Ahouxs.114
net.misc
utcsrgv!utzoo!decvax!ucbvax!mhtsa!ihnss!houxi!houxs!hansen
Thu Feb 25 13:25:58 1982
Hacker's Dictionary following (long!)
               Notes on updating this file:

This glossary file is being maintained at two main locations.  It is
AIWORD.RF[UP,DOC] at SAIL, and GLS;JARGON > at MIT.  If you make any
changes, be sure to FTP the new  file to the other location.   Also,
please let us know (see list of names in later paragraph) about your
changes so that we can double-check them.

Try to conform to the format already being used--70 character lines,
3-character indentations, pronunciations in parentheses, etymologies
in brackets, single-space after def'n numbers and word classes, etc.

Stick to the standard ASCII character set.

If you'd rather not munge the file yourself, send your definitions to
DON @ SAIL, GLS @ MIT-AI, and/or MRC @ SAIL.

====================================
==================================

       Compiled by Guy L. Steele Jr., Raphael Finkel, Donald
       Woods, and Mark Crispin, with assistance from the MIT
       and Stanford AI communities and Worcester Polytechnic
       Institute.  Some contributions were submitted via the
       ARPAnet from miscellaneous sites.

Verb doubling: a standard construction is to double a verb and use it
  as a comment on what the implied subject does.  Often used to
  terminate a conversation.  Typical examples involve WIN, LOSE,
  HACK, FLAME, BARF, CHOMP:
       "The disk heads just crashed."  "Lose, lose."
       "Mostly he just talked about his --- crock.  Flame, flame."
       "Boy, what a bagbiter!  Chomp, chomp!"

Soundalike slang: similar to Cockney rhyming slang.  Often made up on
  the spur of the moment.  Standard examples:
       Boston Globe => Boston Glob
       Herald American => Horrid (Harried) American
       New York Times => New York Slime
       Dime Time => Slime Time
       government property - do not duplicate (seen on keys)
               => government duplicity - do not propagate
  Often the substitution will be made in such a way as to slip in
  a standard jargon word:
       Dr. Dobb's Journal => Dr. Frob's Journal

The -P convention: turning a word into a question by appending the
  syllable "P"; from the LISP convention of appending the letter "P"
  to denote a predicate (a Boolean-values function).  The question
  should expect a yes/no answer, though it needn't.  (See T and
NIL.)
       At dinnertime: "Foodp?"  "Yeah, I'm pretty hungry." or "T!"
       "State-of-the-world-P?"  (Straight) "I'm about to go home."
                                (Humorous) "Yes, the world has a state."

Peculiar nouns: MIT AI hackers love to take various words and add the
  wrong endings to them to make nouns and verbs, often by extending a
  standard rule to nonuniform cases.  Examples:
               porous => porosity
               generous => generosity

       Ergo:   mysterious => mysteriosity
               ferrous => ferocity

       Other examples: winnitude, disgustitude, hackification.

AOS (aus (East coast) ay-ahs (West coast)) [based on a PDP-10
  increment instruction] v. To increase the amount of something.
  "Aos the campfire."  Usage: considered silly.  See SOS.

ANGLE BRACKETS (primarily MIT) n. Either of the characters "<"   AND>".  See BROKET.

ARG n. Abbreviation for "argument" (to a function), used so often as
  to have become a new word.

AUTOMAGICALLY adv. Automatically, but in a way which, for some reason
  (typically because it is too complicated, or too ugly, or perhaps
  even too trivial), I don't feel like explaining to you.  See MAGIC.
  Example: Some programs which produce XGP output files spool them
  automagically.

BAGBITER 1. n. Equipment or program that fails, usually
  intermittently.  2. BAGBITING: adj. Failing hardware or software.
  "This bagbiting system won't let me get out of spacewar."  Usage:
  verges on obscenity.  Grammatically separable; one may speak of
  "biting the bag".  Synonyms: LOSER, LOSING, CRETINOUS, BLETCHEROUS,
  BARFUCIOUS, CHOMPER, CHOMPING.

BAR 1. The second metasyntactic variable, after FOO.  "Suppose we have
  two functions FOO and BAR.  FOO calls BAR..."  2. Often appended to
  FOO to produce FOOBAR.

BARF 1. interj. Term of disgust.  See BLETCH.  2. v. choke, as on
  input.  May mean to give an error message.  "The function `='
  compares two fixnums or two flonums, and barfs on anything else."
  3. BARFULOUS, BARFUCIOUS: adj. said of something which would make
  anyone barf, if only for aesthetic reasons.

BIN [short for BINARY; used as a second file name on ITS] 1. n.
  BINARY.  2. BIN FILE: a file containing the BIN for a program.
  Usage: used at MIT, which runs on ITS.  The equivalent term at
  Stanford is DMP (pronounced "dump") FILE.  Other names used include
  SAV ("save") FILE (DEC and Tenex), SHR ("share") and LOW FILES
  (DEC), and EXE ("ex'ee") FILE (DEC and Twenex).  Also in this
  category are the input files to the various flavors of linking
  loaders (LOADER, LINK-10, STINK), called REL FILES.

BINARY n. The object code for a program.

BLETCH [from German "brechen", to vomit (?)] 1. interj. Term of
  disgust.  2. BLETCHEROUS: adj. Disgusting in design or function.
  "This keyboard is bletcherous!"  Usage: slightly comic.

BLT (blit, very rarely belt) [based on the PDP-10 block transfer
  instruction; confusing to users of the PDP-11] 1. v. To transfer a
  large contiguous package of information from one place to another.
  2. THE BIG BLT: n. Shuffling operation on the PDP-10 under some
  operating systems that consumes a significant amount of computer
  time.  3. (usually pronounced B-L-T) n. Sandwich containing bacon,
  lettuce, and tomato.

BOGUS (WPI, Yale, Stanford) adj. 1. Non-functional.  "Your patches are
  bogus."  2. Useless.  "OPCON is a bogus program."  3. False.  "Your
  arguments are bogus."  4. Incorrect.  "That algorithm is bogus."
  5. Silly.  "Stop writing those bogus sagas."  [This word seems to
  have some, but not all, of the connotations of RANDOM.]

BRAIN-DAMAGED [generalization of "Honeywell Brain Damage" (HBD), a
  theoretical disease invented to explain certain utter cretinisms in
  Multics] adj. Obviously wrong; cretinous; demented.  There is an
  implication that the person responsible must have suffered brain
  damage, because he should have known better.  Calling something
  brain-damaged is really bad; it also implies it is unusable.

BREAK v. 1. To cause to be broken (in any sense).  "Your latest patch
  to the system broke the TELNET server."  2. (Of a program) To stop
  temporarily, so that it may be examined for debugging purposes.
  The place where it stops is a BREAKPOINT.

BROKEN adj. 1. Not working properly (of programs).  2. Behaving
  strangely; especially (of people), exhibiting extreme depression.

BROKET [by analogy with "bracket": a "broken bracket"] (primarily
  Stanford) n. Either of the characters "<"   AND>".  (At MIT these
  are usually called ANGLE BRACKETS.)

BUCKY BITS (primarily Stanford) n. The bits produced by the CTRL and
  META shift keys on a Stanford (or Knight) keyboard.
  DOUBLE BUCKY: adj. Using both the CTRL and META keys.  "The command
  to burn all LEDs is double bucky F."

BUG [from telephone terminology, "bugs in a telephone cable", blamed
  for noisy lines] n. An unwanted and unintended property of a
  program.  See FEATURE.

BUM 1. v. To make highly efficient, either in time or space, often at
  the expense of clarity.  "I managed to bum three more
  instructions."  2. n. A small change to an algorithm to make it
  more efficient.  Usage: somewhat rare.

CANONICAL adj. The usual or standard state or manner of something.
  A true story:  One Bob Sjoberg, new at the MIT AI Lab, expressed
  some annoyance at the use of jargon.  Over his loud objections, we
  made a point of using jargon as much as possible in his presence,
  and eventually it began to sink in. Finally, in one conversation,
  he used the word "canonical" in jargon-like fashion without
  thinking.
  Steele: "Aha!  We've finally got you talking jargon too!"
  Stallman: "What did he say?"
  Steele: "He just used `canonical' in the canonical way."
  [Note by MRC: Does "canonical" have any relationship to the term
  as used by Sherlock Holmes fans for generations?  I'm not sure,
  though I'm both a Sherlock Holmes fan and a hacker.]

CATATONIA (kat-uh'-toe-nee-uh) n. A condition of suspended animation
  in which the system is in a wedged (CATATONIC) state.

CDR (ku'der) [from LISP] v. With "down", to trace down a list of
  elements.  "Shall we cdr down the agenda?"  Usage: silly.

CHOMP v. To lose; to chew on something of which more was bitten off
  than one can.  Probably related to gnashing of teeth.  See
  BAGBITER.  A hand gesture commonly accompanies this, consisting of
  the four fingers held together as if in a mitten or hand puppet,
  and the fingers and thumb open and close rapidly to illustrate a
  biting action.  The gesture alone means CHOMP CHOMP (see Verb
  Doubling).

CLOSE n. Abbreviation for "close (or right) parenthesis", used when
  necessary to eliminate oral ambiguity.  See OPEN.

COKEBOTTLE n. Any very unusual character.  MIT people complain about
  the "control-meta-cokebottle" commands at SAIL, and SAIL people
  complain about the "altmode-altmode-cokebottle" commands at MIT.

COM MODE (variant: COMM MODE) [from the ITS feature for linking two or
  more terminals together so that text typed on any is echoed on all,
  providing a means of conversation among hackers] n. The state a
  terminal is in when linked to another in this way.  Com mode has a
  special set of jargon words, used to save typing, which are not
  used orally:
       BCNU    Be seeing you.
       BTW     By the way...
       BYE?    Are you ready to unlink?  (This is the standard way to
               end a com mode conversation; the other person types
               BYE to confirm, or else continues the conversation.)
       CUL     See you later.
       FOO?    A greeting, also meaning R U THERE?  Often used in the
               case of unexpected links, meaning also "Sorry if I
               butted in" (linker) or "What's up?" (linkee).
       FYI     For your information...
       GA      Go ahead (used when two people have tried to type
               simultaneously; this cedes the right to type to
               the other).

       HELLOP  A greeting, also meaning R U THERE?  (An instance
               of the "-P" convention.)
       NIL     No (see the main entry for NIL).
       OBTW    Oh, by the way...
       R U THERE?      Are you there?
       SEC     Wait a second (sometimes written SEC...).
       T       Yes (see the main entry for T).
       TNX     Thanks.

   <DOUBLE CRLF>  When the typing party has finished, he types
               two CRLF's to signal that he is done; this leaves a
               blank line between individual "speeches" in the
               conversation, making it easier to re-read the
               preceding text.
       <NAME>: When three or more terminals are linked, each speech
               is preceded by the typist's login name and a colon (or
               a hyphen) to indicate who is typing.  The login name
               often is shortened to a unique prefix (possibly a
               single letter) during a very long conversation.

  At Stanford, where the link feature is implemented by "talk loops",
  the term TALK MODE is used in place of COM MODE.  Most of the above
  "sub-jargon" is used at both Stanford and MIT.

CONNECTOR CONSPIRACY [probably came into prominence with the
  appearance of the KL-10, none of whose connectors match anything
  else] n. The tendency of manufacturers (or, by extension,
  programmers or purveyors of anything) to come up with new products
  which don't fit together with the old stuff, thereby making you buy
  either all new stuff or expensive interface devices.

CONS [from LISP] 1. v. To add a new element to a list.  2. CONS UP:
  v. To synthesize from smaller pieces: "to cons up an example".

CRASH 1. n. A sudden, usually drastic failure.  Most often said of the
  system (q.v., definition #1), sometimes of magnetic disk drives.
  "Three lusers lost their files in last night's disk crash."  A disk
  crash which entails the read/write heads dropping onto the surface
  of the disks and scraping off the oxide may also be referred to as
  a "head crash".  2. v. To fail suddenly.  "Has the system just
  crashed?"  Also used transitively to indicate the cause of the
  crash (usually a person or a program, or both).  "Those idiots
  playing spacewar crashed the system."  Sometimes said of people.
  See GRONK OUT.

CRETIN 1. n. Congenital loser (q.v.).  2. CRETINOUS: adj. See
  BLETCHEROUS and BAGBITING.  Usage: somewhat ad hominem.

CRLF (cur'lif, sometimes crul'lif) n. A carriage return (CR) followed
  by a line feed (LF).  See TERPRI.

CROCK n. An awkward feature or programming technique that ought to be
  made cleaner.  Example: Using small integers to represent error
  codes without the program interpreting them to the user is a crock.
  Also, a technique that works acceptably but which is quite prone to
  failure if disturbed in the least, for example depending on the
  machine opcodes having particular bit patterns so that you can use
  instructions as data words too; a tightly woven, almost completely
  unmodifiable structure.

CRUFTY [from "cruddy"] adj. 1. Poorly built, possibly overly complex.
  "This is standard old crufty DEC software".  Hence CRUFT, n. shoddy
  construction.  2. Unpleasant, especially to the touch, often with
  encrusted junk.  Like spilled coffee smeared with peanut butter and
  ketchup.  Hence CRUFT, n. disgusting mess.  3. Generally unpleasant.
  CRUFTY or CRUFTIE n. A small crufty object (see FROB); often one
  which doesn't fit well into the scheme of things.  "A LISP property
  list is a good place to store crufties (or, random cruft)."
  [Note: Does CRUFT have anything to do with the Cruft Lab at Harvard?
  I don't know, though I was a Harvard student. - GLS]

CRUNCH v. 1. To process, usually in a time-consuming or complicated
  way.  Connotes an essentially trivial operation which is
  nonetheless painful to perform.  The pain may be due to the
  triviality being imbedded ina loop from 1 to 1000000000.  "FORTRAN
  programs do mostly number crunching."  2. To reduce the size of a
  file by a complicated scheme that produces bit configurations
  completely unrelated to the original data, such as by a Huffman
  code.  (The file ends up looking like a paper document would if
  somebody crunched the paper into a wad.)  Since such compression
  usually takes more computations than simpler methods such as
  counting repeated characters (such as spaces) the term is doubly
  appropriate.  (This meaning is usually used in the construction
  "file crunch(ing)" to distinguish it from "number crunch(ing)".)

CTY (city) n. The terminal physically associated with a computer's
  operating console.

CUSPY [from the DEC acronym CUSP, for Commonly Used System Program,
  i.e., a utility program used by many people] (WPI) adj. 1. (Of a
  program) Well-written.  2. Functionally excellent.  A program which
  performs well and interfaces well to users is cuspy.  See RUDE.

DAEMON (day'mun, dee'mun) [archaic form of "demon", which has slightly
  different connotations (q.v.)] n. A program which is not invoked
  explicitly, but which lays dormant waiting for some condition(s) to
  occur.  The idea is that the perpetrator of the condition need not
  be aware that a daemon is lurking (though often a program will
  commit an action only because it knows that it will implicitly
  invoke a daemon).  For example, writing a file on the lpt spooler's
  directory will invoke the spooling daemon, which prints the file.
  The advantage is that programs which want (in this example) files
  printed need not compete for access to the lpt.  They simply enter
  their implicit requests and let the daemon decide what to do with
  them.  Daemons are usually spawned automatically by the system, and
  may either live forever or be regenerated at intervals.  Usage:
  DAEMON and DEMON (q.v.) are often used interchangeably, but seem to
  have distinct connotations.  DAEMON was introduced to computing by
  CTSS people (who pronounced it dee'mon) and used it to refer to
  what is now called a DRAGON or PHANTOM (q.v.).  The meaning and
  pronunciation have drifted, and we think this glossary reflects
  current usage.

DEADLOCK n. A situation wherein two or more processes are unable to
  proceed because each is waiting for another to do something.  A
  common example is a program communicating to a PTY or STY, which
  may find itself waiting for output from the PTY/STY before sending
  anything more to it, while the PTY/STY is similarly waiting for
  more input from the controlling program before outputting anything.
  (This particular flavor of deadlock is called "starvation".
  Another common flavor is "constipation", where each process is
  trying to send stuff to the other, but all buffers are full because
  nobody is reading anything.)  See DEADLY EMBRACE.

DEADLY EMBRACE n. Same as DEADLOCK (q.v.), though usually used only
  when exactly two processes are involved.  DEADLY EMBRACE is the
  more popular term in Europe; DEADLOCK in the United States.

DEMENTED adj. Yet another term of disgust used to describe a program.
  The connotation in this case is that the program works as designed,
  but the design is bad.  For example, a program that generates large
  numbers of meaningless error messages implying it is on the point
  of imminent collapse.

DEMON (dee'mun) n. A portion of a program which is not invoked
  explicitly, but which lays dormant waiting for some condition(s) to
  occur.  See DAEMON.  The distinction is that demons are usually
  processes within a program, while daemons are usually programs
  running on an operating system.  Demons are particularly common in
  AI programs.  For example, a knowledge manipulation program might
  implement inference rules as demons.  Whenever a new piece of
  knowledge was added, various demons would activate (which demons
  depends on the particular piece of data) and would create
  additional pieces of knowledge by applying their respective
  inference rules to the original piece.  These new pieces could in
  turn activate more demons as the inferences filtered down through
  chains of logic.  Meanwhile the main program could continue with
  whatever its primary task was.

DIKE [from "diagonal cutters"] v. To remove a module or disable it.
  "When in doubt, dike it out."

DMP (dump)  See BIN.

DOWN 1. adj. Not working.  "The up escalator is down."  2. TAKE DOWN,
  BRING DOWN: v. To deactivate, usually for repair work.  See UP.

DPB (duh-pib') [from the PDP-10 instruction set] v. To plop something
  down in the middle.

DRAGON n. (MIT) A program similar to a "daemon" (q.v.), except that it
  is not invoked at all, but is instead used by the system to perform
  various secondary tasks.  A typical example would be an accounting
  program, which keeps track of who is logged in, accumulates load-
  average statistics, etc.  At MIT, all free TV's display a list of
  people logged in, where they are, what they're running, etc. along
  with some random picture (such as a unicorn, Snoopy, or the
  Enterprise) which is generated by the "NAME DRAGON".  See PHANTOM.

ENGLISH n. The source code for a program, which may be in any
  language, as opposed to BINARY.  Usage: slightly obsolete, used
  mostly by old-time hackers, though recognizable in context.  At
  MIT, directory SYSENG is where the "English" for system programs is
  kept, and SYSBIN, the binaries.  SAIL has many such directories,
  but the canonical one is [CSP,SYS].

EPSILON [from standard mathematical notation for a small quantity] 1.
  n. A small quantity of anything.  "The cost is epsilon."  2. adj.
  Very small, negligible; less than marginal.  "We can get this
  feature for epsilon cost."

EXCH (ex'chuh, ekstch) [from the PDP-10 instruction set] v. To
  exchange two things, each for the other.

EXCL (eks'cul) n. Abbreviation for "exclamation point".  See SEMI,
  OPEN, CLOSE.

EXE (ex'ee)  See BIN.

FAULTY adj. Same denotation as "bagbiting", "bletcherous", "losing",
  q.v., but the connotation is much milder.

FEATURE n. 1. A surprising property of a program.  Occasionally docu-
  mented.  To call a property a feature sometimes means the author of
  the program did not consider the particular case, and the program
  makes an unexpected, although not strictly speaking an incorrect
  response.  See BUG.  "That's not a bug, that's a feature!"  A bug
  can be changed to a feature by documenting it.  2. A well-known and
  beloved property; a facility.  Sometimes features are planned, but
  are called crocks by others.  An approximately correct spectrum:

  (These terms are all used to describe programs or portions thereof,
  except for the first two, which are included for completeness.)
       CRASH  STOPPAGE  BUG  SCREW  LOSS  MISFEATURE
               CROCK  KLUGE  HACK  WIN  FEATURE  PERFECTION
  (The last is never actually attained.)

FEEP 1. n. The soft bell of a display terminal (except for a VT-52!);
  a beep.  2. v. To cause the display to make a feep sound.  TTY's do
  not have feeps.  Alternate forms: BEEP, BLEEP, or just about
  anything suitably onomatopoeic.  The term BREEDLE is sometimes
  heard at SAIL, where the terminal bleepers are not particularly
  "soft" (they sound more like the musical equivalent of sticking out
  one's tongue).  The "feeper" on a VT-52 has been compared to the
  sound of a '52 Chevy stripping its gears.

FENCEPOST ERROR n. The discrete equivalent of a boundary condition.
  Often exhibited in programs by iterative loops.  From the following
  problem: "If you build a fence 100 feet long with posts ten feet
  apart, how many posts do you need?"  (Either 9 or 11 is a better
  answer than the obvious 10.)

FINE (WPI) adj. Good, but not good enough to be CUSPY.  [The word FINE
  is used elsewhere, of course, but without the implicit comparison
  to the higher level implied by CUSPY.]

FLAG DAY [from a bit of Multics history involving a change in the
  ASCII character set originally scheduled for June 14, 1966]
  n. A software change which is neither forward nor backward
  compatible, and which is costly to make and costly to revert.
  "Can we install that without causing a flag day for all users?"

FLAKEY adj. Subject to frequent lossages.  See LOSSAGE.

FLAME v. To speak incessantly and/or rabidly on some relatively
  uninteresting subject or with a patently ridiculous attitude.
  FLAME ON: v. To continue to flame.

FLAP v. To unload a DECtape (so it goes flap, flap, flap...).  Old
  hackers at MIT tell of the days when the disk was device 0 and
  microtapes were 1, 2,... and attempting to flap device 0 would
  instead start a motor banging inside a cabinet near the disk!

FLAVOR n. 1. Variety, type, kind.  "DDT commands come in two flavors."
  2. The attribute of causing something to be FLAVORFUL.  "This
  convention yields additional flavor by allowing one to..."
  See VANILLA.

FLAVORFUL adj. Aesthetically pleasing.  See RANDOM and LOSING for
  antonyms.  See also the entry for TASTE.

FLUSH v. 1. To delete something, usually superfluous.  "All that
  nonsense has been flushed."  Standard ITS terminology for aborting
  an output operation.  2. To leave at the end of a day's work (as
  opposed to leaving for a meal).  "I'm going to flush now."  "Time
  to flush."  3. To exclude someone from an activity.

FOO 1. [from Yiddish "feh" or the Anglo-Saxon "fooey!"] interj. Term
  of disgust.  2. [from FUBAR (Fucked Up Beyond All Recognition),
  from WWII, often seen as FOOBAR] Name used for temporary programs,
  or samples of three-letter names.  Other similar words are BAR, BAZ
  (Stanford corruption of BAR), and rarely RAG.  These have been used
  in Pogo as well.  3. Used very generally as a sample name for
  absolutely anything. The old `Smokey Stover' comic strips often
  included the word FOO, in particular on license plates of cars.
  MOBY FOO: See MOBY.

FROB 1. n. (MIT) The official Tech Model Railroad Club definition is
  "FROB = protruding arm or trunnion", and by metaphoric extension
  any somewhat small thing.  See FROBNITZ.  2. v. abbreviated form of
  FROBNICATE.

FROBNICATE v. To manipulate or adjust, to tweak.  Derived from
  FROBNITZ (q.v.).  Usually abbreviated to FROB.  Thus one has the
  saying "to frob a frob".  See TWEAK and TWIDDLE.  Usage: FROB,
  TWIDDLE, and TWEAK sometimes connote points along a continuum.
  FROB connotes aimless manipulation; TWIDDLE connotes gross
  manipulation, often a coarse search for a proper setting; TWEAK
  connotes fine-tuning.  If someone is turning a knob on an
  oscilloscope, then if he's carefully adjusting it he is probably
  tweaking it; if he is just turning it but looking at the screen he
  is probably twiddling it; but if he's just doing it because turning
  a knob is fun, he's frobbing it.

FROBNITZ, pl. FROBNITZEM (frob'nitsm) n. An unspecified physical
  object, a widget.  Also refers to electronic black boxes.  This
  rare form is usually abbreviated to FROTZ, or more commonly to
  FROB.  Also used is FROBNULE.

FROG (variant: PHROG) 1. interj. Term of disgust (we seem to have a
  lot of them).  2. Used as a name for just about anything.  See FOO.
  3. n. Of things, a crock.  Of people, somewhere inbetween a turkey
  and a toad.  4. FROGGY: adj. Similar to BAGBITING (q.v.), but
  milder.  "This froggy program is taking forever to run!"

FROTZ 1. n. See FROBNITZ.  2. MUMBLE FROTZ: An interjection of very
  mild disgust.

FTP (spelled out, NOT pronounced "fittip") 1. n. The File Transfer
  Protocol for transmitting files between systems on the ARPAnet.  2.
  v. To transfer a file using the File Transfer Program.  "Lemme get
  this copy of Wuthering Heights FTP'd from SAIL."

FUDGE 1. v. To perform in an incomplete but marginally acceptable way,
  particularly with respect to the writing of a program.  "I didn't
  feel like going through that pain and suffering, so I fudged it."
  2. n. The resulting code.

FUDGE FACTOR n. A value or parameter that is varied in an ad hoc way
  to produce the desired result.  The terms "tolerance" and "slop"
  are also used, though these usually indicate a one-sided leeway,
  such as a buffer which is made larger than necessary because one
  isn't sure exactly how large it needs to be, and it is better to
  waste a little space than to lose completely for not having enough.
  A fudge factor, on the other hand, can often be tweaked in more
  than one direction.  An example might be the coefficients of an
  equation, where the coefficients are varied in an attempt to make
  the equation fit certain criteria.

GARBAGE COLLECT v., GARBAGE COLLECTION n. See GC.

GARPLY n. (SAIL) Another meta-word popular among SAIL hackers.

GC [from LISP terminology] 1. v. To clean up and throw away useless
  things. "I think I'll GC the top of my desk today."  2. v. To
  recycle, reclaim, or put to another use.  3. n. An instantiation of
  the GC process.

GLASS TTY n. A terminal which has a display screen but which, because
  of hardware or software limitations, behaves like a teletype or
  other printing terminal.  An example is the ADM-3 (without cursor
  control).  A glass tty can't do neat display hacks, and you can't
  save the output either.

GLITCH [from the Yiddish "glitshen", to slide] 1. n. A sudden
  interruption in electric service, sanity, or program function.
  Sometimes recoverable.  2. v. To commit a glitch.  See GRITCH.

GLORK 1. interj. Term of mild surprise, usually tinged with outrage,
  as when one attempts to save the results of two hours of editing
  and finds that the system has just crashed.  2. Used as a name for
  just about anything.  See FOO.  3. v. Similar to GLITCH (q.v.), but
  usually used reflexively.  "My program just glorked itself."

GOBBLE v. To consume or to obtain.  GOBBLE UP tends to imply
  "consume", while GOBBLE DOWN tends to imply "obtain".  "The output
  spy gobbles characters out of a TTY output buffer."  "I guess I'll
  gobble down a copy of the documentation tomorrow."  See SNARF.

GRIND v. 1. (primarily MIT) To format code, especially LISP code, by
  indenting lines so that it looks pretty.  Hence, PRETTY PRINT, the
  generic term for such operations.  2. To run seemingly
  interminably, performing some tedious and inherently useless task.
  Similar to CRUNCH.

GRITCH 1. n. A complaint (often caused by a GLITCH (q.v.)).  2. v. To
  complain.  Often verb-doubled: "Gritch gritch".  3. Glitch.

GROK [from the novel "Stranger in a Strange Land", by Robert Heinlein,
  where it is a Martian word meaning roughly "to be one with"] v. To
  understand, usually in a global sense.

GRONK [popularized by the cartoon strip "B.C." by Johnny Hart, but the
  word apparently predates that] v. 1. To clear the state of a wedged
  device and restart it.  More severe than "to frob" (q.v.).  2. To
  break.  "The teletype scanner was gronked, so we took the system
  down."  3. GRONK OUT: v. To cease functioning.  Of people, to go
  home and go to sleep.  "I guess I'll gronk out now; see you all
  tomorrow."

GROVEL v. To work interminably and without apparent progress.  Often
  used with "over".  "The compiler grovelled over my code."  Compare
  GRIND and CRUNCH.  Emphatic form: GROVEL OBSCENELY.

GRUNGY adj. Incredibly dirty or grubby.  Anything which has been
  washed within the last year is not really grungy.  Also used
  metaphorically; hence some programs (especially crocks) can be
  described as grungy.

HACK n. 1. Originally a quick job that produces what is needed, but
  not well.  2. The result of that job.  3. NEAT HACK: a clever
  technique.  Also, a brilliant practical joke, where neatness is
  correlated with cleverness, harmlessness, and surprise value.
  Example: the Caltech Rose Bowl card display switch circa 1961.
  4. REAL HACK: a crock (occasionally affectionate).
  v. 5. With "together", to throw something together so it will work.
  6. To bear emotionally or physically.  "I can't hack this heat!" 7.
  To work on something (typically a program).  In specific sense:

  "What are you doing?"  "I'm hacking TECO."  In general sense: "What
  do you do around here?"  "I hack TECO."  (The former is
  time-immediate, the latter time-extended.)  More generally, "I hack
  x" is roughly equivalent to "x is my bag".  "I hack solid-state
  physics."  8. To pull a prank on.  See definition 3 and HACKER (def
  #3).  9. HACK UP (ON): to hack, but generally implies that the
  result is meanings 1-2.  10. HACK VALUE: term used as the reason or
  motivation for expending effort toward a seemingly useless goal,
  the point being that the accomplished goal is a hack.  For example,
  MacLISP has code to read and print roman numerals, which was
  installed purely for hack value.
  HAPPY HACKING: a farewell.  HOW'S HACKING?: a friendly greeting
  among hackers.  HACK HACK: a somewhat pointless but friendly
  comment, often used as a temporary farewell.

HACKER [originally, someone who makes furniture with an axe] n. 1. A
  person who is good at programming quickly.  Not everything a hacker
  produces is a hack.  2. An expert at a particular program, example:
  "A SAIL hacker".  3. A malicious or inquisitive meddler who tries
  to discover information by poking around.  Hence "keyword hacker",
  "network hacker".

HACKISH adj. Being or involving a hack.  HACKISHNESS n.

HAIR n. The complications which make something hairy.  "Decoding TECO
  commands requires a certain amount of hair."  Often seen in the
  phrase INFINITE HAIR, which connotes extreme complexity.

HAIRY adj. 1. Overly complicated.  "DWIM is incredibly hairy."  2.
  Incomprehensible.  "DWIM is incredibly hairy."  3.  Of people,
  high-powered, authoritative, rare, expert, and/or incomprehensible.
  Hard to explain except in context: "He knows this hairy lawyer who
  says there's nothing to worry about."

HAKMEM n. MIT AI Memo 239 (February 1972).  A collection of neat
  mathematical and programming hacks contributed by many people
  at MIT and elsewhere.

HANDWAVE 1. v. To gloss over a complex point; to distract a listener;
  to support a (possibly actually valid) point with blatantly faulty
  logic.  2. n. The act of handwaving.  "Boy, what a handwave!"  The
  use of this word is often accompanied by gestures: both hands up,
  palms forward, swinging the hands in a vertical plane pivoting at
  the elbows and/or shoulders (depending on the magnitude of the
  handwave); alternatively, holding the forearms still while rotating
  the hands at the wrist to make them flutter.  In context, the
  gestures alone can suffice as a remark.

HARDWARILY adv. In a way pertaining to hardware.  "The system is
  hardwarily unreliable."  The adjective "hardwary" is NOT used.  See
  SOFTWARILY.

HELLO WALL  See WALL.

HIRSUTE  Occasionally used humorously as a synonym for HAIRY.

HUMONGOUS, HUMUNGOUS  See HUNGUS.

HUNGUS (hung'-ghis) [perhaps related to current slang "humongous";
  which one came first (if either) is unclear] adj. Large, unwieldy,
  usually unmanageable.  "TCP is a hungus piece of code."  "This is a
  hungus set of modifications."

IMPCOM  See TELNET.

INFINITE adj. Consisting of a large number of objects; extreme.  Used
  very loosely as in: "This program produces infinite garbage."

IRP (erp) [from the MIDAS pseudo-op which generates a block of code
  repeatedly, substituting in various places the car and/or cdr of
  the list(s) supplied at the IRP] v. To perform a series of tasks
  repeatedly with a minor substitution each time through.  "I guess
  I'll IRP over these homework papers so I can give them some random
  grade for this semester."

JFCL (djif'kl or djafik'l) [based on the PDP-10 instruction that acts
  as a fast no-op] v. To cancel or annul something.  "Why don't you
  jfcl that out?"
  [Notes: Once at the Museum of Science parking lot I saw a Vermont
  license plate JFCL.  I wonder who owns it? - GLS.  California JFCL
  plate is on Geoff Goodfellow's grey-beige 450SL Mercedes. - RF]

JIFFY n. 1. Interval of CPU time, commonly 1/60 second or 1
  millisecond. 2. Indeterminate time from a few seconds to forever.
  "I'll do it in a jiffy" means certainly not now and possibly never.

JOCK n. Programmer who is characterized by large and somewhat brute
  force programs.  The term is particularly well-suited for systems
  programmers.

J. RANDOM  See RANDOM.

JRST (jerst) [based on the PDP-10 jump instruction] v. To suddenly
  change subjects.  Usage: rather rare.  "Jack be nimble, Jack be
  quick; Jack jrst over the candle stick."

JSYS (jay'sis) [Jump to SYStem] See UUO.

KLUGE (kloodj) alt. KLUDGE [from the German "kluge", clever] n. 1. A
  Rube Goldberg device in hardware or software.  2. A clever
  programming trick intended to solve a particular nasty case in an
  efficient, if not clear, manner.  Often used to repair bugs.  Often
  verges on being a crock.  3. Something that works for the wrong
  reason.  4. v. To insert a kluge into a program.  "I've kluged this
  routine to get around that weird bug, but there's probably a better
  way."  Also KLUGE UP.  5. KLUGE AROUND: to avoid by inserting a
  kluge.  6. (WPI) A feature which is implemented in a RUDE manner.

LDB (lid'dib) [from the PDP-10 instruction set] v. To extract from the
  middle.

LIFE n. A cellular-automata game invented by John Horton Conway, and
  first introduced publicly by Martin Gardner (Scientific American,
  October 1970).

LINE FEED (standard ASCII terminology) 1. v. To feed the paper through
  a terminal by one line (in order to print on the next line).  2. n.
  The "character" which causes the terminal to perform this action.

LINE STARVE (MIT) Inverse of LINE FEED.

LOSE [from MIT jargon] v. 1. To fail.  A program loses when it
  encounters an exceptional condition.  2. To be exceptionally
  unaesthetic.  3. Of people, to be obnoxious or unusually stupid (as
  opposed to ignorant).  4. DESERVE TO LOSE: v. Said of someone who
  willfully does the wrong thing; humorously, if one uses a feature
  known to be marginal.  What is meant is that one deserves the
  consequences of one's losing actions.  "Boy, anyone who tries to
  use MULTICS deserves to lose!"
  LOSE LOSE - a reply or comment on a situation.

LOSER n. An unexpectedly bad situation, program, programmer, or
  person.  Especially "real loser".

LOSS n. Something which loses.  WHAT A (MOBY) LOSS!: interjection.

LOSSAGE n. The result of a bug or malfunction.

LPT (lip'-it) n. Line printer, of course.

MACROTAPE n. An industry standard reel of tape, as opposed to a
  MICROTAPE.

MAGIC adj. 1. As yet unexplained, or too complicated to explain.
  (Arthur C. Clarke once said that magic was as-yet-not-understood
  science.)  "TTY echoing is controlled by a large number of magic
  bits."  "This routine magically computes the parity of an eight-bit
  byte in three instructions."  2. (SAIL) A feature not generally
  publicized which allows something otherwise impossible, or a
  feature formerly in that category but now unveiled.  Example: The
  keyboard commands which override the screen-hiding features.

MARGINAL adj. 1. Extremely small.  "A marginal increase in core can
  decrease GC time drastically."  2. Of extremely small merit.  "This
  proposed new feature seems rather marginal to me."  3. Of extremely
  small probability of winning.  "The power supply was rather
  marginal anyway; no wonder it crapped out."  4. MARGINALLY: adv.
  Slightly.  "The ravs here are only marginally better than at Small
  Eating Place."

MICROTAPE n. Occasionally used to mean a DECtape, as opposed to a
  MACROTAPE.

MISFEATURE n. A feature which eventually screws someone, possibly
  because it is not adequate for a new situation which has evolved.
  It is not the same as a bug because fixing it involves a gross
  philosophical change to the structure of the system involved.
  Often a former feature becomes a misfeature because a tradeoff was
  made whose parameters subsequently changed (possibly only in the
  judgment of the implementors).  "Well, yeah, it's kind of a
  misfeature that file names are limited to six characters, but we're
  stuck with it for now."

MOBY [Seems to have been in use among model railroad fans years ago.
  Entered the world of AI with the Fabritek 256K moby memory of
  MIT-AI.  Derived from Melville's "Moby Dick" (some say from "Moby
  Pickle").] 1. adj. Large, immense, or complex.  "A moby frob."  2.
  n. The maximum address space of a machine, hence 3. n. 256K words,
  the size of a PDP-10 moby.  (The maximum address space means the
  maximum normally addressable space, as opposed to the amount of
  physical memory a machine can have.  Thus the MIT PDP-10s each have
  two mobies, usually referred to as the "low moby" (0-777777) and
  "high moby" (1000000-1777777), or as "moby 0" and "moby 1".  MIT-AI
  has four mobies of address space: moby 2 is the PDP-6 memory, and
  moby 3 the PDP-11 interface.)  In this sense "moby" is often used
  as a generic unit of either address space (18. bits' worth) or of
  memory (about a megabyte, or 9/8 megabyte (if one accounts for
  difference between 32.- and 36.-bit words), or 5/4 megacharacters).
  4. A title of address (never of third-person reference), usually
  used to show admiration, respect, and/or friendliness to a
  competent hacker.  "So, moby Knight, how's the CONS machine doing?"
  MOBY FOO, MOBY WIN, MOBY LOSS: standard emphatic forms.
  FOBY MOO: a spoonerism due to Greenblatt.

MODULO prep. Except for.  From mathematical terminology: one can
  consider saying that 4=22 "except for the 9's" (4=22 mod 9).
  "Well, LISP seems to work okay now, modulo that GC bug."

MOON n. 1. A celestial object whose phase is very important to
  hackers.  See PHASE OF THE MOON.  2. Dave Moon (MOON@MC).

MUMBLE interj. 1. Said when the correct response is either too
  complicated to enunciate or the speaker has not thought it out.
  Often prefaces a longer answer, or indicates a general reluctance
  to get into a big long discussion.  "Well, mumble."  2. Sometimes
  used as an expression of disagreement.  "I think we should buy it."
  "Mumble!"  Common variant: MUMBLE FROTZ.

MUNCH (often confused with "mung", q.v.) v. To transform information
  in a serial fashion, often requiring large amounts of computation.
  To trace down a data structure.  Related to CRUNCH (q.v.), but
  connotes less pain.

MUNCHING SQUARES n. A display hack dating back to the PDP-1, which
  employs a trivial computation (involving XOR'ing of x-y display
  coordinates - see HAKMEM items 146-148) to produce an impressive
  display of moving, growing, and shrinking squares.  The hack
  usually has a parameter (usually taken from toggle switches) which
  when well-chosen can produce amazing effects.  Some of these,
  discovered recently on the LISP machine, have been christened
  MUNCHING TRIANGLES, MUNCHING W'S, and MUNCHING MAZES.

MUNG (variant: MUNGE) [recursive acronym for Mung Until No Good] v. 1.
  To make changes to afile, often large-scale, usually irrevocable.
  Occasionally accidental.  See BLT.  2. To destroy, usually
  accidentally, occasionally maliciously.  The system only mungs
  things maliciously.

N adj. 1. Some large and indeterminate number of objects; "There were
  N bugs in that crock!"; also used in its original sense of a
  variable name.  2. An arbitrarily large (and perhaps infinite)
  number.  3. A variable whose value is specified by the current
  context.  "We'd like to order N wonton soups and a family dinner
  for N-1."  4. NTH: adj. The ordinal counterpart of N. "Now for the
  Nth and last time..."  In the specific context "Nth-year grad
  student", N is generally assumed to be at least 4, and is usually 5
  or more.  See also 69.

NIGHT MODE  See PHASE (of people).

NIL [from LISP terminology for "false"] No.  Usage: used in reply to a
  question, particularly one asked using the "-P" convention.  See T.

OBSCURE adj. Used in an exaggeration of its normal meaning, to imply a
  total lack of comprehensibility.  "The reason for that last crash is
  obscure."  "FIND's command syntax is obscure."  MODERATELY OBSCURE
  implies that it could be figured out but probably isn't worth the
  trouble.

OPEN n. Abbreviation for "open (or left) parenthesis", used when
  necessary to eliminate oral ambiguity.  To read aloud the LISP form
  (DEFUN FOO (X) (PLUS X 1)) one might say: "Open def-fun foo, open
  eks close, open, plus ekx one, close close."  See CLOSE.

PARSE [from linguistic terminology] v. 1. To determine the syntactic
  structure of a sentence or other utterance (close to the standard
  English meaning).  Example: "That was the one I saw you."  "I can't
  parse that."  2. More generally, to understand or comprehend.
  "It's very simple; you just kretch the glims and then aos the
  zotz."  "I can't parse that."  3. Of fish, to have to remove the
  bones yourself (usually at a Chinese restaurant).  "I object to
  parsing fish" means "I don't want to get a whole fish, but a sliced
  one is okay."  A "parsed fish" has been deboned.  There is some
  controversy over whether "unparsed" should mean "bony", or also
  mean "deboned".

PATCH 1. n. A temporary addition to a piece of code, usually as a
  quick-and-dirty remedy to an existing bug or misfeature.  A patch
  may or may not work, and may or may not eventually be incorporated
  permanently into the program.  2. v. To insert a patch into a piece
  of code.

PDL (piddle or puddle) [acronym for Push Down List] n. 1. A LIFO queue
  (stack); more loosely, any priority queue; even more loosely, any
  queue.  A person's pdl is the set of things he has to do in the
  future.  One speaks of the next project to be attacked as having
  risen to the top of the pdl.  "I'm afraid I've got real work to do,
  so this'll have to be pushed way down on my pdl."  See PUSH and
  POP.  2. Dave Lebling (PDL@DM).

PHANTOM n. (SAIL) The SAIL equivalent of a DRAGON (q.v.).  Typical
  phantoms include the accounting program, the news-wire monitor, and
  the lpt and xgp spoolers.

PHASE (of people) 1. n. The phase of one's waking-sleeping schedule with
  respect to the standard 24-hour cycle.  This is a useful concept
  among people who often work at night according to no fixed
  schedule.  It is not uncommon to change one's phase by as much as
  six hours/day on a regular basis.  "What's your phase?" "I've been
  getting in about 8 PM lately, but I'm going to work around to the
  day schedule by Friday."  A person who is roughly 12 hours out of
  phase is sometimes said to be in "night mode".  (The term "day
  mode" is also used, but less frequently.)  2. CHANGE PHASE THE HARD
  WAY: To stay awake for a very long time in order to get into a
  different phase. 3. CHANGE PHASE THE EASY WAY: To stay asleep etc.

PHASE OF THE MOON n. Used humorously as a random parameter on which
  something is said to depend.  Sometimes implies unreliability of
  whatever is dependent.  "This feature depends on having the channel
  open in mumble mode, having the foo switch set, and on the phase of
  the moon."

POM n. Phase of the moon (q.v.).  Usage: usually used in the phrase
  "POM dependent" which means flakey (q.v.).

POP [based on the stack operation that removes the top of a stack, and
  the fact that procedure return addresses are saved on the stack]
  dialect: POPJ (pop-jay), based on the PDP-10 procedure return
  instruction.  v. To return from a digression.

PPN (pip'in) [DEC terminology, short for Project-Programmer Number] n.
  1. A combination `project' (directory name) and programmer name,
  used to identify a specific directory belonging to that user.  For
  instance, "FOO,BAR" would be the FOO directory for user BAR.  Since
  the name is restricted to three letters, the programmer name is
  usually the person's initials, though sometimes it is a nickname or
  other special sequence.  (Standard DEC setup is to have two octal
  numbers instead of characters; hence the original acronym.)  2.
  Often used loosely to refer to the programmer name alone.  "I want
  to send you some mail; what's your ppn?"  Usage: not used at MIT,
  since ITS does not use ppn's.  The equivalent terms would be UNAME
  and SNAME, depending on context, but these are not used except in
  their technical senses.

PTY (pity) n. Pseudo TTY, a simulated TTY used to run a job under the
  supervision of another job.
  PTYJOB (pity-job) n. The job being run on the PTY.  Also a common
  general-purpose program for creating and using PTYs.
  This is DEC and SAIL terminology; the MIT equivalent is STY.

PUNT [from the punch line of an old joke: "Drop back 15 yards and
  punt"] v. To give up, typically without any intention of retrying.

PUSH [based on the stack operation that puts the current information
  on a stack, and the fact that procedure call addresses are saved on
  the stack] dialect: PUSHJ (push-jay), based on the PDP-10 procedure
  call instruction.  v. To enter upon a digression, to save the
  current discussion for later.

QUES (kwess) 1. n. The question mark character ("?").  2. interj.
  What?  Also QUES QUES?  See WALL.

QUUX [Invented by Steele.  Mythically, from the Latin semi-deponent
  verb QUUXO, QUUXARE, QUUXANDUM IRI; noun form variously QUUX
  (plural QUUCES, Anglicized to QUUXES) and QUUXU (genitive plural is
  QUUXUUM, four U's in seven letters).] 1. Originally, a meta-word
  like FOO and FOOBAR.  Invented by Steele for precisely this
  purpose.  2. interj. See FOO; however, denotes very little disgust,
  and is uttered mostly for the sake of the sound of it.  3. n.
  Refers to one of three people who went to Boston Latin School and
  eventually to MIT:
       THE GREAT QUUX:  Guy L. Steele Jr.
       THE LESSER QUUX:  David J. Littleboy
       THE MEDIOCRE QUUX:  Alan P. Swide
  (This taxonomy is said to be similarly applied to three Frankston
  brothers at MIT.)  QUUX, without qualification, usually refers to
  The Great Quux, who is somewhat infamous for light verse and for
  the "Crunchly" cartoons.  4. QUUXY: adj. Of or pertaining to a
  QUUX.  5. n. The Micro Quux (Sam Lewis).

RANDOM adj. 1. Unpredictable (closest to mathematical definition);
  weird.  "The system's been behaving pretty randomly."  2. Assorted;
  undistinguished.  "Who was at the conference?"  "Just a bunch of
  random business types."  3.  Frivolous; unproductive; undirected
  (pejorative).  "He's just a random loser."  4. Incoherent or
  inelegant; not well organized.  "The program has a random set of
  misfeatures."  "That's a random name for that function."  "Well,
  all the names were chosen pretty randomly."  5. Gratuitously wrong,
  i.e., poorly done and for no good apparent reason.  For example, a
  program that handles file name defaulting in a particularly useless
  way, or a routine that could easily have been coded using only
  three ac's, but randomly uses seven for assorted non-overlapping
  purposes, so that no one else can invoke it without first saving
  four extra ac's. 6. In no particular order, though deterministic.
  "The I/O channels are in a pool, and when a file is opened one is
  chosen randomly."  n. 7. A random hacker; used particularly of high
  school students who soak up computer time and generally get in the
  way.  8. (Occasional MIT usage) One who lives at Random Hall.
  J. RANDOM is often prefixed to a noun to make a "name" out of it
  (by comparison to common names such as "J. Fred Muggs").  The most
  common uses are "J. Random Loser" and "J. Random Nurd" ("Should
  J. Random Loser be allowed to gun down other people?"), but it
  can be used just as an elaborate version of RANDOM in any sense.

RANDOMNESS n. An unexplainable misfeature; gratuitous inelegance.
  Also, a hack or crock which depends on a complex combination
  of coincidences (or rather, the combination upon which the
  crock depends).  "This hack can output characters 40-57 by
  putting the character in the accumulator field of an XCT and
  then extracting 6 bits -- the low two bits of the XCT opcode
  are the right thing."  "What randomness!"

RAVE (WPI) v. 1. To persist in discussing a specific subject.  2. To
  speak authoritatively on a subject about which one knows very
  little.  3. To complain to a person who is not in a position to
  correct the difficulty.  4. To purposely annoy another person
  verbally.  5. To evangelize.

REAL WORLD, THE n. 1. In programming, those institutions at which
  programming may be used in the same sentence as FORTRAN, COBOL,
  RPG, IBM, etc.  2. To programmers, the location of non-programmers
  and activities not related to programming.  3. A universe in which
  the standard dress is shirt and tie and in which a person's working
  hours are defined as 9 to 5.  4. The location of the status quo.
  "Poor fellow, he's left MIT and gone into the real world."  Used
  pejoratively by those not in residence there.  In conversation,
  talking of someone who has entered the real world is not unlike
  talking about a deceased person.

REL See BIN.

RIGHT THING, THE n. That which is "obviously" the correct or
  appropriate thing to use, do, say, etc.  Use of this term often
  implies that in fact reasonable people may disagree.  "Never let
  your conscience keep you from doing the right thing!"  "What's the
  right thing for LISP to do when it reads '(.)'?"

RUDE (WPI) adj. 1. (Of a program) Badly written.  2. Functionally
  poor, e.g. a program which is very difficult to use because of
  gratuitously poor (random?) design decisions.  See CUSPY.

SACRED adj. Reserved for the exclusive use of something (a
  metaphorical extension of the standard meaning).  "Accumulator 7 is
  sacred to the UUO handler."  Often means that anyone may look at
  the sacred object, but clobbering it will screw whatever it is
  sacred to.

SAGA (WPI) n. A cuspy but bogus raving story dealing with N random
  broken people.

SAV (save)  See BIN.

SEMI 1. n. Abbreviation for "semicolon", when speaking.  "Commands to
  GRIND are prefixed by semi-semi-star" means that the prefix is
  ";;*", not 1/4 of a star.  2. Prefix with words such as
  "immediately", as a qualifier.  "When is the system coming up?"
  "Semi-immediately."

SERVER n. A kind of DAEMON which performs a service for the requester,
  which often runs on a computer other than the one on which the
  server runs.

SHR (share)  See BIN.

69 adj. Large quantity.  Usage: Exclusive to MIT-AI.  "Go away, I have
  69 things to do to DDT before worrying about fixing the bug in the
  phase of the moon output routine..."
  [Note: Actually, any number less than 100 but large enough to have
  no obvious magic properties will be recognized as a "large number".
  There is no denying that "69" is the local favorite.  I don't know
  whether its origins are related to the obscene interpretation, but
  I do know that 69 decimal = 105 octal, and 69 hexadecimal = 105
  decimal, which is a nice property. - GLS]

SLOP n. 1. A one-sided fudge factor (q.v.).  Often introduced to avoid
  the possibility of a fencepost error (q.v.).  2. (Used by compiler
  freaks) The ratio of code generated by a compiler to hand-compiled
  code, minus 1; i.e. the space (or maybe time) you lose because you
  didn't do it yourself.

SLURP v. To read a large data file entirely into core before working
  on it.  "This program slurps in a 1K-by-1K matrix and does an FFT."

SNARF v. To grab, esp. a large document or file for the purpose of
  using it either with or without the author's permission.  See BLT.
  Variant: SNARF (IT) DOWN.  (At MIT on ITS, DDT has a command called
  :SNARF which grabs a job from another (inferior) DDT.)

SOFTWARE ROT n. Hypothetical disease the existence of which has been
  deduced from the observation that unused programs or features will
  stop working after sufficient time has passed, even if "nothing has
  changed".  Also known as "bit decay".

SOFTWARILY adv. In a way pertaining to software.  "The system is
  softwarily unreliable."  The adjective "softwary" is NOT used.  See
  HARDWARILY.

SOS 1. (ess-oh-ess) n. A losing editor, SON OF STOPGAP.  2. (sahss) v.
  Inverse of AOS, from the PDP-10 instruction set.

SPAZZ 1. v. To behave spastically or erratically; more often, to
  commit a single gross error.  "Boy, is he spazzing!"  2. n. One who
  spazzes.  "Boy, what a spazz!"  3. n. The result of spazzing.
  "Boy, what a spazz!"

SPLAT n. 1. Name used in many places (DEC, IBM, and others) for the
  ASCII star ("*") character.  2. (MIT) Name used by some people for
  the ASCII pound-sign ("#") character.  3. (SAIL) Name used by some
  people for the Stanford/ITS extended ASCII circle-x character.

  (This character is also called "circle-x", "blobby", and "frob",
  among other names.)  4. (SAIL) Name for the semi-mythical extended
  ASCII circle-plus character.  5. Canonical name for an output
  routine that outputs whatever the the local interpretation of splat
  is.  Usage: nobody really agrees what character "splat" really is,
  but the term is common.

SUPDUP v. To communicate with another ARPAnet host using the SUPDUP
  program, which is a SUPer-DUPer TELNET talking a special display
  protocol used mostly in talking to ITS sites.  Sometimes abbreviated
  to SD.

STATE n. Condition, situation.  "What's the state of NEWIO?"  "It's
  winning away."  "What's your state?"  "I'm about to gronk out."  As
  a special case, "What's the state of the world?" (or, more silly,
  "State-of-world-P?") means "What's new?" or "What's going on?"

STOPPAGE n. Extreme lossage (see LOSSAGE) resulting in something
  (usually vital) becoming completely unusable.

STY (pronounced "sty", not spelled out) n. A pseudo-teletype, which is
  a two-way pipeline with a job on one end and a fake keyboard-tty
  on the other.  Also, a standard program which provides a pipeline
  from its controlling tty to a pseudo-teletype (and thence to another
  tty, thereby providing a "sub-tty").

  This is MIT terminology; the SAIL and DEC equivalent is PTY.

SUPERPROGRAMMER n. See "wizard", "hacker".  Usage: rare.  (Becoming
  more common among IBM and Yourdon types.)

SWAPPED v. From the use of secondary storage devices to implement
  virtual memory in computer systems.  Something which is SWAPPED IN
  is available for immediate use in main memory, and otherwise is
  SWAPPED OUT.  Often used metaphorically to refer to people's
  memories: "I read TECO ORDER every few months to keep the
  information swapped in."

SYSTEM n. 1. The supervisor program on the computer.  2. Any
  large-scale program.  3. Any method or algorithm.  4. The way
  things are usually done.  Usage: a fairly ambiguous word.  "You
  can't beat the system."
  SYSTEM HACKER: one who hacks the system (in sense 1 only; for sense
  2 one mentions the particular program: e.g., LISP HACKER)

T [from LISP terminology for "true"] Yes.  Usage: used in reply to a
  question, particularly one asked using the "-P" convention).  See
  NIL.

TALK MODE  See COM MODE.

TASTE n. (Primarily MIT-DMS) The quality in programs which tends to be
  inversely proportional to the number of features, hacks, and
  kluges programmed into it.  Also, TASTEFUL, TASTEFULNESS.  Although
  TASTEFUL and FLAVORFUL are essentially synonyms, TASTE and FLAVOR
  are not.

TECO (tee'koe) [acronym for Text Editor and COrrector] 1. n. A text
  editor developed at MIT, and modified by just about everybody.  If
  all the dialects are included, TECO might well be the single most
  prolific editor in use.  Noted for its powerful pseudo-programming
  features and its incredibly hairy syntax.  2. v. To edit using the
  TECO editor in one of its infinite forms; sometimes used to mean
  "to edit" even when not using TECO!  Usage: rare at SAIL, where
  most people wouldn't touch TECO with a TENEX pole.
  [Historical note: DEC grabbed an ancient version of MIT TECO many
  years ago when it was still a TTY-oriented editor.  By now, TECO at
  MIT is highly display-oriented and is actually a language for
  writing editors, rather than an editor.  Meanwhile, the outside
  world's various versions of TECO remain almost the same as the MIT
  version of ten years ago.  DEC recently tried to discourage its
  use, but an underground movement of sorts kept it alive.]

  [Since this note was written I found out that DEC tried to force
  their hackers by administrative decision to use a hacked up and
  generally lobotomized version of SOS instead of TECO, and they
  revolted. - MRC]

TELNET v. To communicate with another ARPAnet host using the TELNET
  program.  TOPS-10 people use the word IMPCOM since that is the
  program name for them.  Sometimes abbreviated to TN.  "I usually TN
  over to SAIL just to read the AP News."

TERPRI (tur'pree) [from the LISP 1.5 (and later, MacLISP) function to
  start a new line of output] v. To output a CRLF (q.v.).

THEORY n. Used in the general sense of idea, plan, story, or set of
  rules.  "What's the theory on fixing this TECO loss?"  "What's the
  theory on dinner tonight?"  ("Chinatown, I guess.")  "What's the
  current theory on letting losers on during the day?"  "The theory
  behind this change is to fix the following well-known screw..."

THRASH v. To move wildly or violently.  Swapping systems which are
  overloaded spend much of their time moving pages into and out of
  core, and are therefore said to thrash.

TICK n. Interval of time; basic clock time on the computer.  Typically
  1/60 second.  See JIFFY.

TRAP 1. n. A program interrupt, usually used specifically to refer to
  an interrupt caused by some illegal action taking place in the user
  program.  In most cases the system monitor performs some action
  related to the nature of the illegality, then returns control to
  the program.  See UUO.  2. v. To cause a trap.  "These instructions
  trap to the monitor."  Also used transitively to indicate the cause
  of the trap.  "The monitor traps all input/output instructions."

TTY (titty) n. Terminal of the teletype variety, characterized by a
  noisy mechanical printer, a very limited character set, and poor
  print quality.  Usage: antiquated (like the TTY's themselves).
  Sometimes used to refer to any terminal at all; sometimes used
  to refer to the particular terminal controlling a job.

TWEAK v. To change slightly, usually in reference to a value.  Also
  used synonymously with TWIDDLE.  See FROBNICATE and FUDGE FACTOR.

TWENEX n. The TOPS-20 operating system by DEC.  So named because
  TOPS-10 was a typically crufty DEC operating system for the PDP-10.
  BBN developed their own system, called TENEX (TEN EXecutive), and
  in creating TOPS-20 for the DEC-20 DEC copied TENEX and adapted it
  for the 20.  Usage: DEC people cringe when they hear TOPS-20
  referred to as "Twenex", but the term seems to be catching on
  nevertheless.
  [Note by MRC: Not only that, but the DEC hackers are using it a
  lot themselves!  I used the term Twenex in talking to some Marlboro
  types recently, and they instantly stopped saying "TOPS-20" and
  started saying "Twenex"!]

TWIDDLE n. 1. tilde (ASCII 176, "~").  Also called "squiggle",
  "sqiggle" (sic--pronounced "skig'gul"), and "twaddle", but twiddle
  is by far the most common term.  2. A small and insignificant
  change to a program.  Usually fixes one bug and generates several
  new ones.  3. v. To change something in a small way.  Bits, for
  example, are often twiddled.  Twiddling a switch or knob implies
  much less sense of purpose than toggling or tweaking it; see
  FROBNICATE.

UP adj. 1. Working, in order.  "The down escalator is up."  2. BRING
  UP: v. To create a working version and start it.  "They brought up
  a down system."

USER n. A programmer who will believe anything you tell him.  One who
  asks questions.  Identified at MIT with "loser" by the spelling
  "luser".
  [Note by GLS: I don't agree with RF's definition at all.
  Basically, there are two classes of people who work with a program:
  there are implementors (hackers) and users (losers).  The users are
  looked down on by hackers to a mild degree because they don't
  understand the full ramifications of the system in all its glory.
  (A few users who do are known as real winners.)  It is true that
  users ask questions (of necessity).  Very often they are annoying
  or downright stupid.]

UUO (you-you-oh) [short for "Un-Used Operation"] n. A DEC-10 system
  monitor call.  The term "Un-Used Operation" comes from the fact
  that, on DEC-10 systems, monitor calls are implemented as invalid
  or illegal machine instructions, which cause traps to the monitor
  (see TRAP).  The SAIL manual describing the available UUO's has a
  cover picture showing an unidentified underwater object.  See YOYO.
  [Note: DEC sales people have since decided that "Un-Used Operation"
  sounds bad, so UUO now stands for "Unimplemented User Operation".]
  Tenex and Twenex systems use the JSYS machine instruction (q.v.),
  which is halfway between a legal machine instruction and a UUO,
  since KA-10 Tenices implement it as a hardware instruction which
  can be used as an ordinary subroutine call (sort of a "pure JSR").

VANILLA adj. Ordinary flavor, standard.  See FLAVOR.  When used of
  food, very often does not mean that the food is flavored with
  vanilla extract!  For example, "vanilla-flavored wonton soup" means
  ordinary wonton soup, as opposed to hot and sour wonton soup.

VIRGIN adj. Unused, in reference to an instantiation of a program.
  "Let's bring up a virgin system and see if it crashes again."
  Also, by extension, unused buffers and the like within a program.

VISIONARY n. One who hacks vision (in an AI context, such as the
  processing of visual images).

WALDO [probably taken from the story "Waldo", by Heinlein, which is
  where the term was first used to mean a mechanical adjunct to a
  human limb] Used at Harvard, particularly by Tom Cheatham and
  students, instead of FOOBAR as a meta-syntactic variable and
  general nonsense word.  See FOO, BAR, FOOBAR, QUUX.

WALL [shortened form of HELLO WALL, apparently from the phrase "up
  against a blank wall"] (WPI) interj. 1. An indication of confusion,
  usually spoken with a quizzical tone.  "Wall??"  2. A request for
  further explication.

WEDGED [from "head wedged up ass"] adj. To be in a locked state,
  incapable of proceeding without help.  (See GRONK.)  Often refers
  to humans suffereing misconceptions.  "The swapper is wedged."
  This term is sometimes used as a synonym for DEADLOCKED (q.v.).

WIN [from MIT jargon] 1. v. To succeed.  A program wins if no
  unexpected conditions arise.  2. BIG WIN: n. Serendipity.
  Emphatic forms: MOBY WIN, SUPER WIN, HYPER-WIN (often used
  interjectively as a reply).  For some reason SUITABLE WIN is also
  common at MIT, usually in reference to a satisfactory solution to a
  problem.  See LOSE.

WINNAGE n. The situation when a lossage is corrected, or when
  something is winning.  Quite rare.  Usage: also quite rare.

WINNER 1. n. An unexpectedly good situation, program, programmer or
  person.  2. REAL WINNER: often sarcastic, but also used as high
  praise.

WINNITUDE n. The quality of winning (as opposed to WINNAGE, which is
  the result of winning).  "That's really great!  Boy, what winnitude!"

WIZARD n. 1. A person who knows how a complex piece of software or
  hardware works; someone who can find and fix his bugs in an
  emergency.  Rarely used at MIT, where HACKER is the preferred term.
  2. A person who is permitted to do things forbidden to ordinary
  people, e.g., a "net wizard" on a TENEX may run programs which
  speak low-level host-imp protocol; an ADVENT wizard at SAIL may
  play Adventure during the day.

WORMHOLE n. A location in a monitor which contains the address of a
  routine, with the specific intent of making it easy to substitute a
  different routine.  The following quote comes from "Polymorphic
  Systems", vol. 2, p. 54:

  "Any type of I/O device can be substituted for the standard device
  by loading a simple driver routine for that device and installing
  its address in one of the monitor's `wormholes.'*
  ----------
  *The term `wormhole' has been used to describe a hypothetical
  astronomical situation where a black hole connects to the `other
  side' of the universe.  When this happens, information can pass
  through the wormhole, in only one direction, much as `assumptions'
  pass down the monitor's wormholes."

XGP 1. n. Xerox Graphics Printer.  2. v. To print something on the
  XGP.  "You shouldn't XGP such a large file."

YOYO n. DEC service engineers' slang for UUO (q.v.).  Usage: rare at
  SAIL and MIT, has been found at random DEC installations.

YOYO MODE n. State in which the system is said to be when it rapidly
  alternates several times between being up and being down.

YU-SHIANG WHOLE FISH n. The character gamma (extended SAIL ASCII 11),
  which with a loop in its tail looks like a fish.  Usage: used
  primarily by people on the MIT LISP Machine.  Tends to elicit
  incredulity from people who hear about it second-hand.

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