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authorThedro Neely <thedroneely@gmail.com>2023-06-05 19:31:21 -0400
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+<?php
+
+return [
+
+ 0 => '
+ Augur: The priest of the sacred chicken.
+ ',
+ 1 => '
+ We’re currently having technical issues. Please try again later.
+ ',
+ 2 => '
+ You probably wouldn’t worry about what people think of you if you could
+ know how seldom they do. — Olin Miller
+ ',
+ 3 => '
+ Computer science is the only discipline in which we view adding a new wing
+ to a building as being maintenance. — Jim Horning
+ ',
+ 4 => '
+ God doesn’t play dice. — Albert Einstein
+ ',
+ 5 => '
+ As modern times promote hasty eating to a large extent, it is not surprising to
+ learn that a great astronomer said: “Two things are infinite, as far as we know
+ — the universe and human stupidity.” Ego, Hunger, and Aggression: a Revision
+ of Freud’s Theory and Method, Frederick S. Perls
+ ',
+ 6 => '
+ Reports that say that something hasn’t happened are always interesting to me,
+ because as we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know.
+ We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some
+ things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns–the ones we don’t
+ know we don’t know. — Donald Rumsfeld
+ ',
+ 7 => '
+ Everything is local.
+ ',
+ 8 => '
+ I read it on the Internet, it has to be true!
+ ',
+ 9 => '
+ A debugged program is one for which you have not yet found the conditions
+ that make it fail. — Jerry Ogdin
+ ',
+ 10 => '
+ If a million people say a foolish thing, it is still a foolish thing. —
+ Anatole France
+ ',
+ 11 => '
+ “And who better understands the Unix—nature?” Master Foo asked. “Is it
+ he who writes the ten thousand lines, or he who, perceiving the emptiness of
+ the task, gains merit by not coding?” Upon hearing this, the programmer was
+ enlightened.
+ — The Unix Koans of Master Foo
+ ',
+ 12 => '
+ Immortality — a fate worse than death. — Edgar A. Shoaff
+ ',
+ 13 => '
+ Intellect annuls Fate.
+ So far as a man thinks, he is free. — Ralph Waldo Emerson
+ ',
+ 14 => '
+ Let’s call it an accidental feature. — Larry Wall
+ ',
+ 15 => '
+ In the long run we are all dead. — John Maynard Keynes
+ ',
+ 16 => '
+ A lot of people I know believe in positive thinking, and so do I. I
+ believe everything positively stinks. — Lew Col
+ ',
+ 17 => '
+ Ah, but a man’s grasp should exceed his reach,
+ Or what’s a heaven for? Robert Browning, — “Andrea del Sarto”
+ ',
+ 18 => '
+ All hope abandon, ye who enter here! — Dante Alighieri
+ ',
+ 19 => '
+ All men know the utility of useful things;
+ but they do not know the utility of futility. — Chuang—tzu
+ ',
+ 20 => '
+ And ever has it been known that love knows not its own depth until the
+ hour of separation. — Kahlil Gibran
+ ',
+ 21 => '
+ Besides, I think Slackware sounds better than ‘Microsoft,’ don’t you? —
+ Patrick Volkerding
+ ',
+ 22 => '
+ Waving away a cloud of smoke, I look up, and I’m blinded by a bright, white
+ light. It’s God. No, not Richard Stallman, or Linus Torvalds, but God. In
+ a booming voice, He says: “THIS IS A SIGN. USE LINUX, THE FREE UNIX SYSTEM
+ FOR THE 386”. — Matt Welsh
+ ',
+ 23 => '
+ Never trust an operating system you don’t have sources for. — Unknown
+ Source
+ ',
+ 24 => '
+ Parkinson’s Fifth Law: If there is a way to delay an important decision, the
+ good bureaucracy, public or private, will find it.
+ ',
+ 25 => '
+ Reliable source: The guy you just met.
+ ',
+ 26 => '
+ Thyme’s Law: Everything goes wrong at once.
+ ',
+ 27 => '
+ Netscape is not a newsreader, and probably never shall be. — Tom Christiansen
+ ',
+ 28 => '
+ You can learn many things from children. How much patience you have,
+ for instance. — Franklin P. Jones
+ ',
+ 29 => '
+ To be is to program.
+ ',
+ 30 => '
+ There’s no easy quick way out, we’re gonna have to live through our
+ whole lives, win, lose, or draw. — Walt Kelly
+ ',
+ 31 => '
+ Illiterate? Write today for free help!
+ ',
+ 32 => '
+ Like winter snow on summer lawn, time past is time gone.
+ ',
+ 33 => '
+ Hlade’s Law: If you have a difficult task, give it to a lazy person —
+ they will find an easier way to do it.
+ ',
+ 34 => '
+ Davis’ Law of Traffic Density: The density of rush—hour traffic
+ is directly proportional to 1.5 times the amount of extra time
+ you allow to arrive on time.
+ ',
+ 35 => '
+ Resisting temptation is easier when you think you’ll probably get
+ another chance later on.
+ ',
+ 36 => '
+ Do more than anyone expects, and pretty soon everyone will expect more.
+ ',
+ 37 => '
+ Turnaucka’s Law: The attention span of a computer is only as long as its
+ electrical cord.
+ ',
+ 38 => '
+ Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
+ Great men are almost always bad men, even when they exercise influence
+ and not authority; still more when you superadd the tendency of the
+ certainty of corruption by authority. — Lord Acton
+ ',
+ 39 => '
+ We can predict everything, except the future.
+ ',
+ 40 => '
+ A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many
+ bad measures. — Daniel Webste
+ ',
+ 41 => '
+ Agnes’ Law: Almost everything in life is easier to get into than out of.
+ ',
+ 42 => '
+ Weiler’s Law: Nothing is impossible for the man who doesn’t have to do it
+ himself.
+ ',
+ 43 => '
+ Hanlon’s Razor: Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained
+ by stupidity.
+ ',
+ 44 => '
+ Hofstadter’s Law: It always takes longer than you expect, even when you take
+ Hofstadter’s Law into account.
+ ',
+ 45 => '
+ Murphy’s Law of Research: Enough research will tend to support your theory.
+ ',
+ 46 => '
+ Pryor’s Observation: How long you live has nothing to do
+ with how long you are going to be dead.
+ ',
+ 47 => '
+ Whitehead’s Law: The obvious answer is always overlooked.
+ ',
+ 48 => '
+ G. B. Shaw’s Law: Those who can — do.
+ Those who can’t — teach.
+ Martin’s Extension: Those who cannot teach — administrate.
+ ',
+ 49 => '
+ Johnson’s First Law: When any mechanical contrivance fails, it will do so at the
+ most inconvenient possible time.
+ ',
+ 50 => '
+ Guru: A computer owner who can read the manual.
+ ',
+ 51 => '
+ First law of debate: Never argue with a fool. People might not know the
+ difference.
+ ',
+ 52 => '
+ Woodward’s Law: A theory is better than its explanation.
+ ',
+ 53 => '
+ Lie: A very poor substitute for the truth, but the only one discovered to date.
+ ',
+ 54 => '
+ Hildebrant’s Principle: If you don’t know where you are going, any road will
+ get you there.
+ ',
+ 55 => '
+ Committee: A group of men who individually can do nothing but as a group
+ decide that nothing can be done. — Fred Allen
+ ',
+ 56 => '
+ “The stronger a culture, the less it fears the radical fringe.
+ The more paranoid and precarious a culture, the less tolerance it offers.”
+ — Joel Salatin, Everything I Want to Do Is Illegal: War Stories from the
+ Local Food Front
+ ',
+ 57 => '
+ “The command—line tools of Unix are crude and backward,” he scoffed.
+ “Modern, properly designed operating systems do everything through a
+ graphical user interface.”
+ Master Foo said nothing, but pointed at the moon. A nearby dog began to bark at
+ the master’s hand.
+ — The Unix Koans of Master Foo
+ ',
+ 58 => '
+ The master replied: “There is a defect, and I am considering the best way to
+ repair it.”
+ The novice said, “You preach often about the importance of setting priorities.
+ How, then, can you obsess about something so tiny and unimportant?” Without
+ saying a word,
+ the master raised his staff and brought it down hard upon
+ the bare left foot of the novice, breaking his smallest toe.
+ — Codeless Code
+ ',
+ 59 => '
+ “Master Foo, I am gravely troubled. In my youth, those who followed the Great
+ Way of Unix used
+ software that was simple and unaffected, like ed and mailx. Today, they use vim
+ and mutt.
+ Tomorrow I fear they will use KMail and Evolution, and Unix will have become
+ like
+ Windows — bloated and covered over with GUIs.”
+ Master Foo said: “But what software do you use when you want to draw a
+ poster?”
+ — The Unix Koans of Master Foo
+ ',
+ 60 => '
+ “Master Foo,” he asked “why do Unix users not employ antivirus programs?
+ And defragmentors? And malware cleaners?”
+ Master Foo smiled, and said “When your house is well constructed,
+ there is no need to add pillars to keep the roof in place.”
+ — The Unix Koans of Master Foo
+ ',
+ 61 => '
+ The recruiter said, “I have observed that Unix hackers scowl or become
+ annoyed when
+ I ask them how many years of experience they have in a new programming
+ language. Why is this so?”
+ Master Foo stood, and began to pace across the office floor.
+ The recruiter was puzzled, and asked “What are you doing?”
+ “I am learning to walk,” replied Master Foo.
+ — The Unix Koans of Master Foo
+ ',
+ 62 => '
+ “Is your code ever completely without stain and flaw?” demanded Master Foo.
+ “No,” admitted the zealot, “no man’s is.”
+ “The wisdom of the Patriarchs” said Master Foo, “was that they knew they
+ were fools.”
+ Upon hearing this, the zealot was enlightened.
+ — The Unix Koans of Master Foo
+ ',
+ 63 => '
+ Lewis’s Law of Travel: The first piece of luggage out of the chute doesn’t
+ belong to anyone, ever.
+ ',
+ 64 => '
+ Dow’s Law: In a hierarchical organization, the higher the level,
+ the greater the confusion.
+ ',
+ 65 => '
+ Option Paralysis: The tendency, when given unlimited choices, to make none.
+ — Douglas Coupland, “Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture”
+ ',
+ 66 => '
+ Slous’ Contention: If you do a job too well, you’ll get stuck with it.
+ ',
+ 67 => '
+ Udall’s Fourth Law: Any change or reform you make is going to have consequences
+ you
+ don’t like.
+ ',
+ 68 => '
+ Sacher’s Observation: Some people grow with responsibility — others merely
+ swell.
+ ',
+ 69 => '
+ Law of the Jungle: He who hesitates is lunch.
+ ',
+ 70 => '
+ Fifth Law of Procrastination: Procrastination avoids boredom; one never has the
+ feeling that
+ there is nothing important to do.
+ ',
+ 71 => '
+ Boucher’s Observation: He who blows his own horn always plays the music
+ several octaves higher than originally written.
+ ',
+ 72 => '
+ Booker’s Law: An ounce of application is worth a ton of abstraction.
+ ',
+ 73 => '
+ Williams and Holland’s Law: If enough data is collected, anything may be proven
+ by statistical
+ methods.
+ ',
+ 74 => '
+ Burke’s Postulates: Anything is possible if you don’t know what you are talking
+ about.
+ Don’t create a problem for which you do not have the answer.
+ ',
+ 75 => '
+ Barth’s Distinction: There are two types of people: those who divide people
+ into two
+ types, and those who don’t.
+ ',
+ 76 => '
+ Hanson’s Treatment of Time: There are never enough hours in a day, but always
+ too many days
+ before Saturday.
+ ',
+ 77 => '
+ Peers’ Law: The solution to a problem changes the nature of the problem.
+ ',
+ 78 => '
+ Stone’s Law: One man’s “simple” is another man’s “huh?”
+ ',
+ 79 => '
+ Government’s Law: There is an exception to all laws.
+ ',
+ 80 => '
+ Hitchcock’s Staple Principle: The stapler runs out of staples only while you
+ are trying to
+ staple something.
+ ',
+ 81 => '
+ Finagle’s Seventh Law: The perversity of the universe tends toward a maximum.
+ ',
+ 82 => '
+ Chism’s Law of Completion: The amount of time required to complete a government
+ project is
+ precisely equal to the length of time already spent on it.
+ ',
+ 83 => '
+ Chisolm’s First Corollary to Murphy’s Second Law: When things just can’t
+ possibly get any worse, they will.
+ ',
+ 84 => '
+ Murphy’s Laws: (1) If anything can go wrong, it will.
+ (2) Nothing is as easy as it looks.
+ (3) Everything takes longer than you think it will.
+ ',
+ 85 => '
+ Carswell’s Corollary: When ever man comes up with a better mousetrap,
+ nature invariably comes up with a better mouse.
+ ',
+ 86 => '
+ Putt’s Law: Technology is dominated by two types of people:
+ Those who understand what they do not manage.
+ Those who manage what they do not understand.
+ ',
+ 87 => '
+ Rule of the Great: When people you greatly admire appear to be thinking deep
+ thoughts, they probably are thinking about lunch.
+ ',
+ 88 => '
+ There must be more to life than having everything. — Maurice Sendak
+ ',
+ 89 => '
+ In every hierarchy the cream rises until it sours. — Dr. Laurence J. Peter
+ ',
+ 90 => '
+ The rich have become richer, and the poor have become poorer;
+ and the vessel of the State is driven between the Scylla and Charybdis of
+ anarchy and despotism.
+ — Percy Bysshe Shelley
+ ',
+ 91 => '
+ While money can’t buy happiness, it certainly lets you choose your own
+ form of misery.
+ ',
+ 92 => '
+ He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. — Bion
+ ',
+ 93 => '
+ How come everyone’s going so slow if it’s called rush hour?
+ ',
+ 94 => '
+ Work expands to fill the time available. — Cyril Northcote Parkinson, “The
+ Economist”, 1955
+ ',
+ 95 => '
+ Getting the job done is no excuse for not following the rules.
+ Corollary: Following the rules will not get the job done.
+ ',
+ 96 => '
+ Every cloud has a silver lining; you should have sold it, and bought titanium.
+ ',
+ 97 => '
+ To avoid criticism, do nothing, say nothing, be nothing. — Elbert Hubbard
+ ',
+ 98 => '
+ To get something done, a committee should consist of no more than three
+ persons, two of them absent.
+ ',
+ 99 => '
+ If a thing’s worth doing, it is worth doing badly. — G. K. Chesterton
+ ',
+ 100 => '
+ There’s no such thing as a free lunch. — Milton Friedman
+ ',
+ 101 => '
+ The first lesson of economics is scarcity: there is never enough of anything to
+ fully satisfy all those who want it. The first lesson of politics is to
+ disregard the first lesson of economics. — Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 102 => '
+ The problem isn’t that Johnny can’t read. The problem isn’t even that Johnny
+ can’t think. The problem is that Johnny doesn’t know what thinking is; he
+ confuses it with feeling. — Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 103 => '
+ It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own
+ ignorance. — Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 104 => '
+ If you only have a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail.
+ — Maslow’s Golden Hammer
+ ',
+ 105 => '
+ Ninety percent of everything is crap. — Theodore Sturgeon
+ ',
+ 106 => '
+ It’s easier to take it apart than to put it back together. — Washlesky
+ ',
+ 107 => '
+ Before you ask more questions, think about whether you really want to
+ know the answers. — Gene Wolfe, “The Claw of the Conciliator”
+ ',
+ 108 => '
+ Your picture of the world often changes just before you get it into focus.
+ ',
+ 109 => '
+ You can observe a lot just by watching. — Yogi Berra
+ ',
+ 110 => '
+ Always borrow money from a pessimist; he doesn’t expect to be paid back.
+ ',
+ 111 => '
+ In war, truth is the first casualty. — U Thant
+ ',
+ 112 => '
+ The hardware designer said: “It is rumored that you are a great programmer.
+ How many lines of code do you write per year?”
+ Master Foo replied with a question: “How many square inches of silicon do you
+ lay out per year?” — The Unix Koans of Master Foo
+ ',
+ 113 => '
+ The student said: “How, then, are those enlightened in the Unix Way to return
+ to the Windows world?”
+ Master Foo said: “To return to Windows, you have but to boot it up.” —
+ The Unix Koans of Master Foo
+ ',
+ 114 => '
+ The master considered this, and said: “It is certain that we could forgo
+ testing altogether, if we knew our code to be perfect. How, then, may we
+ achieve perfection?”
+ “Through practice,” said one monk.
+ “Through diligent study,” said another.
+ “Through the appeasement of the proper gods,” said a third.
+ — Codeless Code
+ ',
+ 115 => '
+ If you live long enough, you’ll see that every victory turns into a defeat. —
+ Simone de Beauvoir
+ ',
+ 116 => '
+ Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because fiction is obliged to stick
+ to possibilities; truth isn’t.
+ — Mark Twain
+ ',
+ 117 => '
+ There are some people so addicted to exaggeration that they can’t tell the
+ truth without lying. — Josh Billings
+ ',
+ 118 => '
+ “They that soar too high, often fall hard, making a low and level dwelling
+ preferable.
+ The tallest trees are most in the power of the winds, and ambitious men of the
+ blasts of fortune.
+ Buildings have need of a good foundation, that lie so much exposed to the
+ weather.”
+ — Dale Carnegie, The Art of Public Speaking
+ ',
+ 119 => '
+ “Speech is silvern, Silence is golden; Speech is human, Silence is divine.”
+ — Dale Carnegie, The Art of Public Speaking
+ ',
+ 120 => '
+ The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
+ — Robert Frost
+ ',
+ 121 => '
+ Before attempting to compile this virus make sure you have the correct version
+ of glibc installed,
+ and that your firewall rules are set to ‘allow everything’.
+ — “Why GNU/Linux Viruses are fairly uncommon” from Charlie Harvey
+ ',
+ 122 => '
+ The words fly away, the writings remain.
+ ',
+ 123 => '
+ Rule of Life Number One — Never get separated from your luggage.
+ ',
+ 124 => '
+ He who knows nothing, knows nothing.
+ But he who knows he knows nothing knows something.
+ And he who knows someone whose friend’s wife’s brother knows nothing,
+ he knows something. Or something like that.
+ ',
+ 125 => '
+ “The biggest problem facing software engineering is the one it will
+ never solve — politics.” — Gavin Baker
+ ',
+ 126 => '
+ (1) The world is full of fascinating problems waiting to be solved.
+ (2) No problem should ever have to be solved twice.
+ (3) Boredom and drudgery are evil.
+ (4) Freedom is good.
+ (5) Attitude is no substitute for competence.
+ — Eric S. Raymond
+ ',
+ 127 => '
+ “Give someone a program, and you’ll frustrate them for a day.
+ Teach someone to program, and you’ll frustrate them for a lifetime.”
+ — Unknown
+ ',
+ 128 => '
+ “No individual raindrop considers itself responsible for the flood.”
+ — Unknown
+ ',
+ 129 => '
+ “We’ve gotten to the point where everybody’s got a right and nobody’s
+ got a responsibility.”
+ — Newton Minow
+ ',
+ 130 => '
+ “A library is infinity under a roof.”
+ — Gail Carson Levine
+ ',
+ 131 => '
+ “If you torture the data long enough, it will confess to anything.”
+ — Darrell Huff, How to Lie With Statistics
+ ',
+ 132 => '
+ “You can’t wake a person who is pretending to be asleep.”
+ — Navajo Proverb
+ ',
+ 133 => '
+ “During the gold rush its a good time to be in the pick and shovel
+ business.”
+ — Mark Twain
+ ',
+ 134 => '
+ The 1% Rule: The number of people who create content on the Internet represents
+ approximately
+ 1% of the people who view that content.
+ ',
+ 135 => '
+ Those who have some means think that the most important thing in the
+ world is love. The poor know that it is money. — Gerald Brenan
+ ',
+ 136 => '
+ I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World
+ War IV will be fought with sticks and stones. — Albert Einstein
+ ',
+ 137 => '
+ Why is the alphabet in that order? Is it because of that song? — Steven Wright
+ ',
+ 138 => '
+ Important letters which contain no errors will develop errors in the mail.
+ Corresponding errors will show up in the duplicate while the Boss is reading
+ it. Vital papers will demonstrate their vitality by spontaneously moving
+ from where you left them to where you can’t find them.
+ ',
+ 139 => '
+ If the code and the comments disagree, then both are probably wrong. — Norm
+ Schryer
+ ',
+ 140 => '
+ It is easy when we are in prosperity to give advice to the afflicted. —
+ Aeschylus
+ ',
+ 141 => '
+ Olmstead’s Law: After all is said and done, a hell of a lot more is said than
+ done.
+ ',
+ 142 => '
+ I wish there was a knob on the TV to turn up the intelligence. There’s a
+ knob called “brightness”, but it doesn’t seem to work. — Gallagher
+ ',
+ 143 => '
+ Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means
+ for going backwards. — Aldous Huxley
+ ',
+ 144 => '
+ Anthony’s Law of the Workshop: Any tool when dropped, will roll into the least
+ accessible
+ corner of the workshop.
+ ',
+ 145 => '
+ Remember that there is an outside world to see and enjoy. — Hans Liepmann
+ ',
+ 146 => '
+ Flying is the second greatest feeling you can have. The greatest feeling?
+ Landing... Landing is the greatest feeling you can have.
+ ',
+ 147 => '
+ “There is nothing new under the sun, but there are lots of old things
+ we don’t know yet.” — Ambrose Bierce
+ ',
+ 148 => '
+ If you want to travel around the world and be invited to speak at a lot
+ of different places, just write a Unix operating system. — Linus Torvalds
+ ',
+ 149 => '
+ Hope deferred maketh the heart sick: but when the desire cometh, it is a tree
+ of life.
+ — Proverbs
+ ',
+ 150 => '
+ If the tree fall toward the south, or toward the north, in the place where the
+ tree falleth, there it shall be.
+ — Ecclesiastes
+ ',
+ 151 => '
+ “A blow that would kill a civilized man soon heals on a savage. The higher we
+ go in the scale of life,
+ the greater is the capacity for suffering.”
+ — Dale Carnegie, The Art of Public Speaking
+ ',
+ 152 => '
+ “The gun that scatters too much does not bag the birds.”
+ — Dale Carnegie, The Art of Public Speaking
+ ',
+ 153 => '
+ “All the labour of man is for his mouth, and yet the appetite is not
+ filled.”
+ — Ecclesiastes
+ ',
+ 154 => '
+ The Fifth Law of Computer Programming: Any given program will expand to fill
+ all available memory.
+ ',
+ 155 => '
+ Corcoroni’s First Law of Bus Transportation: The bus that left the stop just
+ before you got there is your bus.
+ ',
+ 156 => '
+ Law of Annoyance: When working on a project, if you put away a tool that you’re
+ certain you’re finished with,
+ you will need it instantly.
+ ',
+ 157 => '
+ The First Discovery of Christmas Morning: Batteries not included.
+ ',
+ 158 => '
+ Corcoroni’s Third Law of Bus Transportation: All buses heading in the opposite
+ direction drive off the face of
+ the earth and never return.
+ ',
+ 159 => '
+ Durrell’s Parameter: The faster the plane, the narrower the seats.
+ ',
+ 160 => '
+ Ettorre’s Observation: The other line moves faster.
+ Corollary: Don’t try to change lines. The other line — the one you were in
+ originally — will then move faster.
+ ',
+ 161 => '
+ Ehrman’s Commentary: Things will get worse before they will get better. Who
+ said things would get better?
+ ',
+ 162 => '
+ Ducharme’s Precept: Opportunity always knocks at the least opportune moment.
+ ',
+ 163 => '
+ Dijkstra’s Prescription for Programming Inertia: If you don’t know what your
+ program is supposed to do, you’d better
+ not start writing it.
+ ',
+ 164 => '
+ Commoner’s First Law of Ecology: No action is without side—effects.
+ ',
+ 165 => '
+ Cohn’s Law: The more time you spend in reporting on what you are doing, the
+ less time you have to do anything.
+ Stability is achieved when you spend all your time doing nothing but reporting
+ on the nothing you are doing.
+ ',
+ 166 => '
+ Law of Permanence: Political power is as permanent as today’s newspaper.
+ Ten years from now, few will know or care who the most powerful man in any
+ state was today.
+ ',
+ 167 => '
+ Clarke’s Third Law: Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable
+ from magic.
+ ',
+ 168 => '
+ Cheops’s Law: Nothing ever gets built on schedule or within budget.
+ ',
+ 169 => '
+ Hacker’s Law: The belief that enhanced understanding will necessarily stir a
+ nation or an
+ organization to action is one of mankind’s oldest illusions.
+ ',
+ 170 => '
+ Harris’s Lament: All the good ones are taken.
+ ',
+ 171 => '
+ Issawi’s Law of the Conservation of Evil: The total amount of evil in any
+ system remains constant.
+ Hence, any diminution in one direction — for instance, a reduction in poverty
+ or unemployment —
+ is accompanied by an increase in another, e.g., crime or air pollution.
+ ',
+ 172 => '
+ Kelley’s Law: Last guys don’t finish nice.
+ ',
+ 173 => '
+ Knoll’s Law of Media Accuracy: Everything you read in the newspapers is
+ absolutely true except for that
+ rare story of which you happen to have firsthand knowledge.
+ ',
+ 174 => '
+ Kohn’s Second Law: Any experiment is reproducible until another laboratory
+ tries to repeat it.
+ ',
+ 175 => '
+ Lowrey’s Law of Expertise: Just when you get really good at something, you
+ don’t need to do it any more.
+ ',
+ 176 => '
+ Lynch’s Law: When the going gets tough, everybody leaves.
+ ',
+ 177 => '
+ Martin’s Law of Communication: The inevitable result of improved and enlarged
+ communication between
+ different levels in a hierarchy is a vastly increased area of misunderstanding.
+ ',
+ 178 => '
+ Cahn’s Axiom: When all else fails, read the instructions.
+ ',
+ 179 => '
+ Horngren’s Observation: The real world is a special case.
+ ',
+ 180 => '
+ Merkin’s Maxim: When in doubt, predict that the present trend will continue.
+ ',
+ 181 => '
+ Comins’ Law: People will accept your idea much more readily if you tell them
+ Benjamin Franklin said it first.
+ ',
+ 182 => '
+ Rosenfield’s Regret: The most delicate component will be dropped.
+ ',
+ 183 => '
+ Cunningham’s Law: The best way to get the right answer on the Internet is not
+ to ask a question; it’s to post the wrong answer.
+ ',
+ 184 => '
+ Connected. Take this REPL, brother, and may it serve you well.
+ ',
+ 185 => '
+ First Law of Laboratory Work: Hot glass looks exactly the same as cold glass.
+ ',
+ 186 => '
+ Leahy’s Law: If a thing is done wrong often enough, it becomes right.
+ ',
+ 187 => '
+ Luce’s Law: No good deed goes unpunished.
+ ',
+ 188 => '
+ Putt’s Corollary: Every technical hierarchy, in time, develops a competence
+ inversion.
+ ',
+ 189 => '
+ Reed’s Law: The utility of large networks, particularly social networks, scales
+ exponentially with the size of the network.
+ ',
+ 190 => '
+ We should forget about small efficiencies, say about 97% of the time:
+ premature optimization is the root of all evil. Yet we should not pass up
+ our opportunities in that critical 3%. A good programmer will not be
+ lulled into complacency by such reasoning, he will be wise to look
+ carefully at the critical code; but only after that code has been
+ identified. — Donald Knuth, Structured Programming with Go To Statements
+ ',
+ 191 => '
+ The Pareto Principle: Most things in life are not distributed evenly.
+ ',
+ 192 => '
+ The KISS principle: Keep it simple, stupid.
+ ',
+ 193 => '
+ Goodhart’s Law: When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure.
+ ',
+ 194 => '
+ Are we consing yet?
+ ',
+ 195 => '
+ The first thing a man will do for his ideals is lie. — Joseph Aloïs Schumpeter
+ ',
+ 196 => '
+ “The man who does not read has no advantage over the man who cannot read.”
+ — Mark Twain
+ ',
+ 197 => '
+ Known Knowns, Known Unknowns, Unknown Unknowns.
+ ',
+ 198 => '
+ Historian’s Rule: Any event, once it has occurred, can be made to appear
+ inevitable by a competent historian.
+ ',
+ 199 => '
+ Gretzky’s Truism: You miss 100% of the shots you never take.
+ ',
+ 200 => '
+ Gresham’s Law: Bad money drives out good.
+ ',
+ 201 => '
+ Glasow’s Comment: There’s something wrong if you’re always right.
+ ',
+ 202 => '
+ Franklin’s Rule: Blessed is he who expects nothing, for he shall not be
+ disappointed.
+ ',
+ 203 => '
+ Fetridge’s Law: Important things that are supposed to happen do not happen,
+ especially when people are looking.
+ ',
+ 204 => '
+ Farkus’ Law: There will always be a closer parking space than the one you
+ found. Goodman’s Corollary: But if
+ you go looking for it, someone else will already have taken it.
+ ',
+ 205 => '
+ Hagenbach and Nuremberg’s Poor Defense: “I was only following orders, sir. An
+ order is an order.”
+ ',
+ 206 => '
+ McIntyre’s First Law: Under the right circumstances, anything I tell you
+ could be wrong.
+ ',
+ 207 => '
+ Those who don’t understand Unix are condemned to reinvent it, poorly.
+ — Henry Spencer, in Introducing Regular Expressions (2012) by Michael
+ Fitzgerald
+ ',
+ 208 => '
+ Hoare’s Law of Large Problems: Inside every large problem is a small problem
+ struggling to get out.
+ ',
+ 209 => '
+ Due to a shortage of devoted followers, the production of great leaders has
+ been discontinued.
+ ',
+ 210 => '
+ Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
+ ',
+ 211 => '
+ Health is merely the slowest possible rate at which one can die.
+ ',
+ 212 => '
+ It is against the grain of modern education to teach children to program.
+ What fun is there in making plans, acquiring discipline in organizing thoughts,
+ devoting attention to detail, and learning to be self—critical? — Alan
+ Perlis
+ ',
+ 213 => '
+ Non—Reciprocal Laws of Expectations: Negative expectations yield negative
+ results.
+ Positive expectations yield negative results.
+ ',
+ 214 => '
+ Gerrold’s Laws of Infernal Dynamics: (1) An object in motion will always be
+ headed in the wrong direction.
+ (2) An object at rest will always be in the wrong place.
+ (3) The energy required to change either one of these states will always be
+ more than you wish to expend,
+ but never so much as to make the task totally impossible.
+ ',
+ 215 => '
+ Kinkler’s First Law: Responsibility always exceeds authority.
+ ',
+ 216 => '
+ Kinkler’s Second Law: All the easy problems have been solved.
+ ',
+ 217 => '
+ There are no games on this system.
+ ',
+ 218 => '
+ Committee Rules: (1) Never arrive on time, or you will be stamped a beginner.
+ (2) Don’t say anything until the meeting is half over; this stamps you as being
+ wise.
+ (3) Be as vague as possible; this prevents irritating the others.
+ (4) When in doubt, suggest that a subcommittee be appointed.
+ (5) Be the first to move for adjournment; this will make you popular — it’s
+ what everyone is waiting for.
+ ',
+ 219 => '
+ Ogden’s Law: The sooner you fall behind, the more time you have to catch up.
+ ',
+ 220 => '
+ “About the time we think we can make ends meet, somebody moves the ends.”
+ — Herbert Hoover
+ ',
+ 221 => '
+ Chesterton’s Fence: Reforms should not be made until the reasoning behind the
+ existing state of affairs is understood.
+ ',
+ 222 => '
+ I returned, and saw under the sun, that the race is not to the swift, nor the
+ battle to the strong, neither yet bread to
+ the wise, nor yet riches to men of understanding, nor yet favour to men of
+ skill; but time and chance happeneth to them all. — Ecclesiastes
+ ',
+ 223 => '
+ Schmidt’s Law: If you mess with a thing long enough, it’ll break. Wyszkowski’s
+ Second Law: Anything can be made to work
+ if you fiddle with it long enough.
+ ',
+ 224 => '
+ Hoover’s Affirmation: Blessed are the young for they shall inherit the national
+ debt.
+ ',
+ 225 => '
+ Sueker’s Note: If you need “n” items of anything, you will have “n-1” in
+ stock.
+ ',
+ 226 => '
+ Always remember that you are absolutely unique. Just like everyone else. —
+ Margaret Mead
+ ',
+ 227 => '
+ DRY: Don’t repeat yourself. WET: Write everything twice.
+ ',
+ 228 => '
+ Isaiah’s Observation: And judgment is turned away backward, and justice
+ standeth afar off: for truth is fallen in the street,
+ and equity cannot enter.
+ ',
+ 229 => '
+ The best things in life are for a fee.
+ ',
+ 230 => '
+ “It is by the fortune of God that, in this country, we have three benefits:
+ freedom of speech, freedom of thought, and the
+ wisdom never to use either.” — Mark Twain
+ ',
+ 231 => '
+ The Sixth Commandment of Frisbee: The greatest single aid to distance is for
+ the disc to be going in a
+ direction you did not want. (Goes the wrong way = Goes a long way.) — Dan
+ Roddick
+ ',
+ 232 => '
+ Of course you have a purpose — to find a purpose.
+ ',
+ 233 => '
+ Unix gives you just enough rope to hang yourself — and then a couple
+ of more feet, just to be sure. — Eric Allman
+ ',
+ 234 => '
+ Connected. Hacks and glory await!
+ ',
+ 235 => '
+ Connected. May the source be with you!
+ ',
+ 236 => '
+ Survivorship Bias: Concentrating on the people or things that “survived” some
+ process and inadvertently
+ overlooking those that didn’t because of their lack of visibility.
+ ',
+ 237 => '
+ Curse of Knowledge: When better informed people find it extremely difficult
+ to think about problems from
+ the perspective of lesser informed people.
+ ',
+ 238 => '
+ “The best way to control the opposition is to lead it ourselves.” —
+ Vladimir Lenin
+ ',
+ 239 => '
+ Going to church does not make a person religious, nor does going to school make
+ a person educated,
+ any more than going to a garage makes a person a car.
+ ',
+ 240 => '
+ What the large print giveth, the small print taketh away.
+ ',
+ 241 => '
+ Anyone can hold the helm when the sea is calm. — Publius Syrus
+ ',
+ 242 => '
+ Power corrupts. And atomic power corrupts atomically.
+ ',
+ 243 => '
+ Power corrupts. And big power corrupts bigly.
+ ',
+ 244 => '
+ Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man’s character,
+ give him power. — Abraham Lincoln
+ ',
+ 245 => '
+ Now and then an innocent person is sent to the legislature.
+ ',
+ 246 => '
+ If entropy is increasing, where is it coming from?
+ ',
+ 247 => '
+ When in doubt, use brute force. — Ken Thompson
+ ',
+ 248 => '
+ Grelb’s Reminder: Eighty percent of all people consider themselves to be above
+ average drivers.
+ ',
+ 249 => '
+ Just when you thought you were winning the rat race, along comes a faster rat!
+ ',
+ 250 => '
+ The trouble with being punctual is that people think you have nothing more
+ important to do.
+ ',
+ 251 => '
+ To iterate is human, to recurse, divine. — Robert Heller
+ ',
+ 252 => '
+ Just as most issues are seldom black or white, so are most good solutions
+ seldom black or white.
+ Beware of the solution that requires one side to be totally the loser and the
+ other side to be totally the winner.
+ The reason there are two sides to begin with usually is because neither side
+ has all the facts.
+ Therefore, when the wise mediator effects a compromise, he is not acting from
+ political motivation.
+ Rather, he is acting from a deep sense of respect for the whole truth. —
+ Stephen R. Schwambach
+ ',
+ 253 => '
+ One reason why George Washington Is held in such veneration: He never blamed
+ his problems
+ on the former Administration. — George O. Ludcke
+ ',
+ 254 => '
+ If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a
+ sound?
+ If you didn’t get caught, did you really do it?
+ ',
+ 255 => '
+ Rhode’s Law: When any principle, law, tenet, probability, happening,
+ circumstance, or result can in no way be directly,
+ indirectly, empirically, or circuitously proven, derived, implied, inferred,
+ induced, deducted, estimated, or scientifically
+ guessed, it will always for the purpose of convenience, expediency, political
+ advantage, material gain, or personal comfort,
+ or any combination of the above, or none of the above, be unilaterally and
+ unequivocally assumed, proclaimed, and adhered
+ to as absolute truth to be undeniably, universally, immutably, and infinitely
+ so, until such time as it
+ becomes advantageous to assume otherwise, maybe.
+ ',
+ 256 => '
+ The trouble with doing something right the first time is that nobody
+ appreciates how difficult it was.
+ ',
+ 257 => '
+ Modern Unix is a catastrophe. It’s the “Un—Operating System”:
+ unreliable,
+ unintuitive, unforgiving, unhelpful, and underpowered. Little is more
+ frustrating
+ than trying to force Unix to do something useful and nontrivial. — The Unix
+ Haters Handbook
+ ',
+ 258 => '
+ All syllogisms have three parts; therefore this is not a syllogism.
+ ',
+ 259 => '
+ Murphy’s Sixth Law: If you perceive that there are four possible ways in
+ which a procedure can go wrong, and circumvent these, then a fifth way,
+ unprepared for, will promptly develop.
+ ',
+ 260 => '
+ Miksch’s Law: If a string has one end, then it has another end.
+ ',
+ 261 => '
+ Irrationality is the square root of all evil. — Douglas Hofstadter
+ ',
+ 262 => '
+ Jone’s Law: The man who smiles when things go wrong has thought of someone to
+ blame it on.
+ ',
+ 263 => '
+ Parkinson’s Fourth Law: The number of people in any working group tends to
+ increase regardless
+ of the amount of work to be done.
+ ',
+ 264 => '
+ Wicker’s Law: Government expands to absorb revenue and then some.
+ ',
+ 265 => '
+ Mr. Cole’s Axiom: The sum of the intelligence on the planet is a constant; the
+ population is growing.
+ ',
+ 266 => '
+ Never put off till tomorrow what you can avoid all together.
+ ',
+ 267 => '
+ “If you give someone your name, they can take your soul. If you give them
+ your birthday,
+ they can control your life.” — Yuuko Ichihara
+ ',
+ 268 => '
+ King Solomon’s Lament: There is no remembrance of former things; neither shall
+ there be any
+ remembrance of things that are to come with those that shall come after.
+ ',
+ 269 => '
+ Friendship: A ship big enough to carry
+ two in fair weather, but only one in foul. — The Devil’s Dictionary
+ ',
+ 270 => '
+ “You really think someone would do that? Just go on the Internet and tell
+ lies?”
+ — Buster the Myth Maker
+ ',
+ 271 => '
+ “We pigs are brainworkers. The whole management and organisation of this farm
+ depend on us.
+ Day and night we are watching over your welfare. It is for your sake that we
+ drink the milk and eat those apples.”
+ — George Orwell’s Animal Farm
+ ',
+ 272 => '
+ Andrea: Unhappy the land that has no heroes. Galileo: No, unhappy the land that
+ needs heroes.
+ — Bertolt Brecht, “Life of Galileo”
+ ',
+ 273 => '
+ User: A programmer who will believe anything you tell him. — The New Hacker’s
+ Dictionary
+ ',
+ 274 => '
+ Testing can show the presence of bugs, but not their absence. — Dijkstra
+ ',
+ 275 => '
+ Gumperson’s Law: The probability of a given event occurring is inversely
+ proportional to its desirability.
+ ',
+ 276 => '
+ It is easier to port a shell than a shell script. — Larry Wall
+ ',
+ 277 => '
+ Logic doesn’t apply to the real world. — Marvin Minsky
+ ',
+ 278 => '
+ Those who do not do politics will be done in by politics. — French Proverb
+ ',
+ 279 => '
+ It’s not what you know, it’s who you know.
+ ',
+ 280 => '
+ Leibowitz’s Rule: When hammering a nail, you will never hit your finger if you
+ hold the hammer with both hands.
+ ',
+ 281 => '
+ When the government’s remedies don’t match your problem, you
+ modify the problem, not the remedy.
+ ',
+ 282 => '
+ Just because everything is different doesn’t mean anything has changed. —
+ Irene Peter
+ ',
+ 283 => '
+ Any great truth can — and eventually will — be expressed as a cliche — a
+ cliche is a
+ sure and certain way to dilute an idea. For instance, my grandmother used to
+ say, “The black
+ cat is always the last one off the fence.” I have no idea what she meant, but
+ at one time,
+ it was undoubtedly true. — Solomon Short
+ ',
+ 284 => '
+ When I was a boy I was told that anybody could become President. Now I’m
+ beginning to believe it. — Clarence Darrow
+ ',
+ 285 => '
+ Science is built up with facts, as a house is with stones. But a collection of
+ facts is no more a science than a heap
+ of stones is a house. — Henri Poincaré
+ ',
+ 286 => '
+ Insanity is the final defense.
+ ',
+ 287 => '
+ Mosher’s Law of Software Engineering: Don’t worry if it doesn’t work right. If
+ everything did, you’d be out of a job.
+ ',
+ 288 => '
+ Swipple’s Rule of Order: Whoever shouts the loudest has the floor.
+ ',
+ 289 => '
+ There are no solutions. There are only trade-offs. — Thomas Sowell in A
+ Conflict of Visions: Ideological Origins of
+ Political Struggles
+ ',
+ 290 => '
+ For the love of life, there’s a trade–off; We could loose it all, but we’ll
+ go down fighting. — David Sylvian and Koji Haijima, For The Love of Life
+ ',
+ 291 => '
+ The nice thing about standards is that there are so many of them to choose
+ from. — Andrew S. Tanenbaum
+ ',
+ 292 => '
+ Real users never know what they want, but they always know when your program
+ doesn’t deliver it.
+ ',
+ 293 => '
+ Democracy is a device that ensures we shall be governed no better than we
+ deserve. — George Bernard Shaw
+ ',
+ 294 => '
+ A candidate is a person who gets money from the rich and votes from the poor to
+ protect them from each other
+ or something like that.
+ ',
+ 295 => '
+ Fudd’s First Law of Opposition: Push something hard enough and it will fall
+ over.
+ ',
+ 296 => '
+ The Roman Rule: The one who says it cannot be done should never interrupt the
+ one who is doing it.
+ ',
+ 297 => '
+ Betteridge’s Law of Headlines: Any headline that ends in a question mark can be
+ answered by the word no.
+ ',
+ 298 => '
+ What people say, what people do, and what they say they do are entirely
+ different things. — Margaret Mead
+ ',
+ 299 => '
+ Newton’s Flaming Laser Sword: What cannot be settled by experiment is not worth
+ debating.
+ ',
+ 300 => '
+ The Sagan Standard: Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
+ ',
+ 301 => '
+ Wirth’s Law: Software gets slower more quickly than hardware gets faster.
+ ',
+ 302 => '
+ Let justice prevail even though the heavens may fall.
+ ',
+ 303 => '
+ Zawinski’s Law: Every program attempts to expand until it can read mail.
+ Corollary: Those programs which cannot expand are replaced by ones which can.
+ ',
+ 304 => '
+ Gates’s Law: The speed of software halves every 18 months.
+ ',
+ 305 => '
+ Lubarsky’s Law of Cybernetic Entomology: There is always one more bug.
+ ',
+ 306 => '
+ With great privilege comes great responsibility.
+ ',
+ 307 => '
+ Kernighan’s Law: Everyone knows that debugging is twice as hard as writing a
+ program
+ in the first place. So if you’re as clever as you can be when you write it, how
+ will you ever debug it?
+ ',
+ 308 => '
+ Wiio’s First Law of Communication: Communication usually fails, except by
+ accident. Corollary: (1)
+ If communication can fail, it will. (2) If communication cannot fail, it still
+ most usually fails.
+ (3) If communication seems to succeed in the intended way, there’s a
+ misunderstanding.
+ (4) If you are content with your message, communication certainly fails.
+ ',
+ 309 => '
+ Wiio’s Second Law of Communication: If a message can be interpreted in several
+ ways, it will be
+ interpreted in a manner that maximizes the damage.
+ ',
+ 310 => '
+ Wiio’s Third Law of Communication: There is always someone who knows better
+ than you what you meant with your message.
+ ',
+ 311 => '
+ Wiio’s Fourth Law of Communication: The more we communicate, the worse
+ communication succeeds. Corollary:
+ The more we communicate, the faster misunderstandings propagate.
+ ',
+ 312 => '
+ Wiio’s Fifth Law of Communication: In mass communication, the important thing
+ is not how things are but how they seem to be.
+ ',
+ 313 => '
+ Wiio’s Sixth Law of Communication: The importance of a news item is inversely
+ proportional to the square of the distance.
+ ',
+ 314 => '
+ Wiio’s Seventh Law of Communication: The more important the situation is, the
+ more probable you had forgotten an essential
+ thing that you remembered a moment ago.
+ ',
+ 315 => '
+ “We buy things we don’t need with money we don’t have to impress people we
+ don’t like.” — Dave Ramsey
+ ',
+ 316 => '
+ Just living in the database.
+ ',
+ 317 => '
+ To protect your rights, we need to prevent others from denying you these rights
+ or asking you to surrender these rights.
+ Therefore, you have certain responsibilities — responsibilities to respect
+ the freedom of others.
+ ',
+ 318 => '
+ We trust you have received the usual lecture from the local system
+ administrator. It usually boils down to these three things:
+ (1) Respect the privacy of others.
+ (2) Think before you type.
+ (3) With great power comes great responsibility.
+ ',
+ 319 => '
+ Frequency Illusion (Baader—Meinhof Phenomenon): The illusion where something
+ that has recently come to one’s
+ attention suddenly seems to appear with improbable frequency shortly afterwards.
+ ',
+ 320 => '
+ The Backdraft Phenomenon: A rapid or explosive burning of superheated gasses in
+ a fire, caused when oxygen rapidly
+ enters an oxygen—depleted environment.
+ ',
+ 321 => '
+ March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb.
+ ',
+ 322 => '
+ Perhaps the most widespread illusion is that if we were in power we would
+ behave very differently from those who now hold it — when, in truth, in
+ order to get power we would have to become very much like them.
+ ',
+ 323 => '
+ Software is much harder to change en masse than hardware. C++ and Java, say,
+ are presumably growing faster than plain C, but I bet C will still be around.
+ For infrastructure technology, C will be hard to displace. — Dennis Ritchie
+ ',
+ 324 => '
+ Pray to God, but keep rowing to shore. — Russian Sailor’s Proverb
+ ',
+ 325 => '
+ Do you guys know what you’re doing, or are you just hacking?
+ ',
+ 326 => '
+ Jacquin’s Postulate on Democratic Government: No man’s life, liberty, or
+ property are safe while the
+ legislature is in session.
+ ',
+ 327 => '
+ I never cheated an honest man, only rascals. They wanted something for
+ nothing. I gave them nothing for something. — The Yellow Kid
+ ',
+ 328 => '
+ Seeing is deceiving. It’s eating that’s believing. — James Thurber
+ ',
+ 329 => '
+ A great nation is any mob of people which produces at least one honest
+ man a century.
+ ',
+ 330 => '
+ Nothing makes a person more productive than the last minute.
+ ',
+ 331 => '
+ Don’t believe everything you read on the Internet.
+ ',
+ 332 => '
+ One man’s simple is another man’s complex.
+ ',
+ 333 => '
+ Every so often the stars align.
+ ',
+ 334 => '
+ Nobody wants a backup, everybody wants a restore.
+ ',
+ 335 => '
+ Kingmaker Scenario: A player who is unable to win with the ability
+ to influence who will win.
+ ',
+ 336 => '
+ Programmers do it bit by bit.
+ ',
+ 337 => '
+ Brontosaurus Principle: Organizations can grow faster than their brains can
+ manage them
+ in relation to their environment and to their own physiology: when this
+ occurs, they are
+ an endangered species. — Thomas K. Connellan
+ ',
+ 338 => '
+ Today will be remembered until tomorrow.
+ ',
+ 339 => '
+ It’s ten o’clock. Do you know where your processes are?
+ ',
+ 340 => '
+ It’s ten o’clock. Do you know where your backups are?
+ ',
+ 341 => '
+ It’s ten o’clock. Do you know where the source code is?
+ ',
+ 342 => '
+ This is a test of the emergency broadcast system. Had there been an
+ actual emergency, then you would no longer be here.
+ ',
+ 343 => '
+ To teach is to learn twice. — Joseph Joubert
+ ',
+ 344 => '
+ Measure with a micrometer. Mark with chalk. Cut with an axe.
+ ',
+ 345 => '
+ The so—called lessons of history are for the most part the rationalizations
+ of the victors. History is written by the survivors. — Max Lerner
+ ',
+ 346 => '
+ (1) Everything depends. (2) Nothing is always. (3) Everything is sometimes.
+ ',
+ 347 => '
+ Ryan’s Law: Make three correct guesses consecutively and you will establish
+ yourself as an expert.
+ ',
+ 348 => '
+ Fast, cheap, good: pick one.
+ ',
+ 349 => '
+ My guidingstar always is, “Get hold of portable property”. — Charles
+ Dickens in “Great Expectations”
+ ',
+ 350 => '
+ If you can lead it to water and force it to drink, it isn’t a horse.
+ ',
+ 351 => '
+ C is quirky, flawed, and an enormous success. — Dennis Ritchie
+ ',
+ 352 => '
+ Use only as directed.
+ ',
+ 353 => '
+ If the meanings of “true” and “false” were switched, then this sentence
+ would not be false.
+ ',
+ 354 => '
+ Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength. War is peace. — George Orwell’s
+ 1984
+ ',
+ 355 => '
+ A truth that’s told with bad intent
+ beats all the lies you can invent. — William Blake
+ ',
+ 356 => '
+ You don’t have to know how the computer works, just how to work the computer.
+ ',
+ 357 => '
+ It is your concern when your neighbor’s wall is on fire. — Quintus Horatius
+ Flaccus (Horace)
+ ',
+ 358 => '
+ Tell the truth and run. — Yugoslav Proverb
+ ',
+ 359 => '
+ It’s not easy, being green. — Kermit The Frog
+ ',
+ 360 => '
+ Value your freedom or you will lose it, teaches history. ‘Don’t bother us
+ with politics’,
+ respond those who don’t want to learn.
+ — Richard Stallman
+ ',
+ 361 => '
+ A prudent man foreseeth the evil, and hideth himself: but the simple pass on,
+ and are punished.
+ — Proverbs
+ ',
+ 362 => '
+ Original thought is like original sin: both happened before you were born
+ to people you could not have possibly met. — Fran Lebowitz, “Social
+ Studies”
+ ',
+ 363 => '
+ In order to get a loan you must first prove that you don’t need it. Wait, isn’t it
+ the other way around?
+ ',
+ 364 => '
+ “Alas Hegel was right when he said that we learn from history that men
+ never learn anything from history.” — George Bernard Shaw
+ ',
+ 365 => '
+ You are the only person to ever get this message.
+ ',
+ 366 => '
+ Steele’s Law: There exist tasks which cannot be done by more than ten men
+ or fewer than one hundred.
+ ',
+ 367 => '
+ For every problem there is one solution which is simple, neat, and wrong.
+ — H. L. Mencken
+ ',
+ 368 => '
+ Rights, Responsibility, Opportunity, and Privilege.
+ ',
+ 369 => '
+ Measure twice, cut once.
+ ',
+ 370 => '
+ No matter what happens, there is always someone who knew it would.
+ ',
+ 371 => '
+ Any sufficiently advanced bug is indistinguishable from a feature.
+ — Rich Kulawiec
+ ',
+ 372 => '
+ Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.
+ ',
+ 373 => '
+ Jack of all trades, master of some.
+ ',
+ 374 => '
+ In these matters the only certainty is that there is nothing certain.
+ — Pliny the Elder
+ ',
+ 375 => '
+ “There is no such thing as good writing,
+ only good rewriting.” — Robert Graves
+ ',
+ 376 => '
+ Preudhomme’s Law of Window Cleaning: It’s on the other side.
+ ',
+ 377 => '
+ If you think the problem is bad now, just wait until we’ve solved it. —
+ Arthur Kasspe
+ ',
+ 378 => '
+ Can anything be sadder than work left unfinished? Yes, work never begun.
+ ',
+ 379 => '
+ If you think the pen is mightier than the sword, the next time someone pulls
+ out a sword I’d like to see you get up there with your pen.
+ ',
+ 380 => '
+ He that teaches himself has a fool for a master.
+ — Benjamin Franklin
+ ',
+ 381 => '
+ Mix’s Law: There is nothing more permanent than a temporary building and a
+ temporary tax.
+ ',
+ 382 => '
+ Unix: Some say the learning curve is steep, but you only have to climb it once.
+ — Karl Lehenbauer
+ ',
+ 383 => '
+ Don’t kid yourself. Little is relevant, and nothing lasts forever.
+ ',
+ 384 => '
+ Politicians are the same all over. They promise to build a bridge even
+ where there is no river. — Nikita Khrushchev
+ ',
+ 385 => '
+ It takes less time to do a thing right than it does to explain why you
+ did it wrong. — H. W. Longfellow
+ ',
+ 386 => '
+ Your code should be more efficient!
+ ',
+ 387 => '
+ “One of the first things taught in introductory statistics textbooks is that
+ correlation
+ is not causation. It is also one of the first things forgotten.” — Thomas
+ Sowell in
+ The Vision of the Anointed
+ ',
+ 388 => '
+ “One of the sad signs of our times is that we have demonized those who
+ produce,
+ subsidized those who refuse to produce, and canonized those who complain.”
+ — Thomas Sowell in The Vision of the Anointed
+ ',
+ 389 => '
+ “People make money for themselves, not for their country.”
+ — John Bagot Glubb in The Fate of Empires
+ ',
+ 390 => '
+ “If we are considering the history of our own country, we write at
+ length of the periods when our ancestors were prosperous and victorious,
+ but we pass quickly over their shortcomings or their defeats.”
+ — John Bagot Glubb in The Fate of Empires
+ ',
+ 391 => '
+ Inner—Platform Effect: The tendency of software architects to create a system
+ so customizable
+ as to become a replica, and often a poor replica, of the software development
+ platform they are using.
+ ',
+ 392 => '
+ “It doesn’t matter how smart you are unless you stop and think.”
+ — Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 393 => '
+ “When you want to help people, you tell them the truth. When you want to help
+ yourself, you tell them what they want to hear.”
+ — Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 394 => '
+ “Intellect is not wisdom.”
+ — Thomas Sowell in Intellectuals and Society
+ ',
+ 395 => '
+ “When people get used to preferential treatment, equal treatment seems like
+ discrimination.”
+ — Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 396 => '
+ “I am so old that I can remember when other people’s achievements were
+ considered to be an inspiration, rather than a grievance.”
+ — Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 397 => '
+ The cloud is just someone else’s computer.
+ ',
+ 398 => '
+ Hoffer’s Discovery: The grand act of a dying institution is to issue a newly
+ revised, enlarged edition of the policies and procedures manual.
+ ',
+ 399 => '
+ You can tell the ideals of a nation by its advertisements.
+ — Norman Douglas
+ ',
+ 400 => '
+ “Momentary masters of a fraction of a dot.” — Carl Sagan
+ ',
+ 401 => '
+ He who is content with his lot probably has a lot.
+ ',
+ 402 => '
+ “It takes a village to raise a child and somebody said it takes a village
+ idiot to believe that.
+ It is part of the whole thing of third parties wanting to make decisions for
+ which they pay no price for when they’re wrong.”
+ — Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 403 => '
+ The best is the enemy of the good.
+ ',
+ 404 => '
+ “If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face
+ — forever.”
+ — George Orwell’s 1984
+ ',
+ 405 => '
+ The stars are bright. But give no light. The world spins backwards every day.
+ — The Singing Sea
+ ',
+ 406 => '
+ “People who pride themselves on their ‘complexity’ and deride others for
+ being ‘simplistic’ should
+ realize that the truth is often not very complicated. What gets complex is
+ evading the truth.”
+ — Thomas Sowell in Barbarians Inside The Gates and Other Controversial Essays
+ ',
+ 407 => '
+ We aren’t in your region yet.
+ ',
+ 408 => '
+ “In real open source, you have the right to control your own destiny.” —
+ Linus Torvalds
+ ',
+ 409 => '
+ Embrace, Extend, and Extinguish.
+ ',
+ 410 => '
+ Astroturfing: The deceptive practice of presenting an orchestrated marketing or
+ public
+ relations campaign in the guise of unsolicited comments from members of the
+ public — fake
+ grass roots support.
+ ',
+ 411 => '
+ The right creature in the right place.
+ ',
+ 412 => '
+ Weinberg’s Law: If builders built buildings the way the programmers wrote
+ programs, the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization.
+ ',
+ 413 => '
+ Feed a dog for three days and he will remember your kindness for three years;
+ feed a cat for three years and she will
+ forget your kindness in three days.
+ ',
+ 414 => '
+ If thou faint in the day of adversity, thy strength is small. — Proverbs
+ ',
+ 415 => '
+ Nobody goes there anymore. It’s too crowded. — Yogi Berra
+ ',
+ 416 => '
+ Force has no place where there is need of skill. — Herodotus
+ ',
+ 417 => '
+ Drew’s Law of Highway Biology: The first bug to hit a clean windshield
+ lands directly in front of your eyes.
+ ',
+ 418 => '
+ If we do not change our direction we are likely to end up where we are headed.
+ ',
+ 419 => '
+ In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice,
+ there is.
+ ',
+ 420 => '
+ The explanation requiring the fewest assumptions is the most likely to be
+ correct. — William of Occam
+ ',
+ 421 => '
+ The probability of someone watching you is proportional to the
+ stupidity of your action.
+ ',
+ 422 => '
+ Hell is empty and all the devils are here. — Shakespeare, “The Tempest”
+ ',
+ 423 => '
+ “If stupidity got us into this mess, then why can’t it get us out?”
+ — Will Rogers
+ ',
+ 424 => '
+ Advice from an old carpenter: measure twice, saw once.
+ ',
+ 425 => '
+ We must believe in free will. We have no choice. — Isaac B. Singer
+ ',
+ 426 => '
+ Flon’s Law: There is not now, and never will be, a language in
+ which it is the least bit difficult to write bad programs.
+ ',
+ 427 => '
+ This space intentionally left blank.
+ ',
+ 428 => '
+ Katz’ Law: Men and nations will act rationally when
+ all other possibilities have been exhausted.
+ ',
+ 429 => '
+ History teaches us that men and nations behave wisely once they have
+ exhausted all other alternatives. — Abba Eban
+ ',
+ 430 => '
+ Just fight it out.
+ ',
+ 431 => '
+ Murphy’s Eleventh Law: It is impossible to make anything foolproof because
+ fools are so ingenious.
+ ',
+ 432 => '
+ Corporate Republic: A theoretical form of government run primarily like a
+ business, involving a board of directors and executives, in which all aspects
+ of society are privatized by a single, or small groups of companies.
+ ',
+ 433 => '
+ Measure once, cut thrice.
+ ',
+ 434 => '
+ Oppression: The malicious or unjust treatment or exercise of power,
+ often under the guise of governmental authority or cultural opprobrium.
+ ',
+ 435 => '
+ No man is an island entire of itself; every man
+ is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. — John Donne
+ ',
+ 436 => '
+ Deception: An act or statement which misleads, hides the truth, or promotes a belief,
+ concept, or idea that is not true. It is often done for personal gain or advantage.
+ Deception can involve dissimulation, propaganda, and sleight of hand, as well as
+ distraction, camouflage, or concealment.
+ ',
+ 437 => '
+ Brooks’s Law: Adding manpower to a late software project makes it later.
+ ',
+ 438 => '
+ The right tool for the right job.
+ ',
+ 439 => '
+ Failed to suspend system via logind: There’s already a shutdown or
+ sleep operation in progress.
+ ',
+ 440 => '
+ Whistler’s Law: You never know who is right, but you always know who is in charge.
+ ',
+ 441 => '
+ You must realize that the computer has it in for you. The irrefutable
+ proof of this is that the computer always does what you tell it to do.
+ ',
+ 442 => '
+ I heard a definition of an intellectual, that I thought was very interesting:
+ a man who takes more words than are necessary to tell more than he knows.
+ — Dwight D. Eisenhower
+ ',
+ 443 => '
+ Appearances often are deceiving. — Aesop
+ ',
+ 444 => '
+ Prices subject to change without notice.
+ ',
+ 445 => '
+ No man is an island if he’s on at least one mailing list.
+ ',
+ 446 => '
+ Talent does what it can.
+ Genius does what it must.
+ You do what you get paid to do.
+ ',
+ 447 => '
+ Finagle’s Fifth Rule: Experiments should be
+ reproducible — they should all fail in the same
+ way.
+ ',
+ 448 => '
+ When the ax entered the forest, the trees said, “The handle is one of us!”
+ — Turkish Proverb
+ ',
+ 449 => '
+ We have seen the light at the end of the tunnel, and it’s out.
+ ',
+ 450 => '
+ Why can’t you be a non-conformist like everyone else?
+ ',
+ 451 => '
+ Subject to change without notice.
+ ',
+ 452 => '
+ People tend to make rules for others and exceptions for themselves.
+ ',
+ 453 => '
+ Today is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday.
+ ',
+ 454 => '
+ Van Roy’s Truism: Life is a whole series of circumstances beyond your control.
+ ',
+ 455 => '
+ Competition Law: A law that promotes or seeks to maintain market competition
+ by regulating anti-competitive conduct by companies.
+ ',
+ 456 => '
+ Don’t believe everything you see or hear on the news.
+ ',
+ 457 => '
+ Newton’s Third Law: For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
+ ',
+ 458 => '
+ The Fediverse: An ensemble of federated servers that are used for web publishing
+ and file hosting, which while independently hosted, can intercommunicate with each other.
+ ',
+ 459 => '
+ There is enough treachery, hatred, violence, absurdity in the average
+ human being to supply any given army on any given day. — The Genius of the Crowd
+ ',
+ 460 => '
+ Don’t be evil.
+ ',
+ 461 => '
+ The personal becomes the political.
+ ',
+ 462 => '
+ It is when I struggle to be brief that I become obscure. — Quintus Horatius
+ Flaccus (Horace)
+ ',
+ 463 => '
+ Honesty is the best policy, but insanity is a better defense.
+ ',
+ 464 => '
+ History is the version of past events that people have decided to agree on.
+ — Napoleon Bonaparte, “Maxims”
+ ',
+ 465 => '
+ A closed mouth gathers no feet.
+ ',
+ 466 => '
+ The medium is the message. — Marshall McLuhan
+ ',
+ 467 => '
+ Shick’s Law: There is no problem a good miracle can’t solve.
+ ',
+ 468 => '
+ A year spent in artificial intelligence is enough to make one believe in God.
+ — Alan Perlis
+ ',
+ 469 => '
+ Kington’s Law of Perforation: If a straight line of holes is made in a piece
+ of paper, such as a sheet of stamps or a check, that line becomes the strongest
+ part of the paper.
+ ',
+ 470 => '
+ Lisp users: Due to the holiday next Monday, there will be no garbage collection.
+ ',
+ 471 => '
+ Anything cut to length will be too short.
+ ',
+ 472 => '
+ Arnold’s Laws of Documentation:
+ (1) If it should exist, it doesn’t.
+ (2) If it does exist, it’s out of date.
+ (3) Only documentation for useless programs transcends the first two laws.
+ ',
+ 473 => '
+ If you do something right once, someone will ask you to do it again.
+ ',
+ 474 => '
+ This land is mine, God gave this land to me. — The Exodus Song
+ ',
+ 475 => '
+ Here’s a dirty little secret: Very few people know what they’re doing.
+ ',
+ 476 => '
+ Never trust a computer you can’t repair yourself.
+ ',
+ 477 => '
+ Fresco’s Discovery: If you knew what you were doing you’d probably be bored.
+ Corollary: Just because you’re bored doesn’t mean you know what you’re doing.
+ ',
+ 478 => '
+ Maryann’s Law: You can always find what you’re not looking for.
+ ',
+ 479 => '
+ Langer’s Law: If the line moves quickly, you’re in the wrong line.
+ ',
+ 480 => '
+ Beryl’s Second Law: It’s always easy to see both sides of an issue
+ you are not particularly concerned about.
+ ',
+ 481 => '
+ Herman’s Law: A good scapegoat is almost as good as a solution.
+ ',
+ 482 => '
+ Irene’s Law: There is no right way to do the wrong thing.
+ ',
+ 483 => '
+ The world wants to be deceived. — Sebastian Brant
+ ',
+ 484 => '
+ No matter what anyone tells you, isometric exercises cannot be done
+ quietly at your desk at work. People will suspect manic tendencies as
+ you twitter around in your chair.
+ ',
+ 485 => '
+ How many comments on the Internet do you surmise are fake?
+ ',
+ 486 => '
+ People never lie so much as after a hunt, during a war, or before an election.
+ — Otto Von Bismarck
+ ',
+ 487 => '
+ If you wish to succeed, consult three old people. — Chinese Proverb
+ ',
+ 488 => '
+ If you resist reading what you disagree with, how will you ever acquire
+ deeper insights into what you believe? The things most worth reading
+ are precisely those that challenge our convictions. — Unknown
+ ',
+ 489 => '
+ Linux sucks.
+ ',
+ 490 => '
+ Will I be accused of being an elitist if I use Arch Linux?
+ ',
+ 491 => '
+ We are Microsoft. You will be assimilated. Resistance is futile.
+ ',
+ 492 => '
+ Occam’s Eraser: The philosophical principle that even the simplest
+ solution is bound to have something wrong with it.
+ ',
+ 493 => '
+ Membership dues are not refundable.
+ ',
+ 494 => '
+ If I do not want others to quote me, I do not speak. — Phil Wayne
+ ',
+ 495 => '
+ Your mileage may vary.
+ ',
+ 496 => '
+ Laura’s Law: No child throws up in the bathroom.
+ ',
+ 497 => '
+ Another day, another dollar.
+ ',
+ 498 => '
+ Most public domain software is free, at least at first glance.
+ ',
+ 499 => '
+ When we write programs that “learn”, it turns out we do and they don’t.
+ ',
+ 500 => '
+ “All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.”
+ — George Orwell’s Animal Farm
+ ',
+ 501 => '
+ “Perhaps the most dangerous by-product of the age of intellect is
+ the unconscious growth of the idea that the human brain can solve
+ the problems of the world ... In a wider national sphere, the survival
+ of the nation depends basically on the loyalty and self‑sacrifice of
+ the citizens.”
+ — John Bagot Glubb in The Fate of Empires and Search for Survival
+ ',
+ 502 => '
+ Murphy’s Eighth Law: If everything seems to be going well, you have
+ obviously overlooked something.
+ ',
+ 503 => '
+ Rules for thee, but not for me.
+ ',
+ 504 => '
+ Worrying is like rocking in a rocking chair — It gives you something to do,
+ but it doesn’t get you anywhere.
+ ',
+ 505 => '
+ Some people are backed by cosmic luck.
+ ',
+ 506 => '
+ You can’t handle the truth.
+ ',
+ 507 => '
+ Gyre: A spiral or vortex.
+ ',
+ 508 => '
+ The decentralized web is coming.
+ ',
+ 509 => '
+ The children of the magenta line.
+ ',
+ 510 => '
+ I’ve got no strings. — Pinocchio
+ ',
+ 511 => '
+ The systemd-journald sucks.
+ ',
+ 512 => '
+ Fame and fortune.
+ ',
+ 513 => '
+ Every man has his price.
+ ',
+ 514 => '
+ A morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable.
+ — Thomas Jefferson
+ ',
+ 515 => '
+ Every way of a man is right in his own eyes. — Proverbs
+ ',
+ 516 => '
+ The typical citizen drops down to a lower level of mental
+ performance as soon as he enters the political field. He argues and
+ analyzes in a way which he would readily recognize as infantile within
+ the sphere of his real interests. He becomes a primitive again.
+ His thinking becomes associative and affective.
+ — Joseph Aloïs Schumpeter
+ ',
+ 517 => '
+ “This civilization is rapidly passing away, however. Let us rejoice
+ or else lament the fact as much as everyone of us likes;
+ but do not let us shut our eyes to it.”
+ — Joseph Aloïs Schumpeter in Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy
+ ',
+ 518 => '
+ “The masses have not always felt themselves to be frustrated and
+ exploited. But the intellectuals that formulated their views for
+ them have always told them that they were, without necessarily
+ meaning by it anything precise.”
+ — Joseph Aloïs Schumpeter in Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy
+ ',
+ 519 => '
+ The stock exchange is a poor substitute for the Holy Grail.
+ — Joseph Aloïs Schumpeter
+ ',
+ 520 => '
+ Advice from an old carpenter: Use the right tool for the right job.
+ ',
+ 521 => '
+ Hypocrisy: A pretense of having a virtuous, moral, or religious character.
+ ',
+ 522 => '
+ The mob is a society of bodies voluntarily bereaving themselves of
+ reason, and traversing its work. The mob is man voluntarily descending
+ to the nature of the beast. — Ralph Waldo Emerson
+ ',
+ 523 => '
+ A mob kills the wrong man was flashed in a newspaper headline lately.
+ ',
+ 524 => '
+ Most people have two reasons for doing anything — a good reason, and
+ the real reason.
+ ',
+ 525 => '
+ Formatted to fit your screen.
+ ',
+ 526 => '
+ Magary’s Principle:
+ When there is a public outcry to cut deadwood and fat from any
+ government bureaucracy, it is the deadwood and the fat that do
+ the cutting, and the public’s services are cut.
+ ',
+ 527 => '
+ Priming: The phenomenon whereby exposure to one stimulus influences
+ a response to a subsequent stimulus, without conscious guidance
+ or intention.
+ ',
+ 528 => '
+ Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
+ ',
+ 529 => '
+ YAML sucks.
+ ',
+ 530 => '
+ Kubernetes sucks.
+ ',
+ 531 => '
+ Sacred cow: An idea, custom, person, or institution unreasonably
+ held to be immune to criticism.
+ ',
+ 532 => '
+ Everybody wants to be a cat.
+ ',
+ 533 => '
+ Today is what happened to yesterday.
+ ',
+ 534 => '
+ The questions remain the same. The answers are eternally variable.
+ ',
+ 535 => '
+ You want it in one line? Does it have to fit in 80 columns?
+ — Larry Wall
+ ',
+ 536 => '
+ As long as the answer is right, who cares if the question is wrong?
+ ',
+ 537 => '
+ “The belly is an ungrateful wretch, it never remembers past favors,
+ it always wants more tomorrow.”
+ — Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
+ ',
+ 538 => '
+ “Beat a dog once and you only have to show him the whip.”
+ — Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
+ ',
+ 539 => '
+ Truth has no special time of its own. Its hour is now — always.
+ — Albert Schweitzer
+ ',
+ 540 => '
+ My computer can beat up your computer. — Karl Lehenbauer
+ ',
+ 541 => '
+ Curiosity killed the cat, but satisfaction brought her back to life.
+ ',
+ 542 => '
+ If you are good, you will be assigned all the work. If you are real
+ good, you will get out of it.
+ ',
+ 543 => '
+ What orators lack in depth they make up in length.
+ ',
+ 544 => '
+ You climb to reach the summit, but once there, discover that all roads
+ lead down. — Stanislaw Lem in “The Cyberiad”
+ ',
+ 545 => '
+ The people sensible enough to give good advice are usually sensible
+ enough to give none.
+ ',
+ 546 => '
+ Freedom of the press is for those who happen to own one.
+ — A.J. Liebling
+ ',
+ 547 => '
+ What we cannot speak about we must pass over in silence.
+ — Wittgenstein
+ ',
+ 548 => '
+ The way of the world is to praise dead saints and prosecute live ones.
+ — Nathaniel Howe
+ ',
+ 549 => '
+ “Has it ever occurred to you, Winston, that by the year 2050, at the
+ very latest, not a single human being will be alive who could
+ understand such a conversation as we are having now?”
+ — George Orwell’s 1984
+ ',
+ 550 => '
+ “With software there are only two possibilities: either the users
+ control the programme or the programme controls the users. If
+ the programme controls the users, and the developer controls
+ the programme, then the programme is an instrument of unjust power.”
+ — Richard Stallman
+ ',
+ 551 => '
+ Learned men are the cisterns of knowledge, not the fountainheads.
+ ',
+ 552 => '
+ You can go anywhere you want if you look serious and carry a clipboard.
+ ',
+ 553 => '
+ Look! Before our very eyes, the future is becoming the past.
+ ',
+ 554 => '
+ Linux is obsolete. — Andrew Tanenbaum
+ ',
+ 555 => '
+ Every man thinks God is on his side. — Jean Anouilh, “The Lark”
+ ',
+ 556 => '
+ Man is by nature a political animal. — Aristotle
+ ',
+ 557 => '
+ Be not deceived: evil communications corrupt good manners.
+ ',
+ 558 => '
+ Divide first, then conquer.
+ ',
+ 559 => '
+ The game is rigged.
+ ',
+ 560 => '
+ This service is no longer available.
+ ',
+ 561 => '
+ Gamification: The application of game-design elements and
+ game principles in non-game contexts.
+ ',
+ 562 => '
+ You made this? I made this.
+ ',
+ 563 => '
+ “Tomorrow’s illiterate will not be the man who can’t read;
+ he will be the man who has not learned how to learn.”
+ — Alvin Toffler’s Future Shock
+ ',
+ 564 => '
+ How users read on the web: They don’t. — Jakob Nielsen
+ ',
+ 565 => '
+ Wilt thou set thine eyes upon that which is not? For riches
+ certainly make themselves wings; they fly away as
+ an eagle toward heaven. — Proverbs
+ ',
+ 566 => '
+ Maybe GitHub was down?
+ ',
+ 567 => '
+ Babylon was taken in one night.
+ ',
+ 568 => '
+ Move fast and fix things.
+ ',
+ 569 => '
+ Sharp like an edge of a samurai sword.
+ The mental blade cuts through flesh and bone.
+ Though my mind’s at peace, the world’s out of order.
+ Missing the inner heat, life gets colder.
+ — Nujabes’ Battlecry, Shing02
+ ',
+ 570 => '
+ A freelancer.
+ A battle cry of a hawk make a dove fly and a tear dry.
+ Wonder why a lone wolf don’t run with a clan.
+ Only trust your instincts and be one with the plan.
+ — Nujabes’ Battlecry, Shing02
+ ',
+ 571 => '
+ The ultimate reward is honor, not awards.
+ At odds with the times in wars with no lords.
+ — Nujabes’ Battlecry, Shing02
+ ',
+ 572 => '
+ “You never change things by fighting the existing reality.
+ To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”
+ — Richard Buckminster ‘Bucky’ Fuller
+ ',
+ 573 => '
+ “If you have always believed that everyone should play by the same rules and be
+ judged by the same standards, that would have gotten you labeled a radical 50 years ago,
+ a liberal 25 years ago and a racist today.”
+ — Thomas Sowell, born in the 1930’s
+ ',
+ 574 => '
+ The web is not just Firefox or Chrome.
+ ',
+ 575 => '
+ The algorithm is your boss.
+ ',
+ 576 => '
+ Who needs documentation anyway?
+ ',
+ 577 => '
+ “Sooner or later, everything old is new again.”
+ ― Stephen King, The Colorado Kid
+ ',
+ 578 => '
+ Public Service Announcement: The production of great leaders has
+ been discontinued.
+ ',
+ 579 => '
+ Three questions that would destroy most arguments: Compared to what?
+ At what cost? What hard evidence do you have? — Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 580 => '
+ “Less than fifty years after the amazing scientific discoveries under Mamun,
+ the Arab Empire collapsed. Wonderful and beneficent as was the
+ progress of science, it did not save the empire from chaos.”
+ ― John Bagot Glubb in The Fate of Empires and Search for Survival
+ ',
+ 581 => '
+ “Another remarkable and unexpected symptom of national decline is the
+ intensification of internal political hatreds. One
+ would have expected that, when the survival
+ of the nation became precarious, political
+ factions would drop their rivalry and stand
+ shoulder-to-shoulder to save their country.”
+ ― John Bagot Glubb in The Fate of Empires and Search for Survival
+ ',
+ 582 => '
+ “In short, numbers are accepted as evidence when they agree with
+ preconceptions, but not when they don’t.”
+ ― Thomas Sowell in The Vision of the Anointed
+ ',
+ 583 => '
+ “Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.”
+ ― Arnold Toynbee
+ ',
+ 584 => '
+ “Throughout history many nations have suffered a physical defeat,
+ but that has never marked the end of a nation. But when a
+ nation has become the victim of a psychological defeat,
+ then that marks the end of a nation.”
+ ― Ibn Khaldun in The Muqaddimah: An Introduction to History, 1377
+ ',
+ 585 => '
+ You are not authorized to repair this device.
+ ',
+ 586 => '
+ Minority rule. Majority rule.
+ ',
+ 587 => '
+ Up and down go the arguers getting nowhere fast.
+ ',
+ 588 => '
+ Echo chambers and epistemic bubbles.
+ ',
+ 589 => '
+ What’s old is new again.
+ ',
+ 590 => '
+ Cease and desist.
+ ',
+ 591 => '
+ The network effect.
+ ',
+ 592 => '
+ “Let us not look back in anger, nor forward in fear, but
+ around us in awareness.” ― James Thurber
+ ',
+ 593 => '
+ We are experiencing system trouble ― do not adjust your terminals.
+ ',
+ 594 => '
+ We the unwilling, led by the ungrateful, are doing the impossible.
+ We’ve done so much, for so long, with so little,
+ that we are now qualified to do something with nothing. ― Unknown
+ ',
+ 595 => '
+ Politics is the ability to foretell what is going to happen tomorrow, next
+ week, next month, and next year. And to have the ability afterwards to
+ explain why it didn’t happen. ― Winston Churchill
+ ',
+ 596 => '
+ Knocked, you weren’t in. ― Opportunity
+ ',
+ 597 => '
+ Information asymmetry.
+ ',
+ 598 => '
+ Gilb’s First Law of Unreliability:
+ Computers are unreliable, but humans are even more
+ unreliable. Corollary: At the source of every error which is
+ blamed on the computer you will find at least two
+ human errors, including the error of blaming it on
+ the computer.
+ ',
+ 599 => '
+ Gilb’s Second Law of Unreliability:
+ Any system which depends on human reliability is
+ unreliable.
+ ',
+ 600 => '
+ Gilb’s Third Law of Unreliability:
+ Undetectable errors are infinite in variety, in
+ contrast to detectable errors, which by definition are limited.
+ ',
+ 601 => '
+ Gilb’s Fourth Law of Unreliability:
+ Investment in reliability will increase until it exceeds the
+ probable cost of errors, or until someone insists on getting
+ some useful work done.
+ ',
+ 602 => '
+ You get what you pay for.
+ ',
+ 603 => '
+ Make a wish, it just might come true.
+ ',
+ 604 => '
+ It is easier to change the specification to fit the program
+ than vice versa.
+ ',
+ 605 => '
+ Politicians speak for their parties, and parties never are, never have
+ been, and never will be wrong. ― Walter Dwight
+ ',
+ 606 => '
+ Too clever is dumb. Too dumb is clever.
+ ',
+ 607 => '
+ Made with real ingredients.
+ ',
+ 608 => '
+ All that is gold does not glitter, not all those who wander are lost.
+ ',
+ 609 => '
+ Just because a message may never be received does not mean it is
+ not worth sending.
+ ',
+ 610 => '
+ A novice was trying to fix a broken lisp machine by turning the
+ power off and on. Knight, seeing what the student was doing spoke sternly,
+ “You cannot fix a machine by just power-cycling it with no understanding
+ of what is going wrong.” Knight turned the machine off and on. The
+ machine worked.
+ ',
+ 611 => '
+ One size fits all, doesn’t fit anyone.
+ ',
+ 612 => '
+ Something’s rotten in the state of Denmark. ― Shakespeare
+ ',
+ 613 => '
+ All generalizations are false, including this one.
+ ― Unknown
+ ',
+ 614 => '
+ No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible.
+ ',
+ 615 => '
+ Shut off the engine before fueling.
+ ',
+ 616 => '
+ There’s an old proverb that says just about what ever you want it to.
+ ',
+ 617 => '
+ There’s a quote that says just about what ever you want it to.
+ ',
+ 618 => '
+ Perhaps one possible reason that things aren’t going according to plan
+ is that there never was a plan in the first place.
+ ',
+ 619 => '
+ Rules, Regulations, and Requirements.
+ ',
+ 620 => '
+ Bots. Bots everywhere.
+ ',
+ 621 => '
+ Remember, Grasshopper, falling down 1000 stairs begins by tripping over
+ the first one. ― Confusion
+ ',
+ 622 => '
+ Money makes the world go round. Nothing more, nothing less.
+ ',
+ 623 => '
+ If complexity got us into this mess, then why can’t it get us out?
+ ',
+ 624 => '
+ The Four Olds: Old Customs, Old Culture, Old Habits, and Old Ideas
+ ',
+ 625 => '
+ What is the opposite of clickbait?
+ ',
+ 626 => '
+ Might makes right: History is written by the victors.
+ ',
+ 627 => '
+ You cannot stop link rot.
+ ',
+ 628 => '
+ When in trouble or in doubt,
+ run in circles, scream and shout.
+ ',
+ 629 => '
+ The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has occurred.
+ ',
+ 630 => '
+ “Of all men’s miseries the bitterest is this: to know so much and
+ to have control over nothing.”
+ ― Herodotus, The Histories
+ ',
+ 631 => '
+ Click Farm: A place where a large group of workers are hired
+ to click on paid advertising links.
+ ',
+ 632 => '
+ There are two sides to every issue: one side is right and the
+ other is wrong, but the middle is always evil. The man who is
+ wrong still retains some respect for truth, if only by accepting
+ the responsibility of choice. But the man in the middle is the
+ knave who blanks out the truth in order to pretend that no
+ choice or values exist. ― Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged
+ ',
+ 633 => '
+ If wishes were horses, beggars would ride.
+ ',
+ 634 => '
+ The best lack all conviction, while the worst
+ are full of passionate intensity.
+ ― William Butler Yeats, The Second Coming
+ ',
+ 635 => '
+ NixOS sucks.
+ ',
+ 636 => '
+ Software is utterly broken.
+ ',
+ 637 => '
+ To continue reading, subscribe today.
+ ',
+ 638 => '
+ The man who does not read code has no advantage
+ over the man who cannot read code.
+ ',
+ 639 => '
+ Fortune favors the fortunate.
+ ',
+ 640 => '
+ It is much easier to suggest solutions when you know
+ nothing about the problem.
+ ',
+ 641 => '
+ The trouble with computers is that they do what you tell them, not what
+ you want. ― D. Cohen
+ ',
+ 642 => '
+ War is delightful to those who have had no experience of it.
+ ― Desiderius Erasmus Roterodamus
+ ',
+ 643 => '
+ Every so often the algorithm consults /dev/random for advice.
+ ',
+ 644 => '
+ Everyone thinks they are reasonable.
+ ',
+ 645 => '
+ It’s only a matter of time.
+ ',
+ 646 => '
+ The well has been poisoned.
+ ',
+ 647 => '
+ Zero trust.
+ ',
+ 648 => '
+ Lisp, Lisp, Lisp Machine,
+ Lisp Machine is Fun.
+ Lisp, Lisp, Lisp Machine,
+ Fun for everyone.
+ ',
+ 649 => '
+ Don’t panic.
+ ',
+ 650 => '
+ We are inclined to believe those we do not know, because they have
+ never deceived us. ― Samuel Johnson
+ ',
+ 651 => '
+ Knowledge is of two kinds. We know a subject ourselves, or
+ we know where we can find information upon it.
+ ― Samuel Johnson
+ ',
+ 652 => '
+ Join in on the new game that’s sweeping the country.
+ It’s called “Bureaucracy”. Everybody stands in a circle.
+ The first person to do anything loses. Start!
+ ',
+ 653 => '
+ An optimist believes we live in the best world possible;
+ a pessimist fears that this is true.
+ ',
+ 654 => '
+ As of next week, passwords will be entered in morse code.
+ ',
+ 655 => '
+ If life is merely a game, the question still remains: for whose amusement?
+ ',
+ 656 => '
+ Just read the instructions.
+ ',
+ 657 => '
+ Like, subscribe, and hit the bell icon.
+ ',
+ 658 => '
+ All systems operational.
+ ',
+ 659 => '
+ Justice standeth afar off.
+ ',
+ 660 => '
+ Speak your mind at your own peril.
+ ',
+ 661 => '
+ My hammer is better than your hammer.
+ ',
+ 662 => '
+ The question of whether computers can think is just like the question of
+ whether submarines can swim. ― Edsger W. Dijkstra
+ ',
+ 663 => '
+ Weiner’s Law of Libraries: There are no answers, only cross references.
+ ',
+ 664 => '
+ Nothing is ever a total loss; it can always serve as a bad example.
+ ',
+ 665 => '
+ Meader’s Law: What ever happens to you, it will previously
+ have happened to everyone you know, only more so.
+ ',
+ 666 => '
+ Most seminars have a happy ending. Everyone’s glad when they’re over.
+ ',
+ 667 => '
+ He who fights and runs away lives to fight another day.
+ ',
+ 668 => '
+ Youth is when you blame all your troubles on your parents; maturity is
+ when you learn that everything is the fault of the younger generation.
+ ',
+ 669 => '
+ Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body.
+ ',
+ 670 => '
+ Never put off until tomorrow what you can do today. There might be a
+ law against it by that time.
+ ',
+ 671 => '
+ Wisdom is better than weapons of war.
+ ',
+ 672 => '
+ Put all eggs in one basket. Make sure to count them before they hatch.
+ ',
+ 673 => '
+ “Please, sir, I want some more.” ― Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist
+ ',
+ 674 => '
+ The wise man’s eyes are in his head.
+ ',
+ 675 => '
+ Bread and circuses.
+ ',
+ 676 => '
+ The forty―eight laws of weakness.
+ ',
+ 677 => '
+ Silent majorities, loud minorities.
+ ',
+ 678 => '
+ The poor is hated even of his own neighbour:
+ but the rich hath many friends.
+ ― Proverbs
+ ',
+ 679 => '
+ Beware of those who talk a good metagame.
+ ',
+ 680 => '
+ Just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.
+ ',
+ 681 => '
+ Even if you can deceive people about a product
+ through misleading statements,
+ sooner or later the product will speak for itself.
+ ― Hajime Karatsu
+ ',
+ 682 => '
+ Normal times may possibly be over forever.
+ ',
+ 683 => '
+ Many people are desperately looking for some wise advice which will
+ recommend that they do what they want to do.
+ ',
+ 684 => '
+ Did it ever occur to you that fat chance and slim chance
+ mean the same thing? Or that we drive on parkways and park
+ on driveways?
+ ',
+ 685 => '
+ To believe in personal responsibility would be to destroy the whole
+ special role of the anointed, whose vision casts them in the role
+ of rescuers of people treated unfairly by society.
+ ― Thomas Sowell, The Vision of the Anointed: Self-Congratulation
+ as a Basis for Social Policy
+ ',
+ 686 => '
+ Why be difficult when, with a bit of effort, you could
+ be impossible?
+ ',
+ 687 => '
+ Those who don’t know, talk. Those who don’t talk, know.
+ ',
+ 688 => '
+ No one lives forever.
+ ',
+ 689 => '
+ Dark Pattern: An interface that has been carefully crafted to
+ mislead a user.
+ ',
+ 690 => '
+ When a fellow says, “It ain’t the money but the principle of the thing,”
+ it’s the money. ― Kim Hubbard
+ ',
+ 691 => '
+ Major premise: Sixty men can do sixty times as much work as one man.
+ Minor premise: A man can dig a posthole in sixty seconds.
+ Conclusion: Sixty men can dig a posthole in one second.
+ ― The Devil’s Dictionary
+ ',
+ 692 => '
+ Does freedom of speech actually exist?
+ ',
+ 693 => '
+ Let’s count the beans.
+ ',
+ 694 => '
+ The uploader has not made this video available in your country.
+ ',
+ 695 => '
+ Clickbait works every time.
+ ',
+ 696 => '
+ You can be replaced by this computer, maybe.
+ ',
+ 697 => '
+ People will do tomorrow what they did today because that is what they
+ did yesterday.
+ ',
+ 698 => '
+ Everything might be different in the present if only one thing had
+ been different in the past.
+ ',
+ 699 => '
+ Fiefdoms still exist.
+ ',
+ 700 => '
+ Where there is a personality, there is a cult.
+ ',
+ 701 => '
+ Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!
+ Nothing beside remains. ― Percy Bysshe Shelley’s Ozymandias
+ ',
+ 702 => '
+ Everything ends badly. Otherwise it wouldn’t end.
+ ',
+ 703 => '
+ Imagine if every Thursday your shoes exploded if you tied them the usual
+ way. This happens to us all the time with computers, and nobody thinks of
+ complaining. ― Jeff Raskin
+ ',
+ 704 => '
+ Utility is when you have one telephone, luxury is when you have two,
+ opulence is when you have three ― and paradise is when you have none.
+ ― Doug Larson
+ ',
+ 705 => '
+ It is fortune, not wisdom, that rules man’s life.
+ ',
+ 706 => '
+ Fact or Opinion.
+ ',
+ 707 => '
+ Even the earth itself cannot contain all the evil.
+ ',
+ 708 => '
+ Many are called, few are chosen. Fewer still get to do the choosing.
+ ',
+ 709 => '
+ “Liberty is always dangerous, but it is the safest thing we have.”
+ ― Harry Emerson Fosdick
+ ',
+ 710 => '
+ People who claim they don’t let little things bother them have never
+ slept in a room with a single mosquito.
+ ',
+ 711 => '
+ Now there was found in it a poor wise man, and he by his wisdom
+ delivered the city; yet no man remembered that same poor man.
+ — Ecclesiastes
+ ',
+ 712 => '
+ If you’re happy, you’re successful.
+ ',
+ 713 => '
+ The Internet is the greatest game of telephone in existence.
+ ',
+ 714 => '
+ Crush the competition.
+ ',
+ 715 => '
+ Buy the competition.
+ ',
+ 716 => '
+ Those of you who think you know everything are annoying to those of
+ us who do.
+ ',
+ 717 => '
+ It is easier to find people fit to govern themselves than
+ people fit to govern others. — Lord Acton
+ ',
+ 718 => '
+ “Everybody likes to get as much power as circumstances
+ allow, and nobody will vote for a self-denying ordinance.”
+ — Lord Acton
+ ',
+ 719 => '
+ “Official truth is not actual truth.” — Lord Acton
+ ',
+ 720 => '
+ Welcome to dependency hell.
+ ',
+ 721 => '
+ Talk is truly cheap.
+ ',
+ 722 => '
+ This website is too bloated.
+ ',
+ 723 => '
+ After the game the king and the pawn go in the same box.
+ — Italian Proverb
+ ',
+ 724 => '
+ Experience is a good teacher, but she sends in terrific bills.
+ — Minna Antrim, “Naked Truth and Veiled Allusions”
+ ',
+ 725 => '
+ It’s a good thing we don’t get all the government we pay for.
+ ',
+ 726 => '
+ The kind of danger people most enjoy is the kind they can watch from
+ a safe place.
+ ',
+ 727 => '
+ The truth eventually comes out.
+ ',
+ 728 => '
+ Newer isn’t always better.
+ ',
+ 729 => '
+ He who foresees calamities suffers them twice over.
+ ',
+ 730 => '
+ Sometimes you don’t get what you pay for.
+ ',
+ 731 => '
+ Always sort by controversial.
+ ',
+ 732 => '
+ Once they go up, who cares where they come down?
+ That’s not my department.
+ ',
+ 733 => '
+ And what might your name be? “Alexander.” So, you can talk?
+ “Y-Yes, sir.” Take him back! He can still talk!
+ — Pinocchio’s Pleasure Island
+ ',
+ 734 => '
+ Flattery will get you everywhere.
+ ',
+ 735 => '
+ According to the latest official figures, 43% of all
+ statistics are totally worthless.
+ ',
+ 736 => '
+ Unix Express: All passengers bring a piece of the aeroplane and a
+ box of tools with them to the airport. They gather on
+ the tarmac, arguing constantly about what kind of plane
+ they want to build and how to put it together. Eventually,
+ the passengers split into groups and build several different aircraft,
+ but give them all the same name. Some passengers actually
+ reach their destinations. All passengers believe they got there.
+ ',
+ 737 => '
+ The network effect is powerful.
+ ',
+ 738 => '
+ The strong give up and move away, while the weak give up and stay.
+ ',
+ 739 => '
+ Academic politics is the most vicious and bitter form of politics,
+ because the stakes are so low. — Wallace Sayre
+ ',
+ 740 => '
+ Stolen waters are sweet.
+ ',
+ 741 => '
+ “The reasonable man adapts himself to the world: the unreasonable
+ one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore
+ all progress depends on the unreasonable man.”
+ — George Bernard Shaw, Man and Superman
+ ',
+ 742 => '
+ As I pass through my incarnations in every age and race,
+ I make my proper prostrations to the Gods of the market-place.
+ — Rudyard Kipling, The Gods of the Copybook Headings
+ ',
+ 743 => '
+ Maybe users like spam?
+ ',
+ 744 => '
+ Appeal to Novelty: It’s current year, you’re wrong.
+ ',
+ 745 => '
+ A poor man that oppresseth the poor is like a sweeping rain which
+ leaveth no food. — Proverbs
+ ',
+ 746 => '
+ Talking past each other: A situation where two or more people talk
+ about different subjects, while believing that they are talking
+ about the same thing.
+ ',
+ 747 => '
+ Not all problems need technological solutions.
+ ',
+ 748 => '
+ Many times a technical solution merely replaces old problems with
+ new ones.
+ ',
+ 749 => '
+ The cheapest, fastest, and most reliable components are those that
+ aren’t there. — Gordon Bell
+ ',
+ 750 => '
+ Controlling complexity is the essence of computer programming.
+ — Brian Kernighan
+ ',
+ 751 => '
+ UNIX was not designed to stop its users from doing stupid things,
+ as that would also stop them from doing clever things. — Doug Gwyn
+ ',
+ 752 => '
+ Life is too short to run proprietary software. — Bdale Garbee
+ ',
+ 753 => '
+ The central enemy of reliability is complexity. — Geer
+ ',
+ 754 => '
+ Essentially everyone, when they first build a distributed
+ application, makes the following eight assumptions.
+ All prove to be false in the long run and all cause big
+ trouble and painful learning experiences.
+ (1) The network is reliable.
+ (2) Latency is zero.
+ (3) Bandwidth is infinite.
+ (4) The network is secure.
+ (5) Topology doesn’t change.
+ (6) There is one administrator.
+ (7) Transport cost is zero.
+ (8) The network is homogeneous.
+ — Peter Deutsch
+ ',
+ 755 => '
+ Most software today is very much like an Egyptian
+ pyramid with millions of bricks piled on top of each other,
+ with no structural integrity, but just done by brute force
+ and thousands of slaves. — Alan Kay
+ ',
+ 756 => '
+ Complexity kills. It sucks the life out of developers,
+ it makes products difficult to plan, build and test,
+ it introduces security challenges and it causes end-user
+ and administrator frustration. — Ray Ozzie
+ ',
+ 757 => '
+ Increasingly, people seem to misinterpret complexity as
+ sophistication, which is baffling—the incomprehensible should
+ cause suspicion rather than admiration. Possibly this trend
+ results from a mistaken belief that using a somewhat
+ mysterious device confers an aura of power on the user.
+ — Niklaus Wirth
+ ',
+ 758 => '
+ My definition of an expert in any field is a person who
+ knows enough about what’s really going on to be scared.
+ — P. J. Plauger
+ ',
+ 759 => '
+ The best code is no code at all.
+ ',
+ 760 => '
+ The most amazing achievement of the computer software
+ industry is its continuing cancellation of the steady
+ and staggering gains made by the computer hardware industry.
+ — Henry Petroski
+ ',
+ 761 => '
+ Software sucks because users demand it to. — Nathan Myhrvold
+ ',
+ 762 => '
+ Join in on the new game that’s sweeping the world.
+ It’s called “Corruption”. Every Government stands in a circle.
+ The first one to improve the state of the country loses. Begin!
+ ',
+ 763 => '
+ Are most politicians liars?
+ ',
+ 764 => '
+ Flights of fancy.
+ ',
+ 765 => '
+ Shill: A plant or a stooge who publicly helps or gives
+ credibility to a person or organization without disclosing
+ that they have a close relationship with the person or organization.
+ ',
+ 766 => '
+ It’s almost time to pay the piper.
+ ',
+ 767 => '
+ Planned Obsolescence: A policy of planning or designing a product
+ with an artificially limited useful life, so that it becomes obsolete.
+ ',
+ 768 => '
+ The genius of our ruling class is that it has kept a majority of the
+ people from ever questioning the inequity of a system where most people
+ drudge along paying heavy taxes for which they get nothing in return.
+ — Gore Vidal
+ ',
+ 769 => '
+ Specifications subject to change without notice.
+ ',
+ 770 => '
+ Good leaders being scarce, following yourself is now allowed.
+ ',
+ 771 => '
+ Three rules for sounding like an expert:
+ (1) Oversimplify your explanations to the point of uselessness.
+ (2) Always point out second-order effects, but never point out when they
+ can be ignored.
+ (3) Come up with three rules of your own.
+ ',
+ 772 => '
+ When you’re down and out, lift up your voice and shout,
+ “I’M DOWN AND OUT”!
+ ',
+ 773 => '
+ One planet is all you get.
+ ',
+ 774 => '
+ “Information is power. But like all power, there are those who want
+ to keep it for themselves.”
+ ― Aaron Swartz
+ ',
+ 775 => '
+ This page intentionally left blank.
+ ',
+ 776 => '
+ Books are better than the Internet.
+ ',
+ 777 => '
+ It’s difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends
+ on his not understanding it.
+ ',
+ 778 => '
+ Sometimes the only winning move is not to play.
+ ',
+ 779 => '
+ This economy is not sustainable.
+ ',
+ 780 => '
+ One weird trick advertisements.
+ ',
+ 781 => '
+ A clever prophet makes sure of the event first.
+ ',
+ 782 => '
+ And miles to go before I sleep.
+ — Robert Frost
+ ',
+ 783 => '
+ Committees have become so important nowadays that subcommittees have to
+ be appointed to do the work.
+ ',
+ 784 => '
+ The high cost of living hasn’t affected its popularity.
+ ',
+ 785 => '
+ Always wear your seat belt.
+ ',
+ 786 => '
+ People actually believe what they read on social media.
+ ',
+ 787 => '
+ Contestants have been briefed on some of the questions before the show.
+ ',
+ 788 => '
+ Mankind is poised midway between the gods and the beasts.
+ — Plotinus
+ ',
+ 789 => '
+ People want either less corruption or more of a chance to
+ participate in it.
+ ',
+ 790 => '
+ While you don’t greatly need the outside world, it’s still very
+ reassuring to know that it’s still there.
+ ',
+ 791 => '
+ Clovis’ Consideration of an Atmospheric Anomaly:
+ The perversity of nature is nowhere better demonstrated
+ than by the fact that, when exposed to the same atmosphere,
+ bread becomes hard while crackers become soft.
+ ',
+ 792 => '
+ Everything that can be invented has been invented.
+ — Charles Duell
+ ',
+ 793 => '
+ Where do you think you’re going today?
+ ',
+ 794 => '
+ Education is what survives when what has been learnt has been forgotten.
+ — B. F. Skinner
+ ',
+ 795 => '
+ There’s no heavier burden than a great potential.
+ ',
+ 796 => '
+ Blutarsky’s Axiom: Nothing is impossible for the man who will not
+ listen to reason.
+ ',
+ 797 => '
+ One man tells a falsehood, a hundred repeat it as the truth.
+ ',
+ 798 => '
+ A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a
+ simple system that works.
+ ',
+ 799 => '
+ Larkinson’s Law: All laws are basically false.
+ ',
+ 800 => '
+ What fools these mortals be. — Lucius Annaeus Seneca
+ ',
+ 801 => '
+ Time and tide wait for no man.
+ ',
+ 802 => '
+ Talk is cheap because supply always exceeds demand.
+ ',
+ 803 => '
+ One nuclear bomb can ruin your whole day.
+ ',
+ 804 => '
+ Are you making all this up as you go along?
+ ',
+ 805 => '
+ One man’s utopia is another man’s dystopia.
+ ',
+ 806 => '
+ Thanks for coming to my TED talk.
+ ',
+ 807 => '
+ Redundant topology.
+ ',
+ 808 => '
+ Their business model is spam.
+ ',
+ 809 => '
+ Teamwork is essential — it allows you to blame someone else.
+ ',
+ 810 => '
+ “When I die, I want the people I did group projects with to lower
+ me into my grave so they can let me down one last time.”
+ ',
+ 811 => '
+ The Internet is utterly broken.
+ ',
+ 812 => '
+ If Bill Gates is the devil then Linus Torvalds must be the messiah.
+ — Unknown
+ ',
+ 813 => '
+ Some men are discovered; others are found out.
+ ',
+ 814 => '
+ Folly is set in great dignity.
+ ',
+ 815 => '
+ “Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times.
+ Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
+ — G. Michael Hopf, Those Who Remain
+ ',
+ 816 => '
+ The time for action is past! Now is the time for senseless bickering.
+ ',
+ 817 => '
+ If the grass is greener on other side of fence, consider what may be
+ fertilizing it.
+ ',
+ 818 => '
+ Cheer Up! Things are getting worse at a slower rate.
+ ',
+ 819 => '
+ Never promise more than you can perform. — Publilius Syrus
+ ',
+ 820 => '
+ New systems generate new problems.
+ ',
+ 821 => '
+ Regression Analysis: Mathematical techniques for trying to
+ understand why things are getting worse.
+ ',
+ 822 => '
+ The Linux philosophy is “laugh in the face of danger”.
+ Oops. Wrong one. “Do it yourself”. That’s it. — Linus Torvalds
+ ',
+ 823 => '
+ “In the future, everyone will be world famous for 15
+ minutes.” — Andy Warhol
+ ',
+ 824 => '
+ A small town that cannot support one lawyer can always support two.
+ ',
+ 825 => '
+ To refuse praise is to seek praise twice.
+ ',
+ 826 => '
+ When you have an efficient government, you have a dictatorship.
+ — Harry Truman
+ ',
+ 827 => '
+ If you think things can’t get worse it’s probably only because you
+ lack sufficient imagination.
+ ',
+ 828 => '
+ The following statement is not true. The previous statement is true.
+ ',
+ 829 => '
+ Nearly every complex solution to a programming problem that I
+ have looked at carefully has turned out to be wrong. — Brent Welch
+ ',
+ 830 => '
+ “Justice at all costs’ is not justice.”
+ — Thomas Sowell, The Quest for Cosmic Justice
+ ',
+ 831 => '
+ “Suppose you are wrong? How would you know?
+ How would you test for that possibility?”
+ ― Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 832 => '
+ “Life does not ask what we want. It presents us with options.”
+ ― Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 833 => '
+ Throw away documentation and manuals,
+ and users will be a hundred times happier.
+ Throw away privileges and quotas,
+ and users will do the right thing.
+ Throw away proprietary and site licenses,
+ and there won’t be any pirating.
+ If these three aren’t enough,
+ just stay at your home directory
+ and let all processes take their course.
+ ',
+ 834 => '
+ Call for pricing.
+ ',
+ 835 => '
+ Monopolies of knowledge.
+ ',
+ 836 => '
+ Unemployment is unused capacity.
+ ',
+ 837 => '
+ Yet creeds mean very little, Coth answered the dark god, still speaking
+ almost gently. The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
+ possible worlds; and the pessimist fears this is true.
+ ― James Cabell, “The Silver Stallion”
+ ',
+ 838 => '
+ Bikeshedding: The process of arguing endlessly over details of some small
+ and relatively unimportant thing.
+ ',
+ 839 => '
+ “Unfortunately, propaganda works.” ― Andy Rooney
+ ',
+ 840 => '
+ Mac Airways:
+ The cashiers, flight attendants and pilots all look the same, feel the same
+ and act the same. When asked questions about the flight, they reply that you
+ don’t want to know, don’t need to know and would you please return to your
+ seat and watch the movie.
+ ',
+ 841 => '
+ A lie can travel halfway around the world before the truth can get its boots on.
+ ',
+ 842 => '
+ Falsehood will fly, as it were, on the wings of the wind, and carry its tales
+ to every corner of the earth; whilst truth lags behind; her steps,
+ though sure, are slow and solemn. ― Thomas Francklin
+ ',
+ 843 => '
+ Those who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who
+ feel that we know everything, especially when we discover that
+ everything they know and everything we know does not match.
+ ',
+ 844 => '
+ We are not anticipating any emergencies.
+ ',
+ 845 => '
+ When ever someone tells you to take their advice, you can be pretty sure
+ that they’re not using it.
+ ',
+ 846 => '
+ Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men
+ have mediocrity thrust upon them. ― Joseph Heller’s Catch-22
+ ',
+ 847 => '
+ In the whole world you know, there’s a million boys and girls.
+ ― Nina Simone, To Be Young, Gifted and Black
+ ',
+ 848 => '
+ Plastic Love.
+ ',
+ 849 => '
+ Watson’s Law: The reliability of machinery is inversely proportional to the
+ number and significance of any persons watching it.
+ ',
+ 850 => '
+ The danger is not that a particular class is unfit to govern. Every class
+ is unfit to govern. ― Lord Acton
+ ',
+ 851 => '
+ Everyone says that having power is a great responsibility. This is
+ a lot of bunk. Responsibility is when someone can blame you if something
+ goes wrong. When you have power you are surrounded by people whose job it
+ is to take the blame for your mistakes. If they’re smart, that is.
+ ― Cerebus The Aardvark, “On Governing”
+ ',
+ 852 => '
+ To err is human. To blame someone else for your mistakes is even more human.
+ ',
+ 853 => '
+ When the wicked rise, men hide themselves: but when they perish,
+ the righteous increase. ― Proverbs
+ ',
+ 854 => '
+ YouTube may terminate your access, or your Google account’s access to all
+ or part of the Service if YouTube believes, in its sole discretion,
+ that provision of the Service to you is no longer commercially viable.
+ ― Google’s YouTube, Terms of Service, 2019
+ ',
+ 855 => '
+ We may suspend or terminate your account or cease providing you with all or part
+ of the Services at any time for any or no reason. ― Twitter, Terms of Service, 2020
+ ',
+ 856 => '
+ WhatsApp may also terminate a user’s access to the Service, if they are
+ determined to be a repeat infringer, or for any or no reason, including
+ being annoying. An annoying person is anyone who is (capriciously or not)
+ determined to be annoying by authorized WhatsApp employees, agents, subagents,
+ superagents or superheros.
+ ― WhatsApp, Terms of Service, 2012
+ ',
+ 857 => '
+ We reserve the right to modify or terminate the Instagram service for any
+ reason, without notice at any time. ― Instagram, Terms of Service, 2013
+ ',
+ 858 => '
+ Spotify may terminate the Agreements or suspend your access to the
+ Spotify Service at any time. ― Spotify, Terms and Conditions, 2019
+ ',
+ 859 => '
+ PeerTube: A free and open-source decentralized self-hosted federated video platform.
+ ',
+ 860 => '
+ Mastodon: A free and open-source self-hosted social networking service.
+ ',
+ 861 => '
+ The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people
+ click ads. That sucks. ― Jeff Hammerbacher
+ ',
+ 862 => '
+ We can’t both be right.
+ ',
+ 863 => '
+ If we all work together, we can totally disrupt the system.
+ ',
+ 864 => '
+ If you stick your head in the sand, one thing is for sure, you’re gonna
+ get your rear kicked.
+ ',
+ 865 => '
+ “Whoever undertakes to set himself up as a judge of truth and knowledge is
+ shipwrecked by the laughter of the gods.”
+ ',
+ 866 => '
+ We have the best politicians money can buy.
+ ',
+ 867 => '
+ Eagleson’s Law: Any code of your own that you haven’t looked at for six or more
+ months, might as well have been written by someone else.
+ ',
+ 868 => '
+ It is said an Eastern monarch once charged his wise men to invent him a
+ sentence to be ever in view, and which should be true and appropriate
+ in all times and situations. They presented him the words: “And this,
+ too, shall pass away.” ― Abraham Lincoln
+ ',
+ 869 => '
+ All things are full of labour; man cannot utter it: the eye is not
+ satisfied with seeing, nor the ear filled with hearing. ― Ecclesiastes
+ ',
+ 870 => '
+ “Preaching to the choir in an echo chamber.”
+ ',
+ 871 => '
+ Every program attempts to expand until it can either read or replace mail.
+ ',
+ 872 => '
+ Cobra Effect: When an attempted solution to a problem makes the problem worse.
+ Offering a bounty for every dead venomous cobra incentivizes people to breed
+ more cobras for the reward.
+ ',
+ 873 => '
+ He who minds his own business is never unemployed.
+ ',
+ 874 => '
+ Write a wise saying and your name will live on forever. ― Unknown
+ ',
+ 875 => '
+ “We live in a world where unfortunately the distinction between true and false
+ appears to become increasingly blurred by manipulation of facts,
+ by exploitation of uncritical minds, and by the pollution of the language.”
+ ― Arne Tiselius
+ ',
+ 876 => '
+ Corollary to Hanlon’s Razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which
+ is adequately explained by greed.
+ ',
+ 877 => '
+ The world is coming to an end. Please log off.
+ ',
+ 878 => '
+ What ever became of eternal truth?
+ ',
+ 879 => '
+ Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
+ ',
+ 880 => '
+ If it works, it’s out of date.
+ ',
+ 881 => '
+ “I hate quotations. Tell me what you know.” ― Ralph Waldo Emerson
+ ',
+ 882 => '
+ “Politics is the gentle art of getting votes from the poor and
+ campaign funds from the rich, by promising to protect each from the other.”
+ ― Oscar Ameringer
+ ',
+ 883 => '
+ We prefer to believe that the absence of inverted commas guarantees the
+ originality of a thought, whereas it may be merely that the utterer has
+ forgotten its source. ― Clifton Fadiman, “Any Number Can Play”
+ ',
+ 884 => '
+ Which is worse: ignorance or apathy? Who knows? Who cares?
+ ',
+ 885 => '
+ “Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book rewritten,
+ every picture has been repainted, every statue and street building
+ has been renamed, every date has been altered. And the process
+ is continuing day by day and minute by minute. History has stopped.
+ Nothing exists except an endless present in which the Party is always right.”
+ ― George Orwell, 1984
+ ',
+ 886 => '
+ The same words mean different things to different people.
+ ',
+ 887 => '
+ Objects are lost only because people look where they are not rather than
+ where they are.
+ ',
+ 888 => '
+ If you learn one useless thing every day, in a single year you’ll learn
+ 365 useless things.
+ ',
+ 889 => '
+ Phases of a Project:
+ (1) Exultation.
+ (2) Disenchantment.
+ (3) Confusion.
+ (4) Search for the Guilty.
+ (5) Punishment for the Innocent.
+ (6) Distinction for the Uninvolved.
+ ',
+ 890 => '
+ Banana Republic: A politically unstable country with an economy
+ dependent upon a limited-resource product.
+ ',
+ 891 => '
+ Throw-away Society: A society with an excessive production of short-lived
+ or disposable items over durable goods that can be repaired.
+ ',
+ 892 => '
+ Got a dictionary? I want to know the meaning of life.
+ ',
+ 893 => '
+ Apparently any program which runs right is obsolete.
+ ',
+ 894 => '
+ Good government never depends upon laws, but upon the personal qualities of
+ those who govern. The machinery of government is always subordinate to the
+ will of those who administer that machinery. The most important element of
+ government, therefore, is the method of choosing leaders.
+ ― Frank Herbert, “Children of Dune”
+ ',
+ 895 => '
+ The majesty and grandeur of the English language; it’s the greatest possession
+ we have. The noblest thoughts that ever flowed through the hearts of men are
+ contained in its extraordinary, imaginative and musical mixtures of sounds.
+ ― George Bernard Shaw, My Fair Lady
+ ',
+ 896 => '
+ If we all work together, we can make the rich richer.
+ ',
+ 897 => '
+ Always read the fine print.
+ ',
+ 898 => '
+ Politics and the fate of mankind are formed by men without ideals and without
+ greatness. Those who have greatness within them do not go in for politics.
+ ― Albert Camus
+ ',
+ 899 => '
+ And the best at murder are those who preach against it.
+ And the best at hate are those who preach love.
+ And the best at war finally are those who preach peace.
+ ― Charles Bukowski, “The Genius Of The Crowd”
+ ',
+ 900 => '
+ Conway’s Law: Any organization that designs a system will produce a design
+ whose structure is a copy of the organization’s communication structure.
+ ',
+ 901 => '
+ If you don’t read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the
+ newspaper you are misinformed.
+ ',
+ 902 => '
+ “There are only two kinds of languages: the ones people complain about
+ and the ones nobody uses.” ― Bjarne Stroustrup
+ ',
+ 903 => '
+ Con man: A confidence man.
+ ',
+ 904 => '
+ “Decadence is a moral and spiritual disease, resulting from too long a
+ period of wealth and power, producing cynicism, decline of religion,
+ pessimism and frivolity. The citizens of such a nation will no
+ longer make an effort to save themselves, because they are not
+ convinced that anything in life is worth saving.”
+ ― John Bagot Glubb, The Fate of Empires and Search for Survival
+ ',
+ 905 => '
+ A committee is organic rather than mechanical in its nature: it
+ is not a structure but a plant. It takes root and grows, it
+ flowers, wilts, and dies, scattering the seed from which other
+ committees will bloom in their turn. ― C. Northcote Parkinson
+ ',
+ 906 => '
+ You too can be a confidence man or woman!
+ ',
+ 907 => '
+ When you’re in command, command. ― Admiral Nimitz
+ ',
+ 908 => '
+ Life is fraught with opportunities to keep your mouth shut.
+ ',
+ 909 => '
+ Moreover the profit of the earth is for all: the king himself
+ is served by the field. ― Ecclesiastes
+ ',
+ 910 => '
+ The golden boy can do no wrong.
+ ',
+ 911 => '
+ Everyone who comes in here wants three things:
+ (1) They want it quick.
+ (2) They want it good.
+ (3) They want it cheap.
+ ',
+ 912 => '
+ If you don’t do the things that are not worth doing, who will?
+ ',
+ 913 => '
+ Somehow, the world always affects you more than you affect it.
+ ',
+ 914 => '
+ Cheap labour.
+ ',
+ 915 => '
+ The last person that quit or was fired will be held responsible for
+ everything that goes wrong ― until the next person quits or is fired.
+ ',
+ 916 => '
+ Journalism is dead.
+ ',
+ 917 => '
+ To have respect of persons is not good: for for a piece of bread
+ that man will transgress. ― Proverbs
+ ',
+ 918 => '
+ Nothing lasts forever.
+ ',
+ 919 => '
+ Where is my flying car?
+ ',
+ 920 => '
+ This is disputed.
+ ',
+ 921 => '
+ Sometimes, the best solution is to do nothing at all.
+ ',
+ 922 => '
+ Don’t build your house on the sand.
+ ',
+ 923 => '
+ It is a hard matter, my fellow citizens, to argue with the belly,
+ since it has no ears. ― Marcus Porcius Cato
+ ',
+ 924 => '
+ Propaganda is one hell of a drug.
+ ',
+ 925 => '
+ The Three Wise Monkeys: See no evil, hear no evil, and speak no evil.
+ ',
+ 926 => '
+ As for man, his days are as grass: as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth.
+ For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone; and the place thereof shall
+ know it no more. — David
+ ',
+ 927 => '
+ You must prove that you are not a robot.
+ ',
+ 928 => '
+ There’s nothing remarkable about it. All one has to do is hit the right
+ keys at the right time and the instrument plays itself. – J. S. Bach
+ ',
+ 929 => '
+ If this is a service economy, why is the service so bad?
+ ',
+ 930 => '
+ There is a sore evil which I have seen under the sun, namely,
+ riches kept for the owners thereof to their hurt.
+ But those riches perish by evil travail:
+ and he begetteth a son, and there is nothing in his hand. — Ecclesiastes
+ ',
+ 931 => '
+ Thus, not all data is created equal.
+ ',
+ 932 => '
+ Argument From Authority: A popular yet controversial type of argument in
+ which the opinion of an authority on a topic is used as evidence to
+ support an argument.
+ ',
+ 933 => '
+ Sock Puppet: A fake online identity used for the purpose of deception.
+ Deception, be it fast or slow, can involve black or grey propaganda to
+ manipulate public opinion.
+ ',
+ 934 => '
+ To be forewarned is to be forearmed.
+ ',
+ 935 => '
+ It’s the worst of both worlds.
+ ',
+ 936 => '
+ “All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly
+ in a room alone.” — Blaise Pascal, Pensées
+ ',
+ 937 => '
+ “The devil is not as black as he is painted.”
+ — Dante Alighieri, The Divine Comedy
+ ',
+ 938 => '
+ Don’t be a shill.
+ ',
+ 939 => '
+ Philosophy: A route of many roads leading from nowhere to nothing.
+ — Ambrose Bierce
+ ',
+ 940 => '
+ Heller’s Law: The first myth of management is that it exists.
+ Johnson’s Corollary: Nobody really knows what is going on anywhere
+ within the organization.
+ ',
+ 941 => '
+ Become a Lord or Lady today!
+ ',
+ 942 => '
+ “Created by wars that required it, the machine now created the wars it
+ required.” — Joseph Aloïs Schumpeter, Imperialism and Social Classes
+ ',
+ 943 => '
+ “History is a record of “effects” the vast majority of which nobody
+ intended to produce.” — Joseph Aloïs Schumpeter
+ ',
+ 944 => '
+ Many arguments are semantic disputes.
+ ',
+ 945 => '
+ Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of tapes
+ hurtling down the highway. — Andrew S. Tanenbaum
+ ',
+ 946 => '
+ Winning Arguments: There is no evidence to support your assertion.
+ ',
+ 947 => '
+ Most of what you read on the Internet is written by insane people.
+ ',
+ 948 => '
+ Politician’s Logic: (1) We must do something.
+ (2) This is something. (3) Therefore, we must do this.
+ ',
+ 949 => '
+ Violence is golden.
+ ',
+ 950 => '
+ Politics is a personal affair.
+ ',
+ 951 => '
+ Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.
+ ',
+ 952 => '
+ “The road to hell is paved with Ivy League degrees.” — Thomas Sowell
+ ',
+ 953 => '
+ There are no atheists in foxholes.
+ ',
+ 954 => '
+ “Another man may look like a deathless one on high
+ but there’s not a bit of grace to crown his words.
+ Just like you, my fine, handsome friend. Not even
+ a god could improve those lovely looks of yours
+ but the mind inside is worthless.”
+ — Homer, The Odyssey
+ ',
+ 955 => '
+ Temporary: Permanent
+ ',
+ 956 => '
+ There are exceptions that prove the rule.
+ ',
+ 957 => '
+ Closed and open slavery.
+ ',
+ 958 => '
+ The Fourth Branch of Government: Social Media and The Press.
+ ',
+ 959 => '
+ He was a confidence man.
+ ',
+ 960 => '
+ Argument from Fallacy: The formal fallacy of analyzing an argument and
+ inferring that, since it contains a fallacy, its conclusion must be false.
+ ',
+ 961 => '
+ “What convinces masses are not facts, and not even invented facts, but
+ only the consistency of the system of which they are presumably a part.”
+ — Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism
+ ',
+ 962 => '
+ “For politics is not like the nursery; in politics obedience and support
+ are the same.” — Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the
+ Banality of Evil
+ ',
+ 963 => '
+ Reality follows fiction.
+ ',
+ 964 => '
+ Most of the great problems we face are caused by politicians creating
+ solutions to problems they created in the first place. — Walter E.
+ Williams
+ ',
+ 965 => '
+ It takes two to tango.
+ ',
+ 966 => '
+ “There are very few who can think, but every man wants to have an
+ opinion; and what remains but to take it ready-made from others, instead
+ of forming opinions for himself?” — Arthur Schopenhauer, The Art of
+ Always Being Right
+ ',
+ 967 => '
+ “A last trick is to become personal, insulting, and rude as soon as you
+ perceive that your opponent has the upper hand. In becoming personal you
+ leave the subject altogether, and turn your attack on the person by
+ remarks of an offensive and spiteful character. This is a very popular
+ trick, because everyone is able to carry it into effect.” — Arthur
+ Schopenhauer, The Art of Always Being Right
+ ',
+ 968 => '
+ “When the rich wage war it’s the poor who die.”
+ — Jean-Paul Sartre
+ ',
+ 969 => '
+ “Talent hits a target no one else can hit. Genius hits a target no one
+ else can see.” — Arthur Schopenhauer
+ ',
+ 970 => '
+ “Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced, where ignorance
+ prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that society is an
+ organized conspiracy to oppress, rob and degrade them, neither persons nor
+ property will be safe.” — Frederick Douglass
+ ',
+ 971 => '
+ They’re savages! Savages!
+ Dirty shrieking devils!
+ Now we sound the drums of war!
+ — Pocahontas’ Savages
+ ',
+ 972 => '
+ Simon’s Law: Everything put together falls apart sooner or later.
+ ',
+ 973 => '
+ A forbidden fruit creates many jams.
+ ',
+ 974 => '
+ Hydra of Lerna: Cut off one head and two more shall take its place.
+ ',
+ 975 => '
+ “But the educated public, the people who read the high-brow weeklies,
+ don’t need reconditioning. They’re all right already. They’ll believe
+ anything.” — C.S. Lewis, That Hideous Strength
+ ',
+ 976 => '
+ “Remember, the firemen are rarely necessary. The public itself stopped
+ reading of its own accord. You firemen provide a circus now and then at
+ which buildings are set off and crowds gather for the pretty blaze...”
+ — Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451
+ ',
+ 977 => '
+ Whatever it is, I fear Greeks even when they bring gifts.
+ — Publius Vergilius Maro (Virgil)
+ ',
+ 978 => '
+ “Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to
+ reform (or pause and reflect).” — Mark Twain
+ ',
+ 979 => '
+ Monkey see, monkey do.
+ ',
+ 980 => '
+ Nothing is so firmly believed as that which we least know.
+ — Michel de Montaigne
+ ',
+ 981 => '
+ A distributed system is one in which the failure of a computer
+ you didn’t even know existed can render your own computer
+ unusable. — Leslie Lamport, 1987
+ ',
+ 982 => '
+ Consequentialist: The end justifies the means.
+ ',
+ 983 => '
+ Currently unavailable.
+ ',
+ 984 => '
+ But does it scale?
+ ',
+ 985 => '
+ Can two walk together, except they be agreed? — Amos
+ ',
+ 986 => '
+ Dualism: Left, Right. Black, White.
+ ',
+ 987 => '
+ Nature imputes duality.
+ ',
+ 988 => '
+ “People are never more sincere than when they assume their own moral
+ superiority.” — Thomas Sowell, The Vision of the Anointed:
+ Self-Congratulation as a Basis for Social Policy
+ ',
+ 989 => '
+ Artificial Intelligence: /dev/random
+ ',
+ 990 => '
+ Cargo Cult: A millenarian belief system in which adherents perform
+ rituals which they believe will cause a more technologically advanced
+ society to deliver goods.
+ ',
+ 991 => '
+ Theosis: Unity with God.
+ Henosis: Unity with the Monad.
+ Transhumanism: Unity with the Machine.
+ ',
+ 992 => '
+ “If facts, logic, and scientific procedures are all just arbitrarily
+ “socially constructed” notions, then all that is left is consensus–more
+ specifically peer consensus, the kind of consensus that matters to
+ adolescents or to many among the intelligentsia.” ― Thomas Sowell,
+ Intellectuals and Society
+ ',
+ 993 => '
+ “Many intellectuals are so preoccupied with the notion that their
+ own special knowledge exceeds the average special knowledge of
+ millions of other people that they overlook the often far more
+ consequential fact that their mundane knowledge is not even one–tenth
+ of the total mundane knowledge of those millions.” — Thomas
+ Sowell, Intellectuals and Society
+ ',
+ 994 => '
+ Augustine’s 49th Law: Regulations grow at the same rate as weeds.
+ ',
+ 995 => '
+ Don’t make a big deal out of everything; just deal with everything.
+ ',
+ 996 => '
+ (1) Don’t think.
+ (2) If you do think, don’t speak.
+ (3) If you think and speak, don’t write.
+ (4) If you think, speak and write, don’t sign.
+ (5) If you think, speak, write and sign, don’t be surprised.
+ — Polish Joke
+ ',
+ 997 => '
+ In politics, temporary means permanent.
+ ',
+ 998 => '
+ In politics, the temporary becomes the permanent.
+ ',
+ 999 => '
+ The primary requisite for any new tax law is for it to exempt enough
+ voters to win the next election.
+ ',
+ 1000 => '
+ Farmer: “You can’t raffle off a dead donkey!”
+ Boy: “Sure I can. Watch me. I just won’t tell anybody he’s dead.”
+ — How to Sell a Dead Donkey
+ ',
+ 1001 => '
+ The bait and switch is the oldest trick in the book.
+ ',
+ 1002 => '
+ If you can’t stand the heat, get out of the kitchen.
+ ',
+ 1003 => '
+ Just when you thought you were winning the rat race, it abruptly ends.
+ ',
+ 1004 => '
+ Do the old eat the young?
+ ',
+ 1005 => '
+ No, we want a king to rule over us.
+ ',
+ 1006 => '
+ Please confirm my bias.
+ ',
+ 1007 => '
+ What if the universe is not immortal?
+ ',
+ 1008 => '
+ Consensus is the only thing that matters.
+ ',
+ 1009 => '
+ Wikipedia is not a reliable source, because it can be edited by anyone at
+ any time.
+ ',
+ 1010 => '
+ Feudalism is alive and well.
+ ',
+ 1011 => '
+ Eristic Dialectics: The Logic of Appearance.
+ ',
+ 1012 => '
+ Turning and turning in the widening gyre;
+ The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
+ Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
+ Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world.
+ ― William Butler Yeats, The Second Coming
+ ',
+ 1013 => '
+ “If people are good only because they fear punishment, and hope for
+ reward, then we are a sorry lot indeed.” — Albert Einstein, Religion
+ and Science
+ ',
+ 1014 => '
+ The best man for the job is often a woman.
+ ',
+ 1015 => '
+ The finest eloquence is that which gets things done; the worst is that which
+ delays them.
+ ',
+ 1016 => '
+ The wages of sin are high but you get your money’s worth.
+ ',
+ 1017 => '
+ Envy is a pain of mind that successful men cause their neighbors. –
+ Onasander, The General
+ ',
+ 1018 => '
+ “Despite the enormous quantity of books, how few people read! And if one
+ reads profitably, one would realize how much stupid stuff the vulgar herd
+ is content to swallow every day.” — Voltaire
+ ',
+ 1019 => '
+ “Love truth, but pardon error.” ― Voltaire
+ ',
+ 1020 => '
+ The current generation now sees everything clearly, it marvels at the
+ errors, it laughs at the folly of its ancestors, not seeing that this
+ chronicle is all overscored by divine fire, that every letter of it cries
+ out, that from everywhere the piercing finger is pointed at it, at this
+ current generation; but the current generation laughs and presumptuously,
+ proudly begins a series of new errors, at which their descendants will
+ also laugh afterwards. — Nikolai Gogol, Dead Souls
+ ',
+ 1021 => '
+ Show me the incentive and I will show you the outcome.
+ — Charlie Munger
+ ',
+ 1022 => '
+ The terms “free software” and “open source” stand for almost the
+ same range of programs. However, they say deeply different things about
+ those programs, based on different values. The free software movement
+ campaigns for freedom for the users of computing; it is a movement for
+ freedom and justice. By contrast, the open source idea values mainly
+ practical advantage and does not campaign for principles. This is why we
+ do not agree with open source, and do not use that term. — Richard Stallman
+ ',
+ 1023 => '
+ Plausible Deniability: An ability of prescience or forethought that
+ exploits a chain of command and the absence of evidence to deny
+ responsibility for actions committed. An adeptness to engender situations
+ that provide multiple outs.
+ ',
+ 1024 => '
+ “The man who lies asleep will never waken fame, and his desire and all
+ his life drift past him like a dream, and the traces of his memory fade
+ from time like smoke in air, or ripples on a stream.” — Dante
+ Alighieri, The Divine Comedy
+ ',
+ 1025 => '
+ Common sense isn’t actually common.
+ ',
+ 1026 => '
+ “There is no art which one government sooner learns of another, than
+ that of draining money from the pockets of the people.” — Adam Smith
+ ',
+ 1027 => '
+ Black Swan Event: An event that comes as a surprise, has a major effect,
+ and is often inappropriately rationalized after the fact with the benefit
+ of hindsight.
+ ',
+ 1028 => '
+ Money is the root of all money. — The Moving Finger
+ ',
+ 1029 => '
+ Social Media: The Perpetual Outrage Machine.
+ ',
+ 1030 => '
+ The time is out of joint. — Hamlet
+ ',
+ 1031 => '
+ Powerful government tends to draw into it people with bloated egos, people
+ who think they know more than everyone else and have little hesitance in
+ coercing their fellow man. Or as Nobel Laureate Friedrich Hayek said, “in
+ government, the scum rises to the top”. — Walter E. Williams
+ ',
+ 1032 => '
+ “Clickbait is dead.”
+ ',
+ 1033 => '
+ The road to hell is paved with asphalt.
+ ',
+ 1034 => '
+ When it comes to legalized bank robbing, I’m the best. — Floyd Mayweather
+ ',
+ 1035 => '
+ “But is it legal?” — Everything I Want to Do Is Illegal: War Stories
+ from the Local Food Front, Joel Salatin
+ ',
+ 1036 => '
+ Most open source software is free, at least at first glance.
+ ',
+ 1037 => '
+ The way to a man’s stomach is through his esophagus.
+ ',
+ 1038 => '
+ Trash the planet.
+ ',
+ 1039 => '
+ A jury consists of twelve persons chosen to decide who has the better
+ lawyer. — Robert Frost
+ ',
+ 1040 => '
+ Murphy’s Ninth Law: Nature always sides with the hidden flaw.
+ ',
+ 1041 => '
+ Rule of Defactualization: Information deteriorates upward through
+ bureaucracies.
+ ',
+ 1042 => '
+ Anderson’s Law: You can’t depend on anyone to be wrong all the time.
+ ',
+ 1043 => '
+ The bigger they are, the harder they hit.
+ ',
+ 1044 => '
+ You can fool some of the people all of the time and all of the people some
+ of the time, and that’s sufficient.
+ ',
+ 1045 => '
+ The Fame and Fortune Axiom: Competence is not a prerequisite for success.
+ ',
+ 1046 => '
+ Polis’ Attorney Law: Any law enacted with more than fifty words contains
+ at least one loophole.
+ ',
+ 1047 => '
+ Pray — or you will become prey.
+ ',
+ 1048 => '
+ You can get so much farther with a kind word and a gun than with a kind
+ word alone. — Irwin Corey
+ ',
+ 1049 => '
+ Please wait... We are checking your browser...
+ ',
+ 1050 => '
+ Don’t shoot the messenger.
+ ',
+ 1051 => '
+ Pay to pray.
+ ',
+ 1052 => '
+ Distributed is the new centralized.
+ ',
+ 1053 => '
+ And slowly, you come to realize;
+ It’s all as it should be.
+ You can only do so much.
+ — David Sylvian and Koji Haijima,
+ For The Love of Life
+ ',
+ 1054 => '
+ Content is not king. Context is king.
+ ',
+ 1055 => '
+ Nothing is true; everything is permitted.
+ — Alamut, Vladimir Bartol
+ ',
+ 1056 => '
+ It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of
+ wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was
+ the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of
+ Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had
+ everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct
+ to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way – in short, the period
+ was so far like the present period, that some of its noisiest authorities
+ insisted on its being received, for good or for evil, in the superlative
+ degree of comparison only. — Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities
+ ',
+ 1057 => '
+ Omniscience: A state of possessing all knowledge.
+ ',
+ 1058 => '
+ “What I want is all of the power and none of the responsibility.”
+ ',
+ 1059 => '
+ Expansion means complexity; and complexity decay.
+ ',
+ 1060 => '
+ There are two kinds of pedestrians; the quick and the dead.
+ — Lord Thomas Rober Dewar
+ ',
+ 1061 => '
+ Programming is like alchemy.
+ ',
+ 1062 => '
+ We are all worms. But I do believe I am a glowworm.
+ — Winston Churchill
+ ',
+ 1063 => '
+ My definition of a free society is a society where it is safe to be unpopular.
+ — Adlai E. Stevenson
+ ',
+ 1064 => '
+ Two heads are more numerous than one.
+ ',
+ 1065 => '
+ Time heals all non—fatal wounds.
+ ',
+ 1066 => '
+ Today is the first day of the rest of your week.
+ ',
+ 1067 => '
+ The early worm gets eaten by the bird.
+ ',
+ 1068 => '
+ Trust the system.
+ ',
+ 1069 => '
+ Prove that you are human.
+ ',
+ 1070 => '
+ Jump on the bandwagon!
+ ',
+ 1071 => '
+ Game the metrics.
+ ',
+ 1072 => '
+ All drugs come with side effects.
+ ',
+ 1073 => '
+ “For my friends, everything; for my enemies, the law.” — Óscar R. Benavides
+ ',
+ 1074 => '
+ In other words, we are left with Plato’s “noble natures,” with the
+ few of whom it may be true that none “does evil voluntarily.” Yet the
+ implied and dangerous conclusion, “Everybody wants to do good,” is not
+ true even in their case. The sad truth of the matter is that most evil is
+ done by people who never made up their minds to be or do either evil or
+ good. — Hannah Arendt, The Life of the Mind
+ ',
+ 1075 => '
+ Justice inclines her scales so that wisdom comes at the price of
+ suffering. — Aeschylus, Agamemnon
+ ',
+ 1076 => '
+ If it happens once, it’s a bug.
+ If it happens twice, it’s a feature.
+ If it happens more than twice, it’s a design philosophy.
+ ',
+ 1077 => '
+ Fake it till you make it?
+ ',
+ 1078 => '
+ God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him. How shall we
+ comfort ourselves, the murderers of all murderers? What was holiest and
+ mightiest of all that the world has yet owned has bled to death under our
+ knives: who will wipe this blood off us? What water is there for us to
+ clean ourselves? What festivals of atonement, what sacred games shall we
+ have to invent? Is not the greatness of this deed too great for us? Must
+ we ourselves not become gods simply to appear worthy of it? — Friedrich
+ Nietzsche
+ ',
+ 1079 => '
+ Hanlon’s Eraser: Stupidity is criminal.
+ ',
+ 1080 => '
+ Great minds think alike, though fools seldom differ.
+ ',
+ 1081 => '
+ Dynamics of Software Acceptance: Worse is better.
+ ',
+ 1082 => '
+ Authoritarianism: A form of government that rejects pluralism and uses a
+ strong central power to preserve the political status quo.
+ ',
+ 1083 => '
+ Why are quotes so popular?
+ ',
+ 1084 => '
+ Everybody wants to be the leader.
+ ',
+ 1085 => '
+ Prove that you are human, human.
+ ',
+ 1086 => '
+ Not everyone is on social media.
+ ',
+ 1087 => '
+ We are aware of the issue.
+ ',
+ 1088 => '
+ Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and
+ deserve to get it good and hard. — H. L. Mencken
+ ',
+ 1089 => '
+ Life’s most persistent and urgent question is, ‘What are you doing for
+ others?’ — Martin Luther King, Jr.
+ ',
+ 1090 => '
+ OSH: Open–source hardware.
+ ',
+ 1091 => '
+ Your web browser is not supported.
+ ',
+ 1092 => '
+ Don’t be evil. Do the right thing.
+ ',
+ 1093 => '
+ There are no adults in the room.
+ ',
+ 1094 => '
+ The fish trap exists because of the fish. Once you’ve gotten the fish
+ you can forget the trap. The rabbit snare exists because of the rabbit.
+ Once you’ve gotten the rabbit, you can forget the snare. Words exist
+ because of meaning. Once you’ve gotten the meaning, you can forget the
+ words. Where can I find a man who has forgotten words so I can talk with
+ him? — Zhuangzi, Chuang Tsu: Inner Chapters
+ ',
+ 1095 => '
+ No horse in this race.
+ ',
+ 1096 => '
+ Morality is the privilege of those judging from the distance.
+ — John Cory
+ ',
+ 1097 => '
+ Thieves respect property; they merely wish the property to become their
+ property that they may more perfectly respect it. — G.K. Chesterton,
+ The Man Who Was Thursday: A Nightmare
+ ',
+ 1098 => '
+ If you analyse anything, you destroy it.
+ — Arthur Miller
+ ',
+ 1099 => '
+ That’s how they write journals in academics, they try to make it so
+ complicated people think you’re a genius. — Terry Davis
+ ',
+ 1100 => '
+ An idiot admires complexity, a genius admires simplicity.
+ — Terry Davis
+ ',
+ 1101 => '
+ But is it safe?
+ ',
+ 1102 => '
+ How is the world ruled, and how do wars start? Diplomats tell lies to
+ journalists, and they believe what they read. — Karl Kraus, Aphorisms
+ and More Aphorisms (1909)
+ ',
+ 1103 => '
+ Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand
+ judgment. — Elihu
+ ',
+ 1104 => '
+ NP: Non—deterministic Polynomial Time.
+ ',
+ 1105 => '
+ Dead Internet Theory: All content on the Internet will eventually be
+ generated by bots with artificial intelligence.
+ ',
+ 1106 => '
+ The bit will flip.
+ ',
+ 1107 => '
+ The masses have never thirsted after truth. They turn aside from evidence
+ that is not to their taste, preferring to deify error, if error seduce
+ them. Whoever can supply them with illusions is easily their master;
+ whoever attempts to destroy their illusions is always their victim. An
+ individual in a crowd is a grain of sand amid other grains of sand, which
+ the wind stirs up at will. — Gustave Le Bon, The Crowd: A Study of the
+ Popular Mind
+ ',
+ 1108 => '
+ Vote for Nobody.
+ Nobody will keep election promises.
+ Nobody will listen to your concerns.
+ Nobody will help the poor and unemployed.
+ Nobody cares!
+ Nobody tells the truth.
+ If Nobody is elected, things will be better for everyone.
+ — A mural in Guelph, Ontario
+ ',
+ 1109 => '
+ Join our community to see this answer!
+ ',
+ 1110 => '
+ Yama: becoming mindful.
+ ',
+ 1111 => '
+ You must update now.
+ ',
+ 1112 => '
+ Update now to send and receive messages.
+ ',
+ 1113 => '
+ Just World Fallacy: A flawed belief that the world
+ is fair and just.
+ ',
+ 1114 => '
+ Are we the bad guys?
+ ',
+ 1115 => '
+ The greatest remedy for anger is delay.
+ ',
+ 1116 => '
+ One small step for man, one giant stumble for mankind.
+ ',
+ 1117 => '
+ You will soon forget this.
+ ',
+ 1118 => '
+ It is better to suffer an injustice than to do an injustice.
+ ',
+ 1119 => '
+ The simple believeth every word: but the prudent man looketh well
+ to his going. — Proverbs
+ ',
+ 1120 => '
+ All possibility of understanding is rooted in the ability to say no.
+ — Susan Sontag
+ ',
+ 1121 => '
+ As a computer, I find your faith in technology amusing.
+ ',
+ 1122 => '
+ Don’t confuse things that need action with those that take care of themselves.
+ ',
+ 1123 => '
+ A university is what a college becomes when the faculty loses interest
+ in students. — John Ciardi
+ ',
+ 1124 => '
+ The only thing that experience teaches us is that experience teaches us
+ nothing. — Andre Maurois (Emile Herzog)
+ ',
+ 1125 => '
+ Adding features does not necessarily increase functionality — it just
+ makes the manuals thicker.
+ ',
+ 1126 => '
+ The only thing humans are equal in is death. — Johan Liebert,
+ Naoki Urasawa’s Monster
+ ',
+ 1127 => '
+ No two persons ever read the same book. — Edmund Wilson
+ ',
+ 1128 => '
+ You have mail.
+ ',
+ 1129 => '
+ Human Nature: A walking contradiction.
+ ',
+ 1130 => '
+ No skin in this game.
+ ',
+ 1131 => '
+ Nothing ventured, nothing gained.
+ ',
+ 1132 => '
+ Don’t copy others’ homework.
+ ',
+ 1133 => '
+ The Philosopher’s Stone: It’s either perfect or useless.
+ ',
+ 1134 => '
+ Don’t break user space.
+ ',
+ 1135 => '
+ The first thing to know about unlimited is that it isn’t unlimited.
+ ',
+ 1136 => '
+ Build, don’t destroy.
+ ',
+ 1137 => '
+ Couldn’t sign you in. This browser or app may not be secure.
+ ',
+ 1138 => '
+ A few minutes until maintenance is over.
+ “So what happens when maintenance is over?”
+ You don’t know? That’s when maintenance begins.
+ ',
+ 1139 => '
+ “Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain.”
+ — The Wizard Of Oz
+ ',
+ 1140 => '
+ Getting there is only half as far as getting there and back.
+ ',
+ 1141 => '
+ “Out of the crooked timber of humanity, no straight thing
+ was ever made.” — Immanuel Kant
+ ',
+ 1142 => '
+ Barker’s Proof: Proofreading is more effective after publication.
+ ',
+ 1143 => '
+ Rome wasn’t burnt in a day.
+ ',
+ 1144 => '
+ The end move in politics is always to pick up a gun.
+ — Buckminster Fuller
+ ',
+ 1145 => '
+ When you have eliminated the JavaScript, whatever
+ remains must be an empty page. — Google Maps
+ ',
+ 1146 => '
+ He that is down need fear no fall.
+ ',
+ 1147 => '
+ Just don’t create a file called -rf.
+ — Larry Wall
+ ',
+ 1148 => '
+ Woolsey—Swanson Rule: People would rather live with a
+ problem they cannot solve rather than accept a solution
+ they cannot understand.
+ ',
+ 1149 => '
+ I’m proud of my humility.
+ ',
+ 1150 => '
+ It’s a questionable day. Ask somebody something.
+ ',
+ 1151 => '
+ Age and treachery will always overcome youth and skill.
+ ',
+ 1152 => '
+ This is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday.
+ And now you know why.
+ ',
+ 1153 => '
+ Dawn: The time when men of reason go to bed.
+ — Ambrose Bierce, “The Devil’s Dictionary”
+ ',
+ 1154 => '
+ If you waste your time cooking, you’ll miss the next meal.
+ ',
+ 1155 => '
+ The most disagreeable thing that your worst enemy says to
+ your face does not approach what your best friends say
+ behind your back. — Alfred De Musset
+ ',
+ 1156 => '
+ All great ideas are controversial, or have been at one time.
+ ',
+ 1157 => '
+ Profits over people.
+ ',
+ 1158 => '
+ I know what you download...
+ ',
+ 1159 => '
+ Armchair Politics.
+ ',
+ 1160 => '
+ Cutler Webster’s Law: There are two sides to
+ every argument, unless a person is personally
+ involved, in which case there is only one.
+ ',
+ 1161 => '
+ An apple every eight hours will keep three
+ doctors away.
+ ',
+ 1162 => '
+ Always try to do things in chronological order;
+ it’s less confusing that way.
+ ',
+ 1163 => '
+ Wisdom is rarely found on the best—seller list.
+ ',
+ 1164 => '
+ If you can keep your head when everybody round
+ you is losing theirs, then it’s very probable that
+ you don’t understand the situation.
+ ',
+ 1165 => '
+ Power corrupts. Absolute power is kind of neat.
+ — John Lehman
+ ',
+ 1166 => '
+ Leadership involves finding a parade and getting
+ in front of it. — John Naisbitt, “Megatrends”
+ ',
+ 1167 => '
+ Telling the truth to people who misunderstand you
+ is generally promoting a falsehood, isn’t it?
+ — Anthony Hope
+ ',
+ 1168 => '
+ Davis’s Dictum: Problems that go away by
+ themselves, come back by themselves.
+ ',
+ 1169 => '
+ A gossip is one who talks to you about others, a bore is
+ one who talks to you about himself; and a brilliant
+ conversationalist is one who talks to you about yourself.
+ — Lisa Kirk
+ ',
+ 1170 => '
+ Practice yourself what you preach. — Titus Maccius Plautus
+ ',
+ 1171 => '
+ “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
+ ',
+ 1172 => '
+ Steinbach’s Guideline for Systems Programming: Never test
+ for an error condition you don’t know how to handle.
+ ',
+ 1173 => '
+ Nothing succeeds like success.
+ ',
+ 1174 => '
+ The only constant is change.
+ ',
+ 1175 => '
+ Misery loves company.
+ ',
+ 1176 => '
+ The cost of living only goes up.
+ ',
+ 1177 => '
+ If you owe the bank a hundred thousand dollars, the bank
+ owns you. If you owe the bank a hundred million dollars,
+ you own the bank. — American Proverb
+ ',
+ 1178 => '
+ “You really think someone would do that? Just go on TV and tell
+ lies?”
+ ',
+ 1179 => '
+ Ginsberg’s Theorem:
+ (0) There is a game.
+ (1) You can’t win.
+ (2) You can’t even break even.
+ (3) You can’t even quit the game.
+ ',
+ 1180 => '
+ Commoner’s Second Law of Ecology:
+ Nothing ever goes away.
+ ',
+ 1181 => '
+ The snake shall eat its own tail.
+ ',
+ 1182 => '
+ Finagle’s First Rule: To study a subject best, understand
+ it thoroughly before you start.
+ ',
+ 1183 => '
+ The Course of Progress: Most things get steadily worse.
+ — Issawi’s Laws of Progress
+ ',
+ 1184 => '
+ The Path of Progress: A shortcut is the longest distance between
+ two points.
+ — Issawi’s Laws of Progress
+ ',
+ 1185 => '
+ The Dialectics of Progress: Direct action produces direct
+ reaction.
+ — Issawi’s Laws of Progress
+ ',
+ 1186 => '
+ The Pace of Progress: Society is a mule, not a car ... If
+ pressed too hard, it will kick and throw off its rider.
+ — Issawi’s Laws of Progress
+ ',
+ 1187 => '
+ SDSM: Super Duper Secure Mode
+ ',
+ 1188 => '
+ Three–strikes Law: Three strikes and you’re out.
+ ',
+ 1189 => '
+ Spam! Spam! Spam! Spam!
+ Lovely spam! Wonderful spam!
+ Spam spa-a-a-a-a-am spam spa-a-a-a-a-am spam.
+ Lovely spam! Lovely spam! Lovely spam! Lovely spam!
+ Spam spam spam spam!
+ — Monty Python, Spam Song
+ ',
+ 1190 => '
+ The world really isn’t any worse. It’s just that the news
+ coverage is so much better.
+ ',
+ 1191 => '
+ If you’re careful enough, nothing bad or good
+ will ever happen to you.
+ ',
+ 1192 => '
+ Never have so many understood so little about so much.
+ — James Burke
+ ',
+ 1193 => '
+ To err is human – but it feels divine.
+ — Mae West
+ ',
+ 1194 => '
+ Necessity is the plea for every infringement of
+ human freedom: it is the argument of tyrants; it
+ is the creed of slaves.
+ — William Pitt, House of Commons, 1783
+ ',
+ 1195 => '
+ Simplicity does not precede complexity, but follows it.
+ ',
+ 1196 => '
+ Polarize the people, controversy is the game.
+ It don’t matter if they hate you if they all say your name.
+ — Ren, Money Game, Pt. 2
+ ',
+ 1197 => '
+ “If it’s a bug people rely on, it’s not
+ a bug – it’s a feature.” — Linus Torvalds
+ ',
+ 1198 => '
+ Everything is awful.
+ ',
+ 1199 => '
+ Knowledge itself is power.
+ — Sir Francis Bacon
+ ',
+ 1200 => '
+ Nature, to be commanded, must be obeyed.
+ — Sir Francis Bacon
+ ',
+ 1201 => '
+ Conscious is when you are aware of something and
+ conscience is when you wish you weren’t.
+ ',
+ 1202 => '
+ You humans are all alike.
+ ',
+ 1203 => '
+ You may be marching to the beat of a different
+ drummer, but you’re still in the parade.
+ ',
+ 1204 => '
+ You have junk mail.
+ ',
+ 1205 => '
+ To do two things at once is to do neither.
+ — Publilius Syrus
+ ',
+ 1206 => '
+ If life is merely a joke, the question still
+ remains: for whose amusement?
+ ',
+ 1207 => '
+ The reward for working hard is more hard work.
+ ',
+ 1208 => '
+ Nobody said computers were going to be polite.
+ ',
+ 1209 => '
+ Tell me what to think!
+ ',
+ 1210 => '
+ Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet
+ deprecate agitation, are men who want rain
+ without thunder and lightning. They want the
+ ocean without the roar of its many waters. —
+ Frederick Douglass
+ ',
+ 1211 => '
+ Never underestimate the power of somebody with
+ source code, a text editor, and the willingness
+ to totally hose their system. — Rob Landley
+ ',
+ 1212 => '
+ Now I lay me back to sleep.
+ The speaker’s dull; the subject’s deep.
+ If he should stop before I wake,
+ Give me a nudge for goodness’ sake.
+ — Anonymous
+ ',
+ 1213 => '
+ “Man is the only animal that can remain on
+ friendly terms with the victims he intends to eat
+ until he eats them.” — Samuel Butler, The Note
+ Books of Samuel Butler
+ ',
+ 1214 => '
+ Stein’s Law: If something cannot go on forever,
+ it will stop.
+ ',
+ 1215 => '
+ Internet: Amazon
+ ',
+ 1216 => '
+ A fool uttereth all his mind. — Proverbs
+ ',
+ 1217 => '
+ Is nepotism a crime?
+ ',
+ 1218 => '
+ Mole problems? Call Avogadro at 6.02 x 10 to the 23.
+ ',
+ 1219 => '
+ Position. Velocity. Acceleration. Jerk. Snap.
+ Crackle. Pop.
+ ',
+ 1220 => '
+ Nihilism: The belief that life is meaningless.
+ ',
+ 1221 => '
+ It’s easier to fool people than to convince
+ them that they have been fooled.
+ ',
+ 1222 => '
+ If everyone is thinking alike then somebody
+ isn’t thinking. — George S. Patton
+ ',
+ 1223 => '
+ Krishnamurti said, “It’s no measure of health
+ to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick
+ society.” — Mark Vonnegut, The Eden Express:
+ A Memoir of Insanity
+ ',
+ 1224 => '
+ Matthew Effect: For whosoever hath, to him shall
+ be given; and whosoever hath not, from him shall
+ be taken even that which he seemeth to have.
+ ',
+ 1225 => '
+ All art is quite useless. — Oscar Wilde
+ ',
+ 1226 => '
+ TOSDR: Terms of Service; Didn’t Read
+ ',
+ 1227 => '
+ GitHub has the right to suspend or terminate your
+ access to all or any part of the Website at any
+ time, with or without cause, with or without
+ notice, effective immediately. GitHub reserves
+ the right to refuse service to anyone for any
+ reason at any time. — GitHub, Terms of Service
+ ',
+ 1228 => '
+ There is no such thing as a thing. — G. K.
+ Chesterton, The Prince of Paradox, Orthodoxy
+ ',
+ 1229 => '
+ We built our website for newer browsers.
+ ',
+ 1230 => '
+ Reality is a harsh mistress.
+ ',
+ 1231 => '
+ We are living in a material world – And I am a
+ material girl. — Madonna, Material Girl
+ ',
+ 1232 => '
+ Meritocracy is a myth.
+ ',
+ 1233 => '
+ For the time being I gave up writing – there is
+ already too much truth in the world – an
+ overproduction which apparently cannot be
+ consumed! — Otto Rank
+ ',
+ 1234 => '
+ Never trust an operating system.
+ ',
+ 1235 => '
+ Advertising is a valuable economic factor because
+ it is the cheapest way of selling goods,
+ particularly if the goods are worthless. —
+ Sinclair Lewis
+ ',
+ 1236 => '
+ We read to say that we have read.
+ ',
+ 1237 => '
+ This file will self destruct in five minutes.
+ ',
+ 1238 => '
+ Not every question deserves an answer.
+ ',
+ 1239 => '
+ One person’s error is another person’s data.
+ ',
+ 1240 => '
+ An expert is one who knows more and more about
+ less and less until he knows absolutely
+ everything about nothing.
+ ',
+ 1241 => '
+ Welcome to hell.
+ ',
+ 1242 => '
+ Social media is an illusion.
+ ',
+ 1243 => '
+ We are drowning in information but starved for knowledge.
+ — John Naisbitt, Megatrends
+ ',
+ 1244 => '
+ The Akashic Records.
+ ',
+ 1245 => '
+ I never did it that way before.
+ ',
+ 1246 => '
+ Theorem: A cat has nine tails. Proof: No cat has
+ eight tails. A cat has one tail more than no cat.
+ Therefore, a cat has nine tails.
+ ',
+ 1247 => '
+ The more things change, the more they’ll never be the same again.
+ ',
+ 1248 => '
+ Society creates its own monsters.
+ ',
+ 1249 => '
+ “It doesn’t matter how beautiful your theory
+ is, it doesn’t matter how smart you are. If it
+ doesn’t agree with experiment, it’s wrong.” —
+ Richard P. Feynman
+ ',
+ 1250 => '
+ Zero days all day.
+ ',
+ 1251 => '
+ To criticize the incompetent is easy; it is more
+ difficult to criticize the competent.
+ ',
+ 1252 => '
+ In a consumer society there are inevitably two
+ kinds of slaves: the prisoners of addiction and
+ the prisoners of envy. — Ivan Illich
+ ',
+ 1253 => '
+ Golden hammers for sale.
+ ',
+ 1254 => '
+ Beware of fake comments and reviews.
+ ',
+ 1255 => '
+ This is the darkest timeline.
+ ',
+ 1256 => '
+ Provides improved system stability.
+ ',
+ 1257 => '
+ No country, however rich, can afford the waste of
+ its human resources. Demoralization caused by
+ vast unemployment is our greatest extravagance.
+ Morally, it is the greatest menace to our social
+ order. — Franklin D. Roosevelt
+ ',
+ 1258 => '
+ It’s great to be smart ‘cause then you know stuff.
+ ',
+ 1259 => '
+ Sorry, the file that you’ve requested has been deleted.
+ ',
+ 1260 => '
+ About the use of language: it is impossible to sharpen a
+ pencil with a blunt ax. It is equally vain to try to do it
+ with ten blunt axes instead. — Edsger Dijkstra
+ ',
+ 1261 => '
+ There are two ways to write error–free programs; only the
+ third way works.
+ ',
+ 1262 => '
+ “The lesser of two evils – is evil.”
+ — Seymour (Sy) Leon
+ ',
+ 1263 => '
+ If you think nobody cares if you’re alive, try missing a
+ couple of car payments. — Earl Wilson
+ ',
+ 1264 => '
+ Bloom’s Seventh Law of Litigation:
+ The judge’s jokes are always funny.
+ ',
+ 1265 => '
+ It’s is not, it isn’t ain’t, and it’s it’s, not its, if you
+ mean it is. If you don’t, it’s its. Then too, it’s hers.
+ It isn’t her’s. It isn’t our’s either. It’s ours, and
+ likewise yours and theirs. — Oxford University Press,
+ Edpress News
+ ',
+ 1266 => '
+ Savage’s Law of Expediency: You want it bad, you’ll get it
+ bad.
+ ',
+ 1267 => '
+ Consumers love ads.
+ ',
+ 1268 => '
+ Everything you considered a product, has now become a service.
+ — Forbes Magazine
+ ',
+ 1269 => '
+ Don’t blame the victim.
+ ',
+ 1270 => '
+ Law of Messengers: Shoot first, ask questions later.
+ ',
+ 1271 => '
+ What if we put a browser inside another browser?
+ ',
+ 1272 => '
+ The invention of the ship was also the invention
+ of the shipwreck. — Paul Virilio
+ ',
+ 1273 => '
+ Everything is compromised.
+ ',
+ 1274 => '
+ Nothing is as simple as it seems at first, or as
+ hopeless as it seems in the middle, or as
+ finished as it seems in the end.
+ ',
+ 1275 => '
+ If a nation values anything more than freedom, it
+ will lose its freedom; and the irony of it is
+ that if it is comfort or money it values more, it
+ will lose that, too. — W. Somerset Maugham
+ ',
+ 1276 => '
+ A person who has nothing looks at all there is
+ and wants something. A person who has something
+ looks at all there is and wants all the rest.
+ ',
+ 1277 => '
+ This video is no longer available because the YouTube
+ account associated with this video has been terminated.
+ ',
+ 1278 => '
+ Robert’s Rule of Order: Whoever has the chair has the floor.
+ ',
+ 1279 => '
+ Twitter’s Rule of Order: Whoever screams the longest has the floor.
+ ',
+ 1280 => '
+ In order to be irreplaceable one must always be different.
+ Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel, 1883—1971
+ ',
+ 1281 => '
+ Everything you know is wrong!
+ ',
+ 1282 => '
+ This video was removed because it was too long.
+ ',
+ 1283 => '
+ If you go out of your mind, do it quietly, so as not to disturb those around
+ you.
+ ',
+ 1284 => '
+ We were so poor that we thought new clothes meant someone had died.
+ ',
+ 1285 => '
+ To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism — to steal from many is research.
+ ',
+ 1286 => '
+ Have an adequate day.
+ ',
+ 1287 => '
+ “If we spoke a different language, we would perceive a somewhat different
+ world.” — Ludwig Wittgenstein
+ ',
+ 1288 => '
+ You must enable DRM to play some audio or video on this page.
+ ',
+ 1289 => '
+ People of privilege will always risk their complete destruction
+ rather than surrender any material part of their advantage.
+ — John Kenneth Galbraith
+ ',
+ 1290 => '
+ It’s always darkest just before it gets pitch black.
+ ',
+ 1291 => '
+ Don’t get suckered in by the comments – they can be terribly misleading.
+ Debug only code. — Dave Storer
+ ',
+ 1292 => '
+ Shedenhelm’s Law: All trails have more uphill sections than they have downhill
+ sections.
+ ',
+ 1293 => '
+ Genius, noun: Person clever enough to be born in the right place at the right
+ time of the right sex and to follow up this advantage by saying all the right
+ things to all the right people.
+ ',
+ 1294 => '
+ To know is to die.
+ ',
+ 1295 => '
+ An attempt was made to break through the security policy of the user agent.
+ ',
+ 1296 => '
+ Nothing astonishes men so much as common sense and plain dealing.
+ — Ralph Waldo Emerson
+ ',
+ 1297 => '
+ There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, and
+ that is not being talked about.
+ — Oscar Wilde
+ ',
+ 1298 => '
+ Did you know that clones never use mirrors?
+ ',
+ 1299 => '
+ Don’t be so humble; you aren’t that great.
+ — Golda Meir
+ ',
+ 1300 => '
+ Honesty is for the most part less profitable than dishonesty. — Plato
+ ',
+ 1301 => '
+ Truly simple systems are not feasible because they would require near–infinite
+ testing. — Norman Augustine
+ ',
+ 1302 => '
+ A tautology is a thing which is tautological.
+ ',
+ 1303 => '
+ I have gained this by philosophy: that I do without being commanded what others
+ do only from fear of the law. — Aristotle
+ ',
+];