Tux Works for Microsoft?!
Jadecristal writes: "From the contact info on the USB group contact page under Microsoft's record, one might get the impression that Tux worked for Microsoft. Perhaps he is being held against his will ... " Would any Microsoft employees care to disclose the whereabouts of a certain "Mr. Tux the penguin," and perhaps say which freezers he favors while in Redmond? Better yet, would any Microsoft employees like to comment on how many internal-to-Microsoft servers Mr. Tux currently powers?
www.usb.org is a BSD box (BSDI/OS, IIRC). Given the syntax of the URLs for drilling down to the contact records, it looks like the info might be in some sort of X.500-style directory, probably LDAP, or maybe NDS or Active Directory. Possibly with a default or blank Root DN password, or some other such dopey move.
If I didn't have to get some sleep, I'd check to see if I could get to it on the default LDAP port, seeing as telnet is open on the box.
The sysadmin there needs to be bonked on the head with a stick.
I just recieved a ransom note. It reads:
"pleeze put m1cr0s0ft wind0ze 2000 on all y0r bawks3z 0r eye will k1ll tha p3nquin -mr gat3s-"
I think it's Bill, but given the spelling and grammar, it may be our own CmdrTaco
For obvious reasons, I'm posting this as AC... :)
:) People actually stop by my cube to talk Tux every now and then. MS isn't so anti-penguin as everyone leads everyone else to believe.
:)
I have to admit that the evil empire helps pay my rent on the 1st and the 15th of every month, but as I haven't seen anyone else step up and admit it, I will admit that I have a Slackware 7.0 box running on MS's network. The smb packages are your friend for connecting to domains and actually being able to get to all those nifty shares.
MS even has a "Linux User Discussion" public folder in Outlook where the occassional question about "how do I get my box on the LAN, etc." gets fielded by several of us. If any other MS employees are running a box, we'd sure love to hear from you!
Remember the last story about the USB Forum? The one where people figured out various username/password combinations that had not been changed from the defaults...
http://pangaea.dhs.org/tux.gif
You can also get the TIFF file if you really want to see it in 24 bpp color.
---
chahast at pangaea dot dhs dot org
Here's Plan 0.8:
Possible bugs with this plan include both the possibility that Coupland isn't actually serious about the OSS movement and will bail at the first sign of trouble and the chance that JWZ will bail before the operation is concluded. Patches to these problems are welcome.----
Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
Now while MS is busy, the Linux team will enter the compound, crash the WinCE running microsoft's security alarms and door locks by setting the date back to 12-31-99 and letting the clock roll over again, or by installing Explorer 5.0 or better yet, AOL Titanium. We will then move to the freezer section where the penguin is being held, free him, and get out before the crashed windows machines catch fire and fill the building with smoke. Stallman, (yes sir!) if there's time, you will go to the legal dept's office and replace the MS EULA with a copy of the GPL. And Young (yes sir!) you swap out the Win2K master CD on the assembly line with a Red Hat 6.3 distro cd.
Ok, break!
Well, some mail does actually make it out of Redmond, so clearly not all their servers run NT.
But alas the Penguin just can't deliver the goods when it comes to really demanding services like BSOD. And, contrary to the usual bad press about Windows availability, the NT-based BSOD service boasts a 99.9% availability record over 5 years, totally unparalleled in the industry. Try beating that, Tux!!
;-)
"The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
Looks like someone managed to rescue Tux. And replace him with Mark Williams.
So Gates has been misquoted all these years.
"64K (bugs) should be enough for anybody."
- B. Gates
zeke
Who do you think was responsible for the 65,000+ bugs in Win2K, fools??? And now you've blown his cover!!!
Harvey