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Joe wrote: MI>> This article appeared in the Tech section of the Monday edition of the St MI>Paul MI>> Pioneer Press. MI>> MI>> Year 2000 woes solved? - James Romenesko, staff writer MI>> "A 14-year-old New Zealand boy says he's come up with a solution to the MI>Year MI>> 2000 computer problem - but he's not showing his stuff until he gets a MI>patent MI>> in his pocket. Meanwhile, the kid has let a computer analyst inspect his MI>work, MI>> and the older pro says the young man just might have solved the dreaded MI>> millennium bug problem." MI>> MI>> Anyone heard about this? Dean Asmussen wrote: MI>BTW, did you hear about the guy that they found dead in the woods that was MI>wearing a wet suit, mask, oxygen tank, snorkel, and swim fins? Seems the MI>forest fire-fighting plane scooped him up while grabbing another tank-full o MI>water. Did you hear that "Freshen-Up" gum was made of spider eggs? Also, a MI>kid put a whole package of "Pop Rocks" in his mouth at the same time and ble MI>his head off! What about the guy that found an entire rat in his Coca-Cola MI>after he had already taken a sip? MI>Just kidding :-D! Sounds like another "urban legend" to me, and that James MI>Romenesko should be taken to task for shoddy reporting. A 14-year-old MI>concerned with patent protection -- come ON, sounds like another "silver MI>bullet"! Dean has latched on to the real problem here... The Media and Big Science. Ever notice how news reports get "screwed up" when the topic is science or anything remotely scientific? I don't even want to mention every computer programmer in the movies from "The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes" to "War Games" to "The Net". Think about how the media analyzes science. It's as though there's a Standard Operating Procedure: 1. Discuss the language. Tell people what a gigabyte is and mention the Internet. 2. Discuss the celebrities. Get a quote from Bill Gates if possible. It's as though Gates is the Jesse Jackson of the computer community, our glorified leader who can speak no wrong. 3. Discuss the fashion component. Show Gen-X folks tapping away on IRC at Planet Java or something. Maybe 'net soap operas. 4. Find a "majority" and stick to it... there are tens of millions of PCs and only half a million AS/400s, so never mention the AS/400, RPG, or any IBM products (except the "frontier" stuff, like copper chip technology). 5. Find a problem and jump to the conclusion that only Government can address major problems (they've done so well at the Post Office). I'm continually amazed at how little content is provided about computers and computer-related issues in the media. I suppose we just don't fit the mold (or the mold doesn't fit us). Jesse McKay jgm@nak.com "System/36 and Beyond!" <spam follows> N.A.K.Software, Home of "The Squirrel's Nest Enjoy Chat with Worldlink, Cybernet, Telecafe, & IRC 199.190.119.2 * http://nak.com * 1-815-795-4894 Webmasters earn more money at http://nak.com/webmastr +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to "MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com". | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MAJORDOMO@midrange.com | and specify 'unsubscribe MIDRANGE-L' in the body of your message. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +---
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