Date: Tue, 18 Jan 2000 18:16:15 -0800 From: Craig Harding <crh@outpost.co.nz> To: chat@freebsd.org Subject: 42 (was Re: Microsoft go it right ;-)) Message-ID: <38851E6F.23416412@outpost.co.nz> References: <200001180432.UAA10153@implode.root.com>
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> >"42" is the answer to "What is the meaning of life?" (at least for > >earthlings). The mice contracted to have earth built in order to > > Actually, it was "...life, the universe, and everything". Deep Thought was the giant self-aware supercomputer built to discover the Answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe, and everything. The result he returned (after several millennia) was 42. Deep Thought justified the Answer (to the astounded high priests in attendance) by pointing out that the Answer didn't really make sense until you fully understood what the Question was; and thus a new even more powerful organic computer (called "Earth") was built to compute the ultimate Question of life, the universe, and everything. The final readout of the Question apparently popped into the head of a woman called Fenchurch ("...sitting on her own in a small cafe in Rickmansworth") but before she could reach a telephone to tell anyone about it, the Earth was destroyed by the Vogons to make way for a hyperspace bypass. Fenchurch later became romantically entangled with Arthur Dent on the substitute Earth recovered by the dolphins. The mice (who were genetically modified descendants of the original question-askers, inserted into the Earth system to direct the computation) realized they would be able to recover the result directly from a careful scan of Arthur Dent's brain, which required only the slight inconvenience of removing it from its traditional location (and some dicing). Arthur successfully fled and the opportunity to obtain the Question was lost. Much later, after a series of unlikely adventures, Arthur Dent and Ford Prefect ended up on prehistoric Earth with its indigenous population of cavemen in the company of a starship-load of Golgafrincham telephone sanitisers. Ford and Arthur realised that the Question locked in Arthur's brain could be recovered through the unconscious direction of a random act (pulling scrabble letters from a bag) and came up with "what do you get if you multiply six by nine". The incorrect Question is explained by the fact that the presence of the Golgafrincham settlers on Earth killed off the native pre-human population, distorting the original setup conditions for the experiment. -- C. (no, I don't have the books with me at work. Entirely from memory. Very disturbing!) To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-chat" in the body of the message
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