If Computer operating systems were beer ..
In yet another lift from the Internet, SheepOverboard
drags this venerable veteran parody of computer operating
software into the noughties with Service Pack 2 plus
updates!
SP2 offers a new take on Linux, Windows and Mac -
and some extra aerated sneering at SCO :{) 
Microsoftdrinks Update** Leif Leet, SheepOverboard's
lazy techie lends a hand to explain some finer points
of dregs, sterilization, and fines 
By SheepOverboard's elite
tech Lief Leet
Original circa pre-1995
- SP2 (below) + updates added 2006
Original
written by Bill Cernansky (wcern@primenet.com)
"VM
Beer" by Gabriel Goldberg (gabe@cpcug.org).
Author
of "VMS Beer" entry is unknown
Service
Pack 2 by Terry Fenning
Upgrade
notes courtesy of SheepOverboard's Lief Leet
This ol' classic has been driving around the
infobahn for a good decade or more. It traces the
history of computer operating systems and their exponential
explosion - except Windows, which eternally teeters
upon implosion - since the splitting of the beer
atom in Xerox's Palo Alto lab in the late sixties.
Blue-screening in the physical world
If Operating Systems
were Beers
DOS Beer: Requires
you to use your own can opener, and requires you
to read the directions carefully before opening the
can. Originally only came in an 8-oz. can, but now
comes in a 16-oz. can. However, the can is divided
into 8 compartments of 2 oz. each, which have to
be accessed separately. Soon to be discontinued,
although a lot of people are going to keep drinking
it after it's no longer available.
-
- Mac Beer: At
first, came only a 16-oz. can, but now comes in
a 32-oz. can. Considered by many to be a "light" beer.
All the cans look identical. When you take one
from the fridge, it opens itself. The ingredients
list is not on the can. If you call to ask about
the ingredients, you are told that "you don't need
to know." A notice on the side reminds you to drag
your empties to the trash can.
-
- Windows 3.1 Beer: The
world's most popular. Comes in a 16-oz. can that
looks a lot like Mac Beer's. Requires that you
already own a DOS Beer. Claims that it allows you
to drink several DOS Beers simultaneously, but
in reality you can only drink a few of them, very
slowly, especially slowly if you are drinking the
Windows Beer at the same time. Sometimes, for apparently
no reason, a can of Windows Beer will explode when
you open it.
-
- OS/2 Beer: Comes
in a 32-oz can. Does allow you to drink several
DOS Beers simultaneously. Allows you to drink Windows
3.1 Beer simultaneously too, but somewhat slower.
Advertises that its cans won't explode when you
open them, even if you shake them up. You never
really see anyone drinking OS/2 Beer, but the manufacturer
(International Beer Manufacturing) claims that
9 million six-packs have been sold.
-
- Windows 95 Beer:: You
can't buy it yet, but a lot of people have taste-tested
it and claim it's wonderful. The can looks a lot
like Mac Beer's can, but tastes more like Windows
3.1 Beer. It comes in 32-oz. cans, but when you
look inside, the cans only have 16 oz. of beer
in them. Most people will probably keep drinking
Windows 3.1 Beer until their friends try Windows
95 Beer and say they like it. The ingredients list,
when you look at the small print, has some of the
same ingredients that come in DOS beer, even though
the manufacturer claims that this is an entirely
new brew.
-
- Windows NT Beer: Comes
in 32-oz. cans, but you can only buy it by the
truckload. This causes most people to have to go
out and buy bigger refrigerators. The can looks
just like Windows 3.1 Beer's, but the company promises
to change the can to look just like Windows 95
Beer's - after Windows 95 beer starts shipping.
Touted as an "industrial strength" beer, and suggested
only for use in bars.
-
- Unix Beer: Comes
in several different brands, in cans ranging from
8 oz. to 64 oz. Drinkers of Unix Beer display fierce
brand loyalty, even though they claim that all
the different brands taste almost identical. Sometimes
the pop-tops break off when you try to open them,
so you have to have your own can opener around
for those occasions, in which case you either need
a complete set of instructions, or a friend who
has been drinking Unix Beer for several years.
-
- AmigaDOS Beer: The
company has gone out of business, but their recipe
has been picked up by some weird German company,
so now this beer will be an import. This beer never
really sold very well because the original manufacturer
didn't understand marketing. Like Unix Beer, AmigaDOS
Beer fans are an extremely loyal and loud group.
It originally came in a 16-oz. can, but now comes
in 32-oz. cans too. When this can was originally
introduced, it appeared flashy and colorful, but
the design hasn't changed much over the years,
so it appears dated now. Critics of this beer claim
that it is only meant for watching TV anyway.
-
- VMS Beer: Requires
minimal user interaction, except for popping the
top and sipping. However cans have been known on
occasion to explode, or contain extremely un-beer-like
contents. Best drunk in high pressure development
environments. When you call the manufacturer for
the list of ingredients, you're told that is proprietary
and referred to an unknown listing in the manuals
published by the FDA. Rumors are that this was
once listed in the Physicians' Desk Reference as
a tranquilizer, but no one can claim to have actually
seen it. The biggest
problem is before you can drink any one of them
you have to buy a really expensive bag of chips
to go with it.
-
- VM Beer: Originally
(1972) marketed in 24-oz. cans, was repositioned
in 1990 as "Enterprise Beer for the 1990s" with
31-oz. cans. The missing ounce never mattered,
because one can of VM beer could have the same
effect as dozens, hundreds, or thousands of cans,
at minimal increased cost, and without a corresponding
increase in wastewater or solid waste. Though VM
beer suffered from neglect by its brewer (International
Beer Manufacturing), it can now be produced in
industrial quantities by the economical "homebrew" kit,
BC (Beer Can) Server 500 System/390.
* Service Pack 2 ~ New,
improved for the noughties
Windows Beers is
reportedly available in 64 oz kegs, but you must order
a pallet which is divisible by a power of 2. (If one
keg falls off the palette, you are immediately reduced
to a 32oz bottle and the rest of the beer is wasted.
Mac Beer has been available in a
variety of colors for some time. It still tastes the
same, just looks better and makes better 'popping'
noises when you open it.
Recently, the recipe for Mac beer has changed and
is now made from Intel hops, the use of fermented Apples
has been discontinued, but they assure us that the
beer will taste better, despite claiming for decades
that these hops are inferior.
There is a special fruity, giga-stubby storage facility,
but it takes over 30 hours to get cold before you can
put in a single can. Strangely, once the beer
is inside, you need 3 straws to drink it. (One
for the fizz, one for the alcohol and a special ‘fibre
straw’ for the actual 'beer.')
A new, 'free' Linux Beer (brew it
yourself from any available ingredients) is now available.
It drinks very well by all accounts, hardly ever froths
over the top of the glass, even after extensive shaking
or storing in old, unstable 16 or 32 oz containers
with very little headroom.
Allegedly this beer recipe was 'stolen' from the SCO
brewery, and the fermenters (having been
drunk for many years on their own success) are suing,
or attempting to sue if they can remember exactly
what the original Unix beer recipe was, or who they,
in turn, stole it from in the first place.
Needless to say, free beer has been
very successful, the chief brewer even claiming the
devaluation of MS beer stocks. A lot of people of have
become very rich by selling free beer, even International
Beer Manufacturing, but no one is exactly sure how
this works.
Pinnacle Beer This is delivered
in very large barrels, (measured in TerraStubbies)
and can pour beer at very high rates (many MegaSculls/second)
but the beer must comply with the Mpeg2 (Multi Pub
Engineering Group) standard before it can be poured.
Beer is usually consumed by the yard (which takes 60
seconds to drink) but 1/2 yard and middies are becoming
more popular as the population's attention span shortens.
Only one cool room is allowed, but many thousands of
beers may be kept at one time, provided they are all
stored individually, beer mixing is not allowed under
any circumstances.
eg: Pouring 'premium'
(4:2:2) beer into a 'lite' (4:2:0) glass will produce
a result not unlike a technicolor yawn, most drinkers
don't like this and even fewer understand why.
Care must be exercised when moving the beer around,
as whole cool rooms have been known to explode, leaving
a very dark hole where colour and light used to be.
Some beer is illegal in this country (Australia), with
the drinkers forced to consume it off-shore and the
brewery going to great lengths by putting it in Irdeto
kegs to ensure this.
Very seldom is Pinnacle beer used on it's own, as
the task of drinking such large quantities immediately
requires a level of automation beyond a single barmaid,
usually requiring a separate GUI (Get Under the Influence)
interface, sometimes known as 'BeerBoss.' These beer
drinkers are very dedicated, sitting in dark rooms
for hours at a time, just watching the beer flow out
over the great unwashed.
EMC Beer is the most expensive beer
on the market, claimed to be always drinkable. Features
include dual redundant ring pulls, bullet proof cans
and the beer itself can withstand temperatures of up
to 160 degrees.
The fact that all the drinkers have passed out due
to heat stress is of no concern to the EMC publican,
quoted as saying "Our beer is fine, the health
or non-conformance of drinkers is of no concern to
us."
It even has a telephone 'in the can' and will phone
home (Ireland, where else?) if, for example, it thinks
it tastes funny - or you aren't drinking it properly.
It is favored by all the yuppies, especially banks
and those that must simply have the most "exclusive" brew,
even if they don't drink beer.
Local experience with this beer (Australian television
broadcaster) wasn't good. Multiple hangovers occurred
while only sipping, causing the big DTV party to be
postponed. (See Pinnacle Beer, above.)
It is the beer that is mostly likely to sue you, even
if you don't drink it.
** Upgrade notes
Windows Beer is the
undoubted leader of the (six) pack and most consumers,
astonishingly, are quite unaware of any other branding.
Microsofdrinks maintains absolute dominance of the
non-connoisseur market.
Windows Beers since
1995 have displayed an odd and disconcerting propensity
to turn blue with no apparent provocation during drinking
- and especially while opening the bottle. No other
foodstuff in the world does this, except maybe prank
substances from joke shops, which are functionally
identical, far cheaper - and stable.
Windows XP Beer exhibits
even more startling behavior, turning blue if poured
into a slightly different shaped bottle before drinking.
The puzzle deepens in its unfathomable complexity,
however. The new 'wrong' shaped bottle must be sealed
and reopened before blueness is invoked. More mystifying,
XP beer sold in any shaped bottle will do this, even
if two concurrent test transfers are conducted concurrently
inversely between two identical pairs of transverse
bottles - adjacently juxtaposed, of course.
- Pundits disparagingly call this
'going pair-shaped'
- Consumers frequently emit what
is widely known to the industry as "a blue scream
of death."
Windows XP Beer is also sold in a
light, or "Home Brand," which tastes and
looks the same but all the ingredients are denaturalized,
resulting in a functionally-sterile brew - as in no
amount of excess drinking makes the bottle look any
more attractive. Its 'devotees' are also renowned for
a lack of sociability and endemic inability to mix
with other drinkers in the same room. And, yet again,
consumers are totally blind to the differences between
beers.
Windows XP Home Brand drinkers
feebly complain, in unison, that they never saw the
warning printed in 1pt Wingdings inside the bottle
top - before opening - that described reduced flavor,
color, effervescence, and promised deficient sociability
outcomes.
Microsoftdrinks, brewers of Windows
Beers™, have long been accused of
poor sanitation. The truth when it emerged was even
more devastating. Though it appeared the beer was
shipped with bacteriological and viral contaminants,
independent researchers demonstrated that upon opening
a draught of Windows Beer, contamination from 'the
wild' was - stupendously, they concurred - virtually
immediate!
Leaked internal Microsoftdrinks memos show the company
was aware of this. To allay the flood of protest, and
in accordance with its known susceptibility to threatened
litigation, Microsoftdrinks promised free beer updates,
piped direct from the brewery - but - and it leaves
a sour taste in the mouth - only to 'validated' drinkers.
Pundits term this the "Beergate" scandal.
Updates from the brewery have been
on tap for nearly ten years, since Beer 95, and consumers'
homes now sport increasingly larger pipes back to regional
beer update servers. Even today, beers shipped with
the latest service packs still exhibit well-nigh instant
contamination, forcing topping up in the home from
the brewery feeds, immediately upon opening, and often
before finishing it off.
Savvy consumers are applying third-party
preservatives to freshly opened Windows Beers but the
brew often thickens to the point where it pours too
slowly, or worse, tastes just like DOS beer - which
oddly seems to render null and moot an entire decade
of modern beer research, development and marketing.
And, yes folks, there's just one thing you can do
with an undrinkable bottle of Windows Beer.
Yup, replace that 25-pound pointy lump of galv-coated
steel at the other end of the chain securin' your boat
to the muddy end of ol' deep six. You'd be positively
amazed at the incapacitating sheer dead weight of an
undrinkable, or unopenable, bottle of Windows Beer.
Not to mention (so I will) the immense satisfaction
of seeing the mother hit the salty realm.
Cheapshots dept. (like, the
above wasn't?)
Windows XP
A 64 bit upgrade to a 32-bit patch for a 16-bit GUI shell running on top of
an 8-bit operating system written for a 4-bit processor by a 2-bit company
who cannot stand 1 bit of competition (but it's better than a Mac)!
Beer-related
Like Budweiser to the Yanks, is Tooheys and VB (Victoria Bitter) to Aussies.
Members of Melbourne Symphony Orchestra, Orchestra Victoria, and conductor
Czesary Skubiszewski combined to the challenge of reproducing the quite grand
theme of Carlton United Brewery's beer music used in their television commercials.
Enjoy the video
[
7MByte file size. Click to play; Right-click and "Save
target as" to download ]

Not beer-related, nor even O/S
Atelevision broadcaster, slightly unknown, rather on the smallish side, flogged to death a Scalar tape library working as backup archive feeding hard-disk playout of commercials and program.
That wasn't enough. The station delivered SIX independent feeds to six regions, some intrastate.
That wasn't enough. The National broadcaster contracted them to playout overseas satellite feeds to Asia, Pacific and India.
That wasn't enough. They filled the non-existent downtime by storing commercials for a national television advertisements clearing house.
It ran 24/7/365, sometimes 366, for 8 years.
Recently decommissioned for multi-terabyte disk arrays, the poor little thing collapsed on the floor the day after its last task.
Bravo, I say!
What's it worth?
Subject: For Sale to Good Home
1 x pre-loved, highly-experienced ADIC Scalar 1000 library.
Only driven on Sunday's (and the days in between), quietly in the country (tv station, that is).
Comes with 25TB of AIT2 Tape stock, well polished, some approaching 5 years of pure mpeg2 experience. (Irreplaceable!)
3 x Sun Ultra 10 Workstations, not all of which still boot despite their over-priced, over-rated pedigree.
1 x D1000 Disc Array with 5 (count them, FIVE) 36Gb drives. (Over $30,000 of "Sun Value" alone!)
Also includes FREE OF CHARGE, the many, many hours of lost sleep over the last 8 years.
But wait ...
There's more....
If you order now (don't send any money) we'll throw in:
- The Cleaning Tapes (you'll need those!)
- Avalon Manuals (well, it was run in "Manual Mode" many, many times...)
- All the episodes of Secret Lives of Us, Don't Blame the Koalas and many more...
and as a special bonus, the aam_api DLL -- fun for the whole family...
Batteries not included, Avalon license sold seperately.
[Kind thanks to Terry Fenning]
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