @ Women will never make good on juries until they get to be as ignorant as men. Bob Edwards @ Politics has not ceased to make strange bedfellows, or, at least the politicians of both parties continue to share the same bunk. You know the kind of bunk we mean. Bob Edwards @ Politicians resemble shoes in one respect -- the higher grade is not machine made. Bob Edwards @ It seems as if the world is divided into two sets of people -- one set engaged in making money by productive labour and the other set are simultaneously engaged in taking it away from them. Bob Edwards @ A man can claim to have "arrived" when his private affairs begin to interest the public. Bob Edwards @ A girl seldom falls in love with a man unless there is some reason why she shouldn't. Bob Edwards @ Every man has his favourite bird. Ours is the bat. Bob Edwards @ The report that whiskey drinking is declining in Calgary will cause no surprise. Most of the politicians are out of town telling the festive farmer which way to vote. Bob Edwards @ Soaking the brain in alcohol does not improve the mind. Bob Edwards @ The water wagon is certainly a more dangerous vehicle than the automobile. At least more people fall off it. Bob Edwards @ Call a girl a chick and she smiles; call a woman a hen and she howls. Call a young woman a witch and she is pleased; call an old woman a witch and she is indignant. Call a girl a kitten and she rather likes it; call a woman a cat and she hates you. Women are queer. Bob Edwards @ A man who hesitates is lost. So is a woman who doesn't. Bob Edwards @ A girl's kisses are like pickles in a bottle -- the first are hard to get, but the rest come easy. Bob Edwards @ Too much distance between husband and wife may result in other enchantments. (This is a deep one.) Bob Edwards @ The only thing that beats a good wife is a bad husband. Bob Edwards @ It is easy for a man to manage his wife. All he has to do is follow her instructions. Bob Edwards @ When we hear a woman say that all men are alike we wonder how she found out. Bob Edwards @ All the world's a stage, and the majority of us sit in the gallery and throw things at the performers. Bob Edwards @ If you want anything done well, do it yourself. This is why most people laugh at their own jokes. Bob Edwards @ The things that come to a man who waits are seldom the things he has been waiting for. Bob Edwards @ A man begins to get his life into proper perspective when he quits expecting to find pearls in his oysters and is extremely gratified when he gets oysters. Bob Edwards @ It is a waste of life to be sensible all the time. Bob Edwards @ No man does as much today as he is going to do tomorrow. Bob Edwards @ Most of the entries in the human race are also rans. Bob Edwards @ Remorse is memory that has begun to ferment. Bob Edwards @ A man never looses money on fast horses. It is the slow ones that cause all the damned trouble. Bob Edwards @ Don't you think "absolutely" a much overworked word, Absolutely. Bob Edwards @ If money talks, all it ever said to me was goodbye. Bob Edwards @ When Solomon said that there was a time and a place for everything he had not encountered the problem of parking an automobile. Bob Edwards @ The first thing a man with a new automobile runs into is debt. Bob Edwards @ The trouble with being efficient is that it makes everybody hate you so. Bob Edwards @ The income tax returns would indicate that there is untold wealth in Canada. Bob Edwards @ Taking things philosophically is easy if they don't concern you. Bob Edwards @ Never exaggerate your faults; your friends will attend to that. Bob Edwards @ Forgive your enemies -- but if you have no enemies, forgive a few of your friends. Bob Edwards @ A tongue, like a race horse, generally runs faster the less weight it carries. Bob Edwards @ Most of life's shadows result from standing in your own light. Bob Edwards @ The man who has never tried has no sympathy for the man who has tried and failed. Bob Edwards @ Some people might as well be crazy for all the sense they have. Bob Edwards @ Meanwhile the meek are a long time inheriting the earth. Bob Edwards @ A little learning is a dangerous thing, but a lot of ignorance is just as bad. Bob Edwards @ Isn't it queer that only sensible people agree with you? Bob Edwards @ The way of the transgressor is ever popular. Bob Edwards @ If its all the same to history, it need not repeat itself anymore. Bob Edwards @ Well, at all events, the Canadian Navy will be able to lick the Swiss Navy. This is one comfort for which we should be thankful. Bob Edwards @ Not all women are as bad as they paint themselves. Bob Edwards @ If men could read woman's thoughts, they would take more risks than they do. Bob Edwards @ It is as easy to recall an unkind word as to draw back a bullet after firing a gun. Bob Edwards @ Never judge a man by the opinion his wife has of him. Be fair. Bob Edwards @ McCrum's Maxim: ASCII no questions and I'll TELETYPE you no lies. @ Trial marriages are very dangerous. If you're not careful, they could lead to the real thing. Warren Beatty @ The greater the number of laws and enactments, the more thieves and robbers there will be. Lao-Tzu (604-531 B.C.) @ No man can put a chain about the ankle of his fellow man without at last finding the other end fastened about his own neck. Frederick Douglas, 1883 @ Ignorance and stupidity are not the same thing. At the battle at Little Big Horn, Crazy Horse was an ignorant savage and George Custer was an educated military tactician and strategist. Custer was also stupid; Crazy Horse wasn't. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Feminist theologians tell us that God is female. But, what about the devil? What about her? Charles J.C. Lyall @ Never try to explain integrity to a lawyer. Charles J.C. Lyall @ There may be a market for artificial intelligence but there is a larger market for artificial stupidity. Charles J.C. Lyall @ In a severe crisis, make sure you have a good stock of the precious metals; gold, silver, and lead. The first two make lousy bullets. Charles J.C. Lyall @ There are only three predators that strike fear into the average man; the man eating shark, a pack of wolves, and the tax department. Charles J.C. Lyall @ The early worm gets eaten. @ Never tell an accountant that he is a credit to his profession. A good accountant is a debit to his profession. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Consultants know more ways of doing things than their clients and they can do it better than their clients; most of the time, they end up doing it the client's way and trying to make the client like it. Consultants are the business equivalent of the high priced whore. Charles J.C. Lyall @ The problem with the war between the sexes is that neither side has much compassion for the casualties. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Any computer system can be rendered ineffective by its users. Charles J.C. Lyall @ No one can design a completely idiot proof system; idiots are too smart. Charles J.C. Lyall @ A poorly managed manual system cannot be improved by automation. The problem is not the system, it's the manager. Charles J.C. Lyall @ All systems have three aspects: there is the official system which is written down; there is the system which the managers administer, and there is the system actually implemented by the employees. It is very similar to the Christian theology of the holy trinity. Charles J.C. Lyall @ The best way to improve the educational system would be to turn it over to private enterprise. Not that the companies could necessarily do it any better, but the education department would suddenly find the deficiencies intolerable. Charles J.C. Lyall @ A person in the 100% tax bracket is called a slave. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Statistics are methods of quantifying ignorance. When an intellectual tells you that it is only a probability that the sun will rise tomorrow morning, he is indicating his ignorance of Newton's Laws. Charles J.C. Lyall @ A cynic is a person who refuses to share your illusions. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Media is the plural of mediocre. Rocky Bridges @ They don't make things like they used to, and what's more they never did. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Don't lie. It is a crime to impersonate a politician. @ Don't steal. It is a crime to compete with government @ The Lord giveth and the government taketh away. @ Some people think that the tax department are thieves. This is nonsense. The tax department does not steal; it simply threatens you with dire consequences if you do not give them the money they want. This is not theft. It is extortion. Charles J.C. Lyall @ The beaver has a completely unjustified reputation for hard work. What it energetically does is destroy trees so it can build a damn and flood what it hasn't destroyed. It is an oversized rodent with a vicious temper and is the perfect symbol for the Canadian government. Charles J.C. Lyall @ There are several occupations that should be de-criminalized because they provide a useful social function. Among them are prostitution and political assassination. Charles J.C. Lyall @ When a person says that technology is "out of control", he usually means that it is out of his control. This is usually a good thing. Charles J.C. Lyall @ The greatest deficiency in educational systems is that they almost never offer courses in thinking. @ It has been determined that mankind and chimpanzees have 99 per cent of their genetic material in common. This annoys both the creationists and the chimps. Charles J.C. Lyall @ The more obvious the defect in a plan, the more likely it will be approved. @ The AIDS epidemic may well bring the end of our species. Homo Sapiens will be supplanted by Hetro Sapiens. @ Schedules are never drawn up by the people who will have to keep them. @ The more sensible and simple your plan, the more likely your supervisor will change it. @ It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than it is for a plan to pass unchanged through a committee. Miesch's Note: A camel is a racehorse designed by a committee. @ Lyall's Regret Waist not, diet not. @ In the ultimate utopia, only three things would be illegal: - the initiation of force; - the act of fraud and; - Monday mornings. Charles J.C. Lyall @ You've gotta know when to code 'em, know when to modem, Know when to load 'em up, know when to run. You never count your money when you're sittin' at the keyboard; There'll be time enough for countin' when the program's done. -Anonymous (With apologies to Kenny Rogers) @ You can slide further on bullshit than you can on sand. Don McKee @ Marriage is made in heaven; so is thunder and lightning. @ Hindsight is diffraction limited. R.E. Fisher @ Many students treat knowledge as a liquid to be swallowed rather than as a solid to be chewed, and then they wonder why it provides so little nourishment. @ Old age and treachery will always overcome youth and vigour. @ First Law of Business Meetings: The probability that the lead pencil will break is directly proportional to the importance of the notes being taken. @ The Grocery Bag Law: The candy bar you had planned to eat on the way home from the market is hidden at the bottom of the grocery bag. @ Brasington's First Law: You will never use the backup copy you just made. @ Brasington's Second Law: The only backup copy you will ever need is either: - the one you didn't have time to make, or; - the one you did make but cannot read. @ Brasington's Third Law: There is no danger in x-raying a scratch disk or tape. However, a boy scout's magnet can destroy the only copy of a file at 50 yards. @ Brasington's Fourth Law: The probability that a given program will conform to expectations is inversely proportional to the programmer's confidence in his ability to do the job. @ Brasington's Fifth Law: When a programmer tells you "no problem", you have a serious problem. @ Brasington's Wisdom: When a programmer commits to a completion date, make sure it includes day, month, and year. @ Brasington's Irrefutable Observation: State of the art software is not. User friendly software also is not. State of the art user friendly software, is an edp insider's joke. @ Brasington's Sixth Law: No system is ever completely debugged. Attempts to debug it invariably introduce new bugs which are even harder to find. @ Brasington's Seventh Law: Projects progress quickly until they become 90% complete, then they remain 90% complete forever. @ Brasington's Insight: One advantage of fuzzy project objectives is that they let you avoid the embarrassement of estimating the costs. @ Brasington's Eighth Law: If project content is allowed to change freely, the rate of change will exceed the rate of progress. @ Brasington's Ninth Law: A carelessly planned project takes three times longer to complete than expected; a carefully planned one will take only twice as long. @ Brasington's Note: Project teams detest project reporting because it vividly manifests their lack of progress. @ Liebling's Truth: Freedom of the press belongs to those who own one. A.J. Liebling @ Austen's Aphorism: Single women have a dreadful propensity for being poor, which is one very strong argument in favour of matrimony. @ People fail to respect the law when the laws fail to deserve respect. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Traditions are solutions for which we have forgotten the problems. @ Information is power. To give out correct information at the correct time is to control the present; to withhold information at the correct time is to control the future. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Our analytical tools are primitive; almost all of our problems are solvable but few yield to analysis. Consider the future; we cannot predict it, but assuredly we are creating it. Most of our problems are subsets of this solvable problem. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Mankind makes tools; we use them to augment our hands, arms and legs. The computer augments the brain and this makes it very unpopular with totalitarians. Charles J.C. Lyall @ Life's a batch, and then you submit. Steve Rosborough. @ Every life form on Earth either has become extinct or will become extinct. That is why the human race will build star ships. Charles J.C. Lyall @ The only people that successfully resist change in society are the dead. Charles J.C. Lyall @ A hug is the perfect gift -- one size fits all, and nobody minds if you exchange it. Ivern Ball @ Absolutely nothing in the world is as friendly as a wet dog. Dan Bennet @ The medieval alchemist said there were four states of matter: Earth, Water, Air, and Fire. On the other hand, we know that there really are four states of matter: Solid, Liquid, Gas and Plasma. Thank God for progress. Kelvin Throop @ Once you get to orbit, you're halfway to anywhere. Robert A. Heinlein @ An economist is a man who tells you what to do with the money you would not have if you had followed his proposal in the first place. Kelvin Throop @ Policy: A common substitute for good judgement. Kelvin Throop @ Those whom the gods would destroy, they first make President. Kelvin Throop @ If at first you don't succeed, try, try again. If that doesn't work, look for a better solution. Kelvin Throop @ And the Lord said unto Job, "There's no reason for it. It's just policy." Kelvin Throop @ If the mind were exercised as much as the mouth, we would be a race of geniuses. Kelvin Throop @ A self addressed envelope would be addressed "envelope". Kelvin Throop @ In matters of belief, he who is absolutely sure he is right is almost certainly dead wrong. Kelvin Throop @ God doesn't want to make it too easy for his children -- many of them are spoiled enough as it is. Kelvin Throop @ To get the attention of a large animal, be it an elephant or a bureaucracy, it helps to know what part of it feels pain. Be very sure, though, that you want its full attention. Kelvin Throop @ There is no such thing as a functional illiterate. Kelvin Throop @ The number of people who agree or disagree with you has absolutely no bearing on whether you're right. The universe has a way of deciding that for itself. Kelvin Throop @ Just because we're not currently using a technology doesn't mean that it doesn't work anymore. Kelvin Throop @ Jargon (or "technical terminology") is a marvelous way to convey a lot of information to the knowledgeable. It's also a superb way to intimidate the uninitiated. Why do you suppose it was developed? Kelvin Throop @ Isn't it interesting that the same people who laugh at science fiction listen to weather reports and economists. Kelvin Throop @ Reality is a crutch for people who can't cope with drugs. Lily Tomlin @ Tradition is what you resort to when you don't have the time or the money to do it right. Kurt Herbert Adler @ Love is the answer, but while you're waiting for the answer, sex raises some pretty good questions. Woody Allen @ Is sex dirty? Only if it's done right. Woody Allen @ Inanimate objects are classified scientifically into three major catagories -- those that don't work, those that break down, and those that get lost. Russel Baker @ Heblock's Horror: If it's good, they'll stop making it. @ Creativity is inverse to experience. Decision levels are inverse to comprehension. Size of error is inverse to elapsed time. Derek Hutchins @ Cayo's Law: The only things that start on time are those that you're late for. @ Arndt's Truism: If you have never made a mistake, you have never made anything. Lyall's curmudgeonly addendum: ... or anyone. @ More programming sins are committed in the name of efficiency (without necessarily achieving it) than for any other single reason including stupidity. William A. Wulf @ Porter's Strategem for future dilemmas: We'll burn that bridge when we come to it. @ Walton's Observation: Given two choices, you'll make the wrong one -- twice. @ Takeovers are always announced one day after you sell the stock of the target company. Gluskin-Fagan Report @ Time-tested investment strategies stop working as soon as you put your money into them. Gluskin-Fagan Report @ The next bull market will begin on the day you swear never to touch another stock as long as you live. Gluskin-Fagan Report @ The only hot stock market tips that work are those you have ignored. Gluskin-Fagan Report @ The trouble with planners is that they often undertake vast projects using half vast ideas. @ Brilliance is typically the act of an individual, but incredible stupidity can usually be traced to an organization. Jon Bentley @ Testing can show the presence of bugs but not their absence. Edsger W. Dijkstra @ If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Bert Lance If we can't fix it, it ain't broke. Walt Weir If it might break, don't go near it. Herbert Stein @ The fastest I/O is no I/O. Nils-Peter Nelson @ The cheapest, fastest and most reliable components of a computer system are those that aren't there. Gorden Bell @ Eschew Clever Rules. Joe Condon @ Make it work first before you make it work fast. Bruce Whiteside @ Bulls do not win bullfights: people do. People do not win people fights: lawyers do. Norman R. Augustine @ Augustine's Fundamental Law of Aeronautics: Never fly on an airplane with a tail number less than 10. @ Software is like entropy. It is difficult to grasp, weighs nothing, and obeys the second law of thermodynamics: i.e., it always increases. Norman R. Augustine @ It is better to be a reorganizer than a reorganizee. Norman R. Augustine @ The optimum committee has no members. Norman R. Augustine @ The early bird gets the worm. The early worm--gets eaten. Norman R. Augustine @ Two thirds of the earth's surface is covered with water. The other two thirds is covered with auditors from headquarters. Norman R. Augustine @ If the error rate is high enough to be measured, it's too high. Bill Godbout @ The most effective way to increase the reliability of software that we currently know about is simply to make it understandable and predictable. Nancy Leveson @ Experiment and theory often show remarkable agreement when performed in the same laboratory. Daniel Bershader @ The world is divided into three kinds of people -- those who can count and those who can't. Mick Racky @ Swanson's Principle of Prelusive Programming: Hardware will learn to emulate any software bug within one hour of its removal. @ A human mind is monumentally harder to change than a bed. Lois McMaster Bujold @ There are three kinds of medical experiments: Single Blind: The patients don't know if they got the drug or the placebo. Double blind: The doctors don't know either. Triple Blind: The administrators have lost the key and nobody will ever know. @ Newton's Law - revised in Ottawa: For each and every decision, an equal amount of time, energy, and money shall be spent auditing that decision. @ Boyle's First Law: The success of any venture will be helped by prayer, even in the wrong denomination. @ Boyle's Second Law: An original idea will never emerge from a committee in the original form. @ Boyle's Third Law: If not controlled, work will flow to the competent employee until he or she is submerged. @ Dieter's Law: Food that tastes best has the highest number of calories. @ Foster's Query: If the polls are so accurate, why are there so many polling companies? @ Those who know little soon repeat it. @ The less an organization produces, the more frequently it re-organizes. @ Mediocrity imitates. @ No boss will keep an employee who is right all of the time. No employee will remain with a boss who is wrong all of the time. @ An efficient bureaucracy is the greatest threat to liberty. @ Trivial laws are promptly voted in; important ones never are. @ Nothing is illegal if 100 business men decide to do it. @ Otto's Observation: The color of any paint formula, as shown by the manufacturer's sample, bears no resemblance to the actual color of that formula when applied to any surface. @ Otto's Corollary: No two samples of any paint formula, when prepared at two different times, look anything like each other. @ The Price/Earnings ratio doesn't mean anything when there is no E. Raymond Rose @ To catch a mouse, make a noise like a cheese. Lewis Kornfeld @ The disagreements between theoretical and experimental results can generally be resolved if one multiplies the experimental findings by a factor equal to the ratio of the theoretical expectation to the experimental measurement. Wilder Bancroft The ratio is also known as Finnagle's variable constant. CJCL @ Adding people to speed up a late software project just makes it later. Fred Brooks @ Attempting to read a roadmap while driving causes all traffic lights to turn green. Rene Augustine @ When forty million people believe in a dumb idea, it's still a dumb idea. @ O'Brien's Principle: Auditors always reject any expense account with a bottom line divisible by 5 or 10. @ Round numbers are always fake. @ Morton's Law: If rats are experimented on, they will develop cancer. @ Booth's Observation: The best parachute folders are those who jump themselves. @ Sorting out the truth with a lawyer is like sorting balloons with a pitchfork. @ An engineer is a man who can do for a dime what any damn fool can do for a dollar. Nevil Shute @ Contraceptives should be used at every conceivable occassion. @ A computer user will tell you everything you ask about and nothing more. @ Crayne's Law: All computers wait at the same speed. @ Standards aren't standard. Gerald Weinburg @ If the code and the comments disagree, then both are probably wrong. Norm Schryer @ The second rule of program optimization: Don't do it yet! Michael Jackson @ God created economists to give credibility to astrologers. @ First rule of program optimization; Don't do it! Michael Jackson @ Malpractice makes malperfect. @ Meyer's Law: In all emotional conflicts, the thing you find hardest to do is the thing you should do. John D. MacDonald @ When the tough get going, they let sleeping dogs lie. @ The generation of random numbers is too important to be left to chance. @ The early worm catches the fish. @ Never trust a prescription that has one pill in it. C.J. Cherryh @ Edelstein's First Law of Benchmarks: Every commercial product has its best performance on standard benchmarks. @ Edelstein's Second Law of Benchmarks: In any fair benchmark, the DBMS you want to win, will win. Edelstein's Corollory: If the system you wanted to win, didn't, the benchmark wasn't fair. @ Benchmarking is to computer science as creationism is to evolution. Herb Edelstein @ Timmins' Tautology: That quantity which, when mathematically manipulated into a set of experimental results, will produce the predicted results, is known as a constant. @ An experiment may be considered successful if no more than half the data must be discarded to obtain agreement with your pet theory. @ Past experience is always true; do not be mislead by present facts. @ When you don't know what you are doing, do it neatly. @ The shortest distance between two points is closed for construction. Nollie Altito @ Any theory that fits all of the facts is bound to be wrong since some of the facts are misleading. Francis Crick @ The trouble with the rat race is that even if you win, you're still a rat. Lily Tomlin @ People who fight fire with fire usually end up with ashes. Abigail Van Buren @ Ever notice that, when operating blinds, you always pull the wrong string first? P.R. Engele @ Woollcott's Wisdom: Nothing risque, nothing gained. @ Seeger's Law: Anything in parenthesis can (not) be ignored. @ The toughest thing in business is minding your own. @ The only time to be positive is when you're positive you are wrong. @ Two monologues don't make a dialogue. Two monograms don't make a diagram. Two carrots do make a diet. @ Research is the process of going up alleys to see if they are blind. Marston Bates @ When it comes to broken marriages most husbands will split the blame -- half his wife's fault and half her mother's. @ There will be sex after death; we just won't be able to feel it. Lily Tomlin @ Weston's Wisdom: A fox is a wolf who sends flowers. @ Rule of Failure: If at first you don't succeed, destroy all evidence that you have tried. @ A business is too big when it takes a week for gossip to go from one end of the office to the other. @ It's not whether you win or lose, it's how you place the blame. @ The best way to appreciate your job is to imagine yourself without one. @ The Word Processor's Rule: Nothing highlights a document as much as a failure in the spele checker. Arild Jensen @ If you drink, don't drive. Don't even putt. Dean Martin @ Swing at the strikes. Yogi Berra @ When you come to a fork in the road, take it. Yogi Berra @ Byrne's Law of Concrete Placement: When you pour, it rains. @ Caffyn's Rule on Pronouncements: The rosier the news, the higher ranking the official who announces it. @ Buechner's Principle: The simplest explanation is that it just doesn't make sense. @ Canning's Law: Nothing is so fallacious as facts -- except figures. @ Chilton's Theological-Clerical Rule: If you work in a church office you have to keep all of your equipment locked up because nothing is sacred. @ Civil Service Maxim: The pension is mightier than the sword. @ Clark's Law of Leadership: A leader should not get too far in front of his troops or he will get shot in the arse. @ Conrad's Definition: A problem drinker is the one who never buys. @ Conrad's consolation: One advantage of getting older is that there are more younger women all the time. @ Corcoran's Laws of Nonsense: 1 - There are no laws of nonsense because laws are logical and nonsense is not. 2 - Since the previous law is nonsense, ignore Corcoran's First Law of Nonsense. 3 - If you don't like the first two laws of nonsense, come up with your own. @ Craine's Laws of Simplicity: For every simple solution, there are a number of complex problems. For every simple problem there are a number of complex problems. @ Crisp's Creed: Don't try to keep up with the Joneses; drag them down to your level. @ Cruikshank's Observation: We have met the enemy, in fact we elected him. @ Brown's Insight: The only game that can't be fixed is peek-a-boo. @ Cuppy's Note: All modern men are descended from wormlike creatures, but it shows more on some people. @ Blattenbenberger's Marital Principle: Marriages are like union contracts in that six weeks after the event, both parties feel that they could have done better if they had held out longer. @ Blick's Rule of Life: You have two chances -- slim and none. @ Bobbitt's Law of TV: Television network trouble never occurs except during the most exciting part of your favourite program. @ Boettcher's Attribution: If you have a bunch of clowns, you're going to have a circus. @ Boorstein's Observation: Two centuries ago, when a great man appeared, people looked for God's purpose in him; now we look for his press agent. @ Boorstlemann's Rule: If everything seems to be coming your way, you're probably in the wrong lane. @ Boucher's Corollary to Murphy's Law: Murphy's Law holds no more than eighty per cent of the time; unfortunately, it is impossible to predict when. @ Bradley's Reminder: Everything comes to him who waits, including death. @ Brauer's Warning: He who tries to pick all the flowers, is sure to get some poison ivy. @ Brecht's Hierarchy of Needs: Grub first -- then ethics. @ Bressler's Law: There is no crisis to which academics will not respond with a seminar. @ Brewster's Exception: Every rule has its exceptions except this one: a man must be present when he's being shaved. @ Brother's Sexist Comment: The biggest difference between men and boys is the price of their toys. @ Buchwald's First Sans Souci Rule: Any rumour that survives forty eight hours is probably true. @ Buchwald's Second Sans Souci Rule: When a cabinet minister comes to dine, everybody's lunch is tax deductible. @ Astor's Economic Insight: A man who has a million dollars is as well off as if he were rich. @ Austin's Law: It tastes better at someone else's house. @ Barber's Rule: Anything worth doing is worth doing to excess. @ Schwabb's Truth: You can get as drunk on water as you can on land. @ Baker's Bylaw: When you are over the hill, you pick up speed. @ Ballweg's Discovery: Whenever there is a flat surface, someone will find something to put on it. @ Banacek's Rule: When an owl shows up at the mouse picnic, he's not there to enter the sack race. @ Barne's Law of Probability: There's a fifty per cent chance of anything. Either it will happen or it won't. @ Baron's Law: The world is divided between victims and predators, and you have to defend you yourself against both. @ Barrymore's Conclusion: The thing that takes up the least amount of time and causes the most amount of trouble is sex. @ Beiser's Brass Tack: Facts without theory are trivia; theory without facts is bullshit. @ Big's Oblique Rule: Don't try to stem the tide; move the beach. @ Albert's Law of the Sea: The more they are in a fog, the more boats (and people) toot their horns. @ Ackley's Axiom: The degree of technical competence is inversely proportional to the level of management. @ Agrait's Law: A rumour will travel fastest to the place where it will do the most damage. @ Albinak's Algorithm: When graphing a function, the width of the line should be inversely proportional to the precision of the data. @ Anderson's First Maxim: Colleges and universities are immune to their own knowledge. @ Anderson's Second Maxim: You can't out-think a person who isn't thinking. @ Arnofy's Law of the Post Office: The likelyhood of a letter getting lost in the mail is directly proportional to its importance. @ Daugherty's Dictum: The computer is most likely to crash during backup. @ Hanlon's Assertion: An unwatched printer always falters. @ Bontchev's Laws of Computer viruses: 1 - If the virus can be made, it will be. 2 - If the virus cannot be made, it will be anyway. @ Nestor's Nostrum: Anything worth doing makes a mess @ McFee's McFact: Matter can neither be created nor destroyed. However, it can be lost. @ Epps Law of Elevators: A crowded elevator smells different to short people. @ Never assume anything except a 4 percent mortgage. Dave Kindred @ No one is ever old enough to know better. Holbrook Jackson @ Throw strikes. Home plate don't move. Satchel Paige @ Inskip's Rules: 1 - Don't sweat the small stuff. 2 - It's all small stuff. @ Saul's Saw: When fastening down something held by several screws, don't tighten any of them until they are all in place. @ Never change diapers in mid-stream. Don Marquis @ No amount of planning can replace dumb luck. Marc Keralla @ Never slap a man who chews tobacco. Willard Scott @ Two plus two equals five -- for large values of two. @ Venturi's Law: There are two great rules of life: never tell everything at once. @ Don't eat yellow snow. W.P. Kinsella @ Too much of anything is bad, but too much of good whiskey is barely enough. Mark Twain @ Atkin's Adage: Miserable penny pinching, never-spend-a-dime people are not much fun to live with, but they make wonderful ancestors. @ Put not your trust in money, but put your money in trust. Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. @ Watson's Wisdom: Show me a man with both feet on the ground and I'll show you a man who can't get his pants on. @ A rumour without a leg to stand on will get around some other way. John Tudor @ The more experienced the fortune-teller, the more likely they won't predict that their customer is a plain clothes officer. @ Knebel's Knews: Smoking is the leading cause of statistics. @ Comroe's Definition: Serendipity is looking in a haystack for a needle and finding the farmer's daughter. @ When things go wrong, don't go with them. @ Up is by definition the direction which broadens your horizons. A. Cygni @ Coull's Comment: Every new project requires a tool that you don't have. Coull's First Corollory: The required tool is probably out of stock. Coull's Second Corollory: If the required tool is in stock, it is more expensive than any tool in your present kit. @ Coggins' Cold Truth: Conventional wisdom may be conventional but it is not wisdom. @ Skelton's First Law: Advice is correct, if and only if it is not taken. @ Finagle's Principle: The perversity of the universe has no bounds. @ Four of every three citizens are against the state. @ Grandma Solderquist's Conclusion: There are more horses' asses in the world than there are horses. @ Anderson's Axiom: Throw it out -- worth a fortune. Keep it -- junk. @ Theory is like mist on glasses. Obscures facts. "Charlie Chan" (Warner Orland) @ It takes one woman nine months to produce a baby, no matter how many men you put on the job. @ There aren't nearly enough crutches in the world for all the lame excuses. @ Earthquakes don't kill people, buildings do. Californa Engineer @ A problem is just an opportunity dereferenced with a null pointer. @ Capra's Wisdom: A hunch is creativity trying to tell you something. @ Anyone can do any amount of work, provided it isn't the work he is supposed to be doing at the moment. Robert Benchley @ Life is like golf. If you keep in the fairway, you never have to ask for a ruling. Chi Chi Rodriquez @ Putt's Law Technology is dominated by two types of people: those who understand what they do not manage, and those who manage what they do not understand. @ Three Laws of Crises A person must rock the boat to get ahead. Technological hierarchies abhor perfection. The maximum rate of promotion is achieved at a level of crises only slightly less than that which will result in dismissal. @ The Law of Failure Technology abhors little failures but rewards big ones. @ Laws Governing Values The value of an idea is measured by its contents rather than by the structure of the hierarchy in which it is pronounced. @ The value of a technical article when first published is proportional to the sum of the prestige of its authors, but its ultimate value is proportional to the sum of the subsequent references to it. @ Three Laws of Advice The correct advice to give is the advice that is desired. The correct advice is revealed by the structure of the hierarchy, not by the structure of the technology. Simple advice is the best advice. Unsolicited advice is always bad advice. @ Five Laws of Decision Making Managers make decisions. Any decision is better than no decision. A decision is judged by the conviction with which is it uttered. Technical analysis have no value above the mid-management level. Decision are justified by benefits to the organization; decisions are made by considering benefits to the decision makers. @ There is no theorem saying the interesting things in the world are conserved--only the total of everything. Richard Feynman @ Just because your doctor has a name for your condition doesn't mean your doctor knows what it is. Corollory I: If the name of your condition includes the word "intrinsic", then nobody knows what it is. @ All wiring access holes are either too small or in the wrong place. @ A wiring tray you need to string a new cable is full. @ The person who snores falls asleep first. @ The wise are pleased when they discover the truth; fools are pleased when they discover falsehood. @ The number of theories that can explain any given phenomenon is infinite. @ The number of loopholes in any legal system is always greater than the number of laws. @ You can't outtalk a person who knows what they are talking about. You can't out bullshit a person who doesn't. @ Parker's rule of parliamentary procedure: A motion to adjourn is always in order. The most important aspect of this rule is that it is false. CJCL @ The Iron Law of Secretaries: As soon as you get a fresh cup of coffee, the boss will ask you to do something that will last until the coffee is cold. @ Wooden legs are not hereditary; wooden heads are. @ There are two kinds of people, the righteous and the unrighteous, and the righteous do the dividing. @ On any project, the real expert is the person who predicts the highest cost and length of time for the project. @ Never try to outwait a bureaucrat. @ To decide not to decide is to decide. To fail to decide is failure. @ Mankind is the lowest cost nonlinear all purpose computer that can be mass produced by unskilled labour. @ I think that I shall never see A subroutine that works for me, A macro or a zero test That isn't just a rodent's nest. A string that doesn't always stray And mix up bits in wild array. A process with re-entrant flair That isn't just a looping snare. Routines whose timings are not slain When interrupts begin to rain. Maybe God can make a tree, But bugs are made by guys like me. Probably not by Joyce Kilmer @ Computers are useless. They can only give answers. Pablo Picasso @ Stay humble. Always answer the phone -- no matter who else is in the car. Jack Lemmon @ God made integers; all else is the work of man. Leopold Kronecker @ Levinger's Law of Inevitable Revision They don't know what they want, until you give them what they asked for. J. E. Levinger @ Levinger's Law of Project Duration: Everything takes longer than you think. J. E. Levinger @ Proper Perspective on the Cost of Desired Things: When you look at it over thirty years, it's only pennies a day. H. R. Levinger @ Planning is designing a desired future. Richard A. Stack @ Stages of Learning 1. Turning data into information 2. Turning information into knowledge 3. Turning knowledge into wisdom Richard A. Stack @ Kirkland's First Law: Never bet your bladder against a brewery. @ Kirkland's Second Law: Never argue with a man who buys ink by the barrel. @ Lebowitz Law: Never let your children mix drinks. It's unseemly and they use too much vermouth. @ Good luck knocks once but bad luck is more patient. @ Eperson's Law: When a man says it's a silly childish game, it's probably something his wife can beat him at. @ Never say 'oops' in the operating room. Dr. Leo Troy @ First things first -- but not necessarily in that order. Dr. Who @ A person has two reasons for doing anything; a good reason and the real reason. @ Diamond is coal that performed well under pressure. @ A consultant is a person who borrows your watch, tells you what time it is, pockets your watch and sends you a bill. @ Reality is an illusion created by an alcohol deficiency. @ Virtual means never knowing where your next byte is coming from. @ God is REAL (unless declared INTEGER). @ A censor is a man who thinks he knows more than you ought to. @ Free cheese always sits in a mousetrap. @ Anything worth doing well is worth doing slowly. Gypsy Rose Lee @ A hangover is the wrath of grapes. @ Ducharme's Axiom: If you examine your problem closely enough, you will recognize yourself as part of the problem. @ Exceptions prove the rule -- and wreck the budget. @ Mathematicians are devices for turning coffee into theorems. @ All things are possible except skiing through a revolving door. @ An ugly carpet will last forever. Erma Bombeck @ Bigamy is having one spouse to many. So is monogamy. @ Crane's Rule: There are three ways to get something done: do it yourself, hire someone to do it or forbid your kids from doing it. @ Leibowitz's Rule: When hammering a nail, you will never hit your finger if you hold the hammer with both hands. @ Never get between a dog and a lamp post. @ Documentation is like sex: when it is good, it is very, very good; and when it is bad, it is better than nothing. @ Drew's Law of Highway Biology: The first bug to hit a clean windshield lands directly in front of the driver's eyes. @ If an instructor says, "It is obvious" it isn't. @ If you don't say it, they can't repeat it. @ A computer language with a goto is Wirth-less. @ Wind velocity is proportional to the cost of a hairdo. @ Every computer is a Digital computer. Ken Olson @ It is a sin to believe evil of others, but it is seldom a mistake. H.L. Mencken @ Mobius strippers never show you their back side! @ When you arrive at a fork in the road, take it. Yogi Berra @ One cannot make an omelette without breaking eggs, but it is amazing how many eggs one can break without making a decent omelette. @ Westheimer's Discovery: A couple of months in the laboratory can frequently save a couple of hours in the library. @ Where there's a will, there's an inheritance tax. @ Of course you should go out on a limb -- that's where the fruit is. @ My patience is all, The features are yet, The opener the architecture, The behinder I get. Al Stevens Dr. Dobbs Journal @ You can't control what you can't measure. Tom DeMarco @ Spicer's Third Law of Parliamentary Procedure: For every action, there's a parliamentary commission. @ Bob Rae's Ratio: Political ineptitude varies as the square of ideological rigidity. @ La Rule Lindros: A professional athlete's diplomatic skills are inversly proportional to his scoring ability. @ Hussein's Law of Conservation: Nuclear material has no dimensions or physical location. Therefore it cannot be created, destroyed, or found. @ John Crow's Iron Law: Prosperity yesterday, prosperity tomorrow, but hardship today. @ Geraldo's Ratio: The dumber the TV show, the bigger the ratings. @ Life is full of doors that don't open when you knock, equally spaced with those that open when you don't want them to. Roger Zelazny @ If you don't understand it, don't screw around with it. Roger Zelazny @ A woman must marry for love, and keep on marrying until she finds it. Zsa Zsa Gabor @ In case of a thunderstorm, stand in the middle of the fairway and hold up a one-iron. Not even God can hit a one-iron. Lee Trevino @ Look around the card table. If you don't see a sucker, get up, because you're the sucker. Amarillo Slim @ Keep a diary and one day it'll keep you. Mae West @ You can never be too paranoid. C.E. Crimmons @ Self restraint is feeling your oats without sowing them. Shannon Fife @ Weiner's Wisdom: Remember when he peacock struts his stuff he shows his backside to half the world. @ When Death is present, the wise are absent. Dave Duncan @ I/O! I/O! It makes the system slow. So use some cache to make it flash, I/O! I/O, I/O, I/O. With apologies to Grumpy @ Our little systems have their day. Alfred Lord Tennyson (In Memoriam) @ The best selling system is the one that makes the best video tape. @ Physics has nothing to do with reality. @ The better the four wheel drive, the further out you get stuck. @ If you don't have enemies, you don't have character. Paul @ Balogh's Law of Corporate Management: If there were only half the staff, corporate management would be ten times easier. @ Tasiaux' Law of Corporate Management: An unsuccessful company needs a highly successful accountant. @ Miesch's Re-Tort: When your lawyer tells you it's impossible or illegal, he's just testing you out to see how much he can charge you for making your wished come true. @ Meisch's Trial Balance: All accountants will usually charge a very modest fee until they explain to you that your books are unusually complex. No auditor will ever accept a simple, straightforward explanation. @ A careful wife will make her husband put away money for a rainy day and then make sure they move to Texas. She will also make sure she is at least thirty years younger than her husband. Colin Meisch @ I'm neither for nor against the motion - in fact, quite the contrary. Anonymous Swiss Politician @ Meisch's Observation: Behind every successful businessman there stands a woman in a mink coat; behind every successful businesswoman, there lies an emaciated husband. Emaciated is sometimes spelled 'emasculated'. @ During my lifetime, many women have told me how wonderfully I make love to them. I always tell them it is simply a matter of practice; when I am home by myself, I practice a lot. Woody Allen @ Miesch's Quandry: You can't out-drink a person who isn't drinking but you can outlive a person who isn't living. @ Miesch's Laws of Dieting: 1. If you enjoy eating it, your wife will never cook it for you. 2. If you don't like it, your wife will serve it three times a week on the premise that it is good for you. 3. If you get to like it, your wife will take it off the menu. 4. Happily married fat men are a rarity. @ There is one difference between a tax collector and a taxidermist - the taxidermist leaves the hide. Mortimer Caplin IRS Commissioner (1963) @ Faye's Declaration: There are too many menus and not enough appetite. @ Brock's Note: Enough things will go right to make you keep on trying; enough things will go wrong to make you wish you hadn't. @ Conran's Law: First things first; second things never. @ As I keep repeating to anyone who will listen; there is no such thing as a secret. Suzy Knickerbocker @ If truth is beauty, how come no one has their hair done in the library? Lily Tomlin @ Getting divorced because you don't love a man is almost as silly as getting married because you do. Zsa Zsa Gabor @ Do I lift weights? Sure I do - every time I get up. Dolly Parton @ A curved line is the lovliest distance between two points. Mae West @ Even when freshly washed and relieved of all obvious confection, children tend to be sticky. Fran Lebowitz @ Never allow your child to call you by your first name, he hasn't known you long enough. Fran Lebowitz @ Although today there are many trial marriages, there is no such thing as a trial child. Gail Sheehy False! Every child is a trial. CJCL @ You can say what you like about long dresses, but they cover a multitude of shins. Mae West @ Macho does not prove mucho. Zsa Zsa Gabor @ I believe in large familys - every woman should have at least three husbands. Zsa Zsa Gabor @ Punctuality is somewthing that, if you have it, there's often no one around to share it with you. Hylda Baker @ Gordon's Rule: I think there is one smashing rule. Don't face facts. @ Whitehorn's Second Law: No nice men are good at getting taxis. @ If you give a man enough rope, then he will skip. Zsa Zsa Gabor @ Whoever said money can't buy happiness simply hadn't found out where to go shopping. Bo Derek @ Men seldom make passes At girls who wear glasses But a girl on a sofa Is easily won ofa. Dorthy Parker @ Shanahan's Law: The length of a meeting is proporional to the square of the number of people present. @ Berlei's Law: On the very day you have worn your frumpiest, dullest, greyest old bra, the man you have been secretly in love with for the last five years finally makes a pass at you -- and you are forced to slap his hands instead. Sally MacGuiness Brisbane Courier-Mail @ Women do not like timid men. Cats do not like prudent mice. H.L. Mencken @ What you have when everyone wears the same playclothes for all occassions, is addressed by nickname, expected to particiapate in show and tell and bullied out of any desire for privacy is not democracy. It is kindergarten. "Miss Manners" Judith Martin @ You're only young once, but you can be immature forever. Alex Tilley @ All nations want peace but they want a peace that suits them. John Fisher, First Sea Lord @ You can replace cavelrymen and artillerymen within a few months, but you simply can't go around to the green grocers, and buy new battleships, cruisers and destroyers. John Fisher, First Sea Lord @ A straw vote shows where the hot air blows. O. Henry @ Aleph-null bottles of beer on the wall, Aleph-null bottles of beer. Take one down and pass it around, Aleph-null bottle of beer on the wall. (Repeat aleph-null times, then count remaining bottles) @ All true wisdom is found on T-shirts. @ Anyone with money to burn will find someone to tend the fire. @ As I was passing Project MAC I met a QUUX with seven hacks. Each hack had seven bugs; Each bug had seven manifestations; Each manifestation had seven synptoms. Symptoms, manifestations, bugs and hacks. How many loses at Project MAC? @ Be a better psychologist and the world will beat a psychopath to your door. @ Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away. @ Blood is thicker than water, and much tastier. @ Crime does not pay -- as well as politics. Mad Magazine @ First law of bicycling: The route is always uphill and into the wind. @ There never has been and never will be a language in which it is the least bit difficult to write a bad program. @ Going to church does not make a person religious, not does going to school make a person educated,any more than going to a garage makes a person a car. @ Hall's Laws of Politics: 1. The voters want fewer taxes and more spending. 2. Citizens want honest politicians until they need something fixed. 3. Constituency drives out consistency (i.e. liberals defend military spending and conservatives social spending in their own constituency.) @ All you need to grow vigorous grass is a crack in a sidewalk. @ Friedman's Find: Hell hath no fury like a bureaucrat scorned. Milton Friedman @ Heuristic programs are bug ridden by definition. If they didn't have bugs, they'd be algorithms. @ IBM had a PL/1 It's syntax worse then JOSS And everywhere this language went It was a total loss. gls@think.com @ If entropy is increasing, then where is it coming from? @ If I travelled to the end of the rainbow, As Dame Fortune did intend, Murphy would be there to tell me The pot's at the other end. Bert Whitney @ In America, any boy can become president and I suppose that's just one of the risks he takes. @ In the long run, every program becomes rococco and then rubble. Alan Perlis @ The leading cause of cancer in rats is research. @ It's much easier to suggest solutions when you know nothing about the problem. @ Laslo's Chinese Relativity Axiom: No matter how great your triumphs or how tragic your defeats -- one billion Chinese couldn't care less. @ Man invented language to satisfy his deep need to complain. Lili Tomlin @ The Micro Law: Never trust a computer bigger than you can lift. @ Mistakes are often the stepping stones to utter failure. @ Mitchell's Law of Committees: Any simple problem can be made insoluble if enough meetings are held to discuss it. @ Never call a man a fool. Borrow from him. @ Never offend people with style when you can offend them with substance. @ One difference between a man and a machine is that a machine is quiet when well oiled. @ Passionate hatred can give meaning and purpose to an empty life. Eric Hoffer @ pi seconds is a nanocentury. Tom Duff @ Radioactive cats have 18 half lives. @ Korman's Law: Resisting temptation is easier when you think you'll get another chance later on. @ The Law of Innovation Prevention: Unless the results are known in advance, funding agencies will reject the proposal. @ Slick's Three Laws of the Universe: 1. Nothing travels faster than a bad check. 2. A quarter ounce of chocolate = four pounds of fat. 3. There are two types of dirt: the dark kind which is attracted to light objects and the light kind which is attracted to dark objects. @ System/3! System/3. See how it runs! See how it runs! It's monitor loses so totally, It runs all its programs in RPG. It's made by your favourite monopoly! System/3! gls@think.com @ A monitor system named DOS Became superseded by OS It's not hard to guess Why the subsequent mess Caused programmers all to scream S.O.S. gls@think.com @ Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo. @ Swipple's Rule of Order: He who shouts loud enough has the floor. @ Talk sense to a fool and he calls you foolish. @ The goal of science is to build better mousetraps. The goal of nature is to build better mice. @ The Gods gave man fire and he invented fire engines. The Gods gave man love and he invented marriage. @ Medwar's Metarule: The human mind treats a new idea the way the human body treats a new protein -- it rejects it. @ The older a man gets, the further he had to walk to school as a boy. @ The one good thing about repeating your mistakes is that you know when to cringe. @ The probability of someone watching you is proportional to the stupidity of your actions. @ There was a young man who said, "God, I find it exceedingly odd, That the willow oak tree Continues to be When there's no one about in the Quad." Dear Sir, your astonishment's odd, For I'm always about in the Quad. And that's why the tree Continues to be Signed "Yours faithfully, God." @ There's only one way to have a happy marriage and as soon as I learn what it is, I'll get married again. Clint Eastwood @ An unbreakable toy can be used to break other toys. @ When we are planning for posterity, we ought to rememeber that virtue is not hereditary. Thomas Paine @ Oh dear, what can the matter be When it's converted to energy? There's a slight loss of parity. Neutrinos are so hard to snare. Traditional @ Where humour is concerned there are no standards -- no one can say what is good or bad, although you can be sure that everyone will. John Kenneth Galbraith @ Where there's a will, there's an inheritance tax. @ Whistler's Law: You never know who's right but you always know who is in charge. @ Achilles' Biological Findings: 1. If a child looks like his father, it's heredity. 2. If the child looks like a neighbour, it's environment. 3. A lot of time has been wasted over which came first, the chicken or the egg. It was the rooster. @ Kingston's Koan: Trust your computer but not its programmer. @ You don't have to explain something you never said. Calvin Coolidge @ If you want to see your plays performed the way you wrote them, become President. Vaclav Havel @ Any girl can be glamorous. All you have to do is stand still and look stupid. Hedy Lamarr @ The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who lack it. G. B. Shaw @ The proof that IBM didn't invent the car is that it has a steering wheel and an accelerator instead of ropes and spurs to be compatible with a horse. Jac Goudsmit @ Fishing is a delusion entirely surrounded by liars in old clothes. Don Marquis @ Relationships are complex because they are part real and part imaginary. Martin Terman @ Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read. Groucho Marx @ The rule for staying alive as a program manager is to give them a number or give them a date, but never give them both at once. @ A feature is a bug with seniority. Dave Bartley @ A philosophy that can be put in a nutshell belongs there. Anon @ Don't worry about people stealing your ideas. If your ideas are any good, you'll have to ram them down people's throats. Howard Aiken @ The good Christian should beware of mathematicians and all those who make empty prophecies. The danger already exists that mathematicians have made a covenent with the devil to darken the spirit and confine man in the bonds of Hell. Saint Augustine @ ASCII is our God any UNIX is his profit. Gary Benson @ Tobacco is the only drug that will kill you if used as directed. Dr C. Everett Koop @ If I had my life to live over again, I'd make the same mistakes only sooner. Tallulah Bankhead @ I respect faith but doubt is what gets you an education. Wilson Mizner @ A society of sheep must in time begat a government of wolves. Bertrand de Jouvenel @ Th limits of my language are the limits of my world. Ludwig Wittgenstein @ I'd rather be a woman than a man. Women can cry, they can wear cute clothes, and they're first to be rescued off sinking ships. Gilda Radner @ I believe that sex is one of the most beautiful wholesome things that money can buy. Steve Martin @ In a calm sea, every man is a pilot. John Ray @ Ignorance is not bliss; it is oblivion. Philip Wylie @ There are two ways of writing error free programs. Only the third one works. @ Every program has two purposes: the one for which it is written and the one for which it is used. @ It is easier to write an incorrect program than to understand a correct one. @ Fuller's Law of Cosmic Irreversability: 1 Pot T == 1 Pot P 1 Pot P != 1 Pot T Buckminster Fuller @ Under any conditions anywhere, whatever you are doing, there is some ordinance under which you can be booked. Robert Sprecht @ Whoso diggeth a pit shall fall within. Proverbs @ It is only after turning in your notice that you find: - you were in line for a promotion, and; - new early retirement benefits will soon be announced. @ You only need a bedpan during visitors hours. @ When you collect all the facts, you'll find them misleading. @ Even water tastes bad when given under doctor's orders. @ Innovation is easy. You just rub smart people and money together. Alan Kay @ The real impact of computers is not the silicon. It's not even the current software. It's the re-thinking. Bob Frankston @ First rule of Superiority: Don't let your superiors know you are superior to them. @ Kitman's Law: Ordinary drivel is driven from the TV by pure drivel. @ Alexander Graham Bell's Observation: When a body is immersed in water, the phone rings. @ Young's Law of Research Projects: The greater the funding, the longer the project takes. Projects with unlimited funding take forever. @ Miller's Law: You cannot tell how deep a puddle is until you step in it. @ A man between two lawyers is like a fish between two cats. Ben Franklin @ A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming is a language not worth knowing. Dennis M. Richie @ A large number of installed systems work by fiat. That is they work by being declared to work. Anatol Holt @ A professor is someone who talks in someone else's sleep. Anon @ The purpose of simulation is insight, not numbers. Richard Hamming @ Of two evils choose the prettier. Carolyn Wells @ The visionary is the only true realist. Frederico Fellini @ If you know where you are going, any road will take you there. If you don't know where you are going, any road will take you there. @ The amount of expertise varies in inverse proportion to the number of statements understood by the general public. @ Twain's Truth: First get your facts; then distort them. @ The best time to tackle a small problem is before he grows up. @ Ideas don't work unless you do. @ The wise look things over; the unwise overlook things. @ Good luck is the lazy man's extimate of the worker's success. @ Wits are a means of support that must be sharp to be sure. @ Politeness is better than logic. You can often persuade when you can't convince. @ Nothing is too wonderful to be true. Michael Faraday @ Beware of programmers that carry screwdrivers. Leanord Brandwein @ There are more icebergs than Titanics. @ No man is free who cannot command himself. Pythagoras @ No matter how much you nurse a grudge, it won't get better. @ The Programmer's Cheer: SHIFT to the left. SHIFT to the right. POPUP. PUSH DOWN. BYTE! BYTE! BYTE! @ Think twice before speaking and you may find something to say that's even more annoying. @ When adults act like children, they're silly. When children act like adults, they're delinquent. @ If it works, it's obsolete. Marshall McLuhan @ Man cannot live by incompetence alone. Laurence J. Peter @ Whether it works in practice is neither here nor there. Will it work in theory? Frank Milligan @ Stirling's Law: If you believe in Ogopogo, or any other mystical beast, you will likely see one. If you are a sceptic, you never will. Mary Moon @ Organization is the enemy of improvisation. Lord Beaverbrook @ If it ain't broke -- it's still under warranty. @ Cloak's Ratio: The urgency of any project is inversely proportional to its importance. @ Eskimo Recipe for Loon Soup: Do not make Loon Soup. @ Dewan's Law: A late train gets later. @ Roy's Law: The amount of fear people have about a scientific question is proportional to their distance from scientific reality-- squared. David Roy @ Paige's Pronouncement: A stitch in time would destroy Einstein's Theory of Relativity. Ned Paige @ Moffat's Law: Any fundamental theory of physics is beautiful. If it isn't, it's wrong. John Moffat @ Lee's Lament: Pars come and pars go but double bogies go on forever. @ Jill's Discovery: You can find love on the tennis court but it's more comfortable on the golf course. @ Everyone scores an eagle on the nineteenth hole. @ Williams' Woe: Vehicle electric windows always fail in the down position. @