Re: <ad> GUARANTEED CREDIT REPAIR BY LAW FIRM
Article: 7354 of alt.hackers From: btomlin@crl.com (Bruce Tomlin) Newsgroups: alt.hackers Subject: Re: <ad> GUARANTEED CREDIT REPAIR BY LAW FIRM Date: 12 Feb 1995 17:44:21 -0800 Organization: San Antonio, TX Lines: 30 Approved: nobody Message-ID: 3hmdhl$8f8@crl9.crl.com Reply-To: btomlin@aol.com NNTP-Posting-Host: crl9.crl.com X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2] Status: RO
Tommy Usher (hacker@ns.secis.com) wrote in alt.hackers: >>(I believe that counts as my ObHack for the day.) >(I belive you are wrong.) Okay, so I'm new and I was too caffiene-deprived at the time to think of any of my better hacks. How's this: ObAccidentalHack: Last night I was bored and decided to sort out this spammy mess of little bits of crushed glass and beads that I dug up from the closet (I told you I was bored). Well, after a few iterations of picking beads out individually and brushing bits of glass out of my hand into a junk pile, I decided to sort them in a lid. So I dumped them in and spread the mess around with my fingers. Then to my surpise, the beads automatically rolled down to the edge of the box! With that small amount of gravity, the bits of glass (actually more like 2mm sand grains) would stay put, but the round beads would roll off to the edge of the box. I was able to sort most of the beads this way and did so until I was even more bored. Once I had them sorted in this box lid, I had to get them out without mixing them. The solution was to push them to opposite sides of the box, put two trays underneath the piles, and tilt the box. That wasn't very digital, but then there was the time I wrote an Infocom interpreter for a 6809 machine just because I loved the 6809 instruction set. To test it, I played Zork I all the way through *before* I implemented save/restore. (There, that makes up for last time, too. My karma is now zero.)