Abort, Retry, Ignore?

Joined
May 17, 2002
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Once upon a midnight dreary, fingers cramped and vision bleary,
System manuals piled high and wasted paper on the floor,
Longing for the warmth of bed sheets, still I sat there doing spreadsheets.
Having reached the bottom line I took a floppy from the drawer,
I then invoked the SAVE command and waited for the disk to store,
Only this and nothing more.

Deep into the monitor peering, long I sat there wond'ring, fearing,
Doubting, while the disk kept churning, turning yet to churn some more.
But the silence was unbroken, and the stillness gave no token.
"Save!" I said, "You cursed mother! Save my data from before!"
One thing did the phosphors answer, only this and nothing more,
Just, "Abort, Retry, Ignore?"

Was this some occult illusion, some maniacal intrusion?
These were choices undesired, ones I'd never faced before.
Carefully I weighed the choices as the disk made impish noises.
The cursor flashed, insistent, waiting, baiting me to type some more.
Clearly I must press a key, choosing one and nothing more,
From "Abort, Retry, Ignore?"

With fingers pale and trembling, slowly toward the keyboard bending,
Longing for a happy ending, hoping all would be restored,
Praying for some guarantee, timidly, I pressed a key.
But on the screen there still persisted words appearing as before.
Ghastly grim they blinked and taunted, haunted, as my patience wore,
Saying "Abort, Retry, Ignore?"

I tried to catch the chips off guard, and pressed again, but twice as hard.
I pleaded with the cursed machine: I begged and cried and then I swore.
Now in mighty desperation, trying random combinations,
Still there came the incantation, just as senseless as before.
Cursor blinking, angrily winking, blinking nonsense as before.
Reading, "Abort, Retry, Ignore?"

There I sat, distraught, exhausted, by my own machine accosted.
Getting up I turned away and paced across the office floor.
And then I saw a dreadful sight: a lightning bolt cut through the night.
A gasp of horror overtook me, shook me to my very core.
The lightning zapped my previous data, lost and gone forevermore.
Not even, "Abort, Retry, Ignore?"

To this day I do not know the place to which lost data go.
What demonic nether world us wrought where lost data will be stored,
Beyond the reach of mortal souls, beyond the ether, into black holes?
But sure as there's C, Pascal, Lotus, Ashton-Tate and more,
You will one day be left to wander, lost on some Plutonian shore,
Pleading, "Abort, Retry, Ignore?"
 
Great read. I've been there a few times. Jumping up and down, yelling, pacing, and hitting the keys...nothing worked. :eek: :mad:
 
I wonder how many of the younger folks here are going to be completely mystified....

While I'm here -- how many of us have been around computers long enough to laugh at a poem about syntax errors?
 
Cougar Allen said:
While I'm here -- how many of us have been around computers long enough to laugh at a poem about syntax errors?
I'm only 23, but have been around computers most of my life (started in Kindergarten with an Apple in our class room in 1986 or so). In first grade, the school burned down, so we were without a computer lab until I was in 5th grade (1991) when we got some DOS based machines. The first computer we had at home was a Tandy 1000 in 1989.

I was a fan of MS BASIC, even learned to write the language and made a few half way decent text based RPGs when I was in high school. DOS is still my favorite OS.

I've been piecing together some parts to make an old DOS machine just for the hell of it.
 
Pocket calculators weren't even on the market until after I got out of the Air Force. Math and engineering guys used slide rules in those days. I used a Pickett circular slide rule in USAF to calculate ETA and convert miles to kilometers to nautical miles.

My first real computer was a Sharp, marketed by Radio Shack, that looked like a pocket calculator with a tiny keyboard. 8k and it programed in Basic.

DOS is still my favorite OS.

I resisted Windows for a long time. DOS worked fine for me, but eventually, it just wasn't supported by the new programs I needed.
 
Very clever and most enjoyable. It was fun to read aloud.

I can sympathize but hardly know what you're talking about. I use Macs. :D
 
Esav Benyamin said:
I resisted Windows for a long time. DOS worked fine for me, but eventually, it just wasn't supported by the new programs I needed.
Once I was in middle school (1992-ish), my parents decided we needed something that I could write papers on, so we had a 486 machine built. It had DOS 4 (maybe, I really don't remember) and Windows 3.1. We always ran it in DOS mode and only started windows when needed.

To this day, 3.1 is my favorite version of Windows... and damn sure the most stable.

Ben
 
Psychopomp said:
To this day, 3.1 is my favorite version of Windows... and damn sure the most stable.

Looks like you never used it for anything beyond Solitaire. It's far from being the most stable, especially when used with TCP/IP networking (packet driver under DOS and TCP/IP stack under Win which is what i still use on one of my older boxes that has DOS set up for older games that i like to play every now and then and cannot run well on tis box). I only own one computer with Windows running all the time (the one i'm typingthis on) - the rest are Linux, NetBSD or DOS boxes :D
 
Esav Benyamin said:
Pocket calculators weren't even on the market until after I got out of the Air Force. Math and engineering guys used slide rules in those days. I used a Pickett circular slide rule in USAF to calculate ETA and convert miles to kilometers to nautical miles.
Ahhhhhh.. the memories. A slide rule was the only calculator I ever had until way after I left school. I had, (my memory is getting dim here), a Jeppeson circular flight computer for all that including wind triangles and so on. Eventually I got a TI-58 and a flight nav ROM but, apart from playing around with it for a while, I never really used it that much.
 
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