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Large User Groups Cause Spontaneous Greying

tiny69 writes "According to Microsoft, a Person's hair turns grey if there are more than 500 users in a User Group. Supposedly, the grey hair does not affect the functionality of the User Group. Microsoft claims to have a solution to fix the problem. How many people do you know that have hair that has turned grey? This web site has a large collection of links to humorous Microsoft Knowledge Base articles."

11 of 385 comments (clear)

  1. Myself, I like... by herrvinny · · Score: 4, Informative

    Myself, I like Calculator Does Not Reliably Subtract Two Numbers in Windows

    Then what's the point of using a calculator in the first place?

    1. Re:Myself, I like... by unixbum · · Score: 5, Informative
      Myself, I like Calculator Does Not Reliably Subtract Two Numbers in Windows
      Probably get marked troll for this but, taken off the supplied link.
      The information in this article applies to:
      Microsoft Windows 3.0
      Microsoft Windows 3.0a
      Microsoft Windows 3.1
      Microsoft Windows 3.11
      Microsoft Windows for Workgroups 3.1
      Microsoft Windows for Workgroups 3.11
      This bug only affects Windows 3.0-3.11
    2. Re:Myself, I like... by acm · · Score: 4, Informative
      Raymond Chen had a good blog entry about that problem here:

      The innards of Calc - the arithmetic engine - was completely thrown away and rewritten from scratch. The standard IEEE floating point library was replaced with an arbitrary-precision arithmetic library. This was done after people kept writing ha-ha articles about how Calc couldn't do decimal arithmetic correctly, that for example computing 10.21 - 10.2 resulted in 0.0100000000000016.

      (These all came from people who didn't understand how computers handle floating point. I have a future entry planned to go into floating point representations in more detail.)

      Today, Calc's internal computations are done with infinite precision for basic operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division) and 32 digits of precision for advanced operations (square root, transcendental operators).

  2. Re:I posted this earlier today by powerpuffgirls · · Score: 3, Informative

    It's because some browsers (like my Firefox) use google.com to search for the typo, and sure enough, www.microsoft.com is the first link if you search http in google.com.

    If you enter "imoou" in the Firefox address field (without anything else, just imoou), you'll get redirected to the first link as if you search the same term in google.com.

  3. why would joe sixpack be managing a domain? by SuperBanana · · Score: 4, Informative
    How in the world do you expect the mythical "Joe Sixpack" to manage that?

    Why would the mythical Joe Sixpack be managing a computer or domain with 500 users, and further, be bothered enough by the different icon color? A company with 500 windows users damn well better have an experienced windows tech.

    It's probably there to help some poor geek in a fortune-500 whose PHB declares, "fix that" and makes him waste a week on it so the department looks busy.

  4. Re:Mouse dos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    Apparently some people think that MS-DOS never used the mouse for anything, or something like that. I remember lots of DOS programs that used the mouse, and one of the neat features of both the Windows and OS/2 DOS shells was that you could use the mouse in a shell without having to squeeze a mouse driver into the 640k + himem alloted the DOS session.

    A lot of those links weren't funny at all, the only one that got me to laugh was a fake geocities page on the intricies of how to RTFM.

  5. Re:I posted this earlier today by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 3, Informative

    As many have pointed out, Microsoft has nothing to do with this. (Please remove foil hats before moderating, people -- they may block government mind scanners, but they also seem to prevent intelligent thought.) In Opera, it becomes http://www.http.com/www.ebay.com, which seems to be owned by SearchMachine.com (it's one of those stupid advertising sites masquerading as a portal or search engine.)

    --

    How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
  6. It's not really a joke... by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Informative

    The icon hair color changes from dark to gray in order to indicate that the statuses aren't going to be queried in advance of the user wanting to see details on the group... it's not really an easter egg, it's a feature. Gray is the color in the computer world to indicate such inactive states, isn't it?

  7. Re:Calculator - Missing Sqrt, Arc-trig functions by general_re · · Score: 4, Informative
    Yeah, and the Windows calculator is also way too big and heavy to hang from your belt loop or put in your pocket.

    Seriously, get real for a minute - it's purely a convenience thing, not something intended to be a full-blown replacement for your HP-48 or whatever. People who need full-fledged scientific calculators probably already have one to begin with, and therefore just about nobody is going to care that you can't do arctans in the Windows calc. And the very few who do demand such things on their desktops can readily find more advanced calculators elsewhere.

    --
    ABSURDITY, n.: A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion.
  8. Re:Calculator - Missing Sqrt, Arc-trig functions by TwistedSquare · · Score: 5, Informative
    how do you do arc-trig functions? ... No hyperbolic trig functions, either.

    Look on the top left of the calculator in scientific mode. There is an "inv" tickbox and a "hyp" one. To get arc-trig, tick the inv box, then click sin. Likewise, sinh can be performed by ticking hyp then pressing sin. Not the most obvious solution but not too bad either imho.

  9. Re:Shaking my head... by cloudmaster · · Score: 3, Informative

    You forgot RFC 1149 - Standard for the transmission of IP datagrams on avian carriers. Then there's 748 and 1097 for amusing TELNET options, 1605 for SONNET to Sonnet translation, 2324 and 2325 for managing coffee pots, etc. RFC 1924 is one that's a bit more subtle in its humor. A google search for "amusing RFCs" will get a more complete list, since it's difficult to remember them all. :)