Bruce J. Richman
October 4th 04, 07:12 PM
The Devil wrote:
>On 04 Oct 2004 17:48:18 GMT, (Bruce J. Richman)
>wrote:
>
>>Howierd should have a different quote everyday because, unfortunately, for
>most
>>Alzheimer's sufferers, every day is a new day.
>
>What are you saying? Every day is a new day for me too. And I'm not
>aware of having any form of dementia. At least, none that I don't
>fully command.
>
That's good. For Hwierd, unfortunately, the level of awareness of *anything*
factual is pretty low. His new days are the same as his old ones - ad nauseam.
(But he doesn't know it).
>>Carbon paper is indeed useful for copying the work of others, Howierd will
>note
>>(during brief periods of awareness).
>
>The tricky bit is getting it into other people's typewriters. And
>since no one uses typewriters any more, it's even trickier.
I thought of that true. Howie probably just places the carbon paper underneath
the work of others he's swiped from the Internet and then presses down hard
with a dough roller (like for making cakes) and hopes the pressure will
transfer to a blank piece of paper underneath.
There
>could be a few seat-of-the-pants spy stories in there. With Howie's
>technical incompetence, how many laser printer drums have been ****ed
>up? How many monitors smashed on the floor as Howie tries to get a
>carriage return? Gripping stuff.
>
That's what happens when he performs his double blind, double deaf tests.
>--
>td
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Bruce J. Richman
>On 04 Oct 2004 17:48:18 GMT, (Bruce J. Richman)
>wrote:
>
>>Howierd should have a different quote everyday because, unfortunately, for
>most
>>Alzheimer's sufferers, every day is a new day.
>
>What are you saying? Every day is a new day for me too. And I'm not
>aware of having any form of dementia. At least, none that I don't
>fully command.
>
That's good. For Hwierd, unfortunately, the level of awareness of *anything*
factual is pretty low. His new days are the same as his old ones - ad nauseam.
(But he doesn't know it).
>>Carbon paper is indeed useful for copying the work of others, Howierd will
>note
>>(during brief periods of awareness).
>
>The tricky bit is getting it into other people's typewriters. And
>since no one uses typewriters any more, it's even trickier.
I thought of that true. Howie probably just places the carbon paper underneath
the work of others he's swiped from the Internet and then presses down hard
with a dough roller (like for making cakes) and hopes the pressure will
transfer to a blank piece of paper underneath.
There
>could be a few seat-of-the-pants spy stories in there. With Howie's
>technical incompetence, how many laser printer drums have been ****ed
>up? How many monitors smashed on the floor as Howie tries to get a
>carriage return? Gripping stuff.
>
That's what happens when he performs his double blind, double deaf tests.
>--
>td
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Bruce J. Richman