
Geek Horoscopes 70
Chops-Frozen-Water writes "Your horoscope for next year can be found on Salon. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll say, "Hey! I resemble that!" And remember, The Stars Are Right. " Just for the record, I am an Aries.
How can you do 'New Math' problems with an 'Old Math' mind? -- Charles Schulz
First Haiku (Score:1)
i have beaten everyone
moderate me down
I don't believe in horoscopes (Score:2)
rOD.
Another Project? (Score:2)
What you will actually do: Toy with the rough edges of how much time you can spend on Slashdot while just barely meeting project deadlines.
But wasting ^H^H^H^H^H^H^H spending time on /. is my current project. :P
What a load of... (Score:3)
After all, it's a well known fact that the only true way to predict the future is tarot readings.
These are good tech horoscopes...(offtopic?) (Score:1)
Hey! (Score:1)
Salon is obviously out of it. I wish I could get an office in the server room! That would rock! Of course all that EMR would probably make me sterile or give me cancer or something, but hey, I've never really wanted kids anyway.
Oh, OK, it's occured to me that maybe they meant it in a negative way (ie, it would be bad if youre office was not the server room).
How accurate! (Score:1)
Heads up! Hackers will exploit Y2K hoopla as the perfect diversion. While the rest of the world screams "fire," they're quietly gutting the corporate data cores and decrypting sensitive financial records on Linux-based parallel supercomputers. They will attempt to high-five each other, and miss. Don't worry, a Gemini firewall admin takes the heat.
That's exactly what I was talking about five minutes ago! It should be fun for non libras, too... and not just because clinton said not to.
I must not be . . . (Score:1)
Re:Another Project? (Score:1)
This is horrible. I work at Barnes and Noble and make espresso all day in the Cafe for rich jerks, while i read O'reilly perl books on breaks. Sigh...
Re:First Haiku (Score:1)
--
The major problem with horoscopes... (Score:2)
And why did they have the date range listed beside the different signs? Would anyone that actually descided to read their horoscope then think to them selves "Wait! I don't know what my sign is!"
For that matter, does *anyone* in western civilization not know what sign they are anyway? Isn't it required knowledge to get a passport or something?
It's a beowulf!!! (Score:1)
"While the rest of the world screams "fire," they're quietly gutting the corporate data cores and decrypting sensitive financial records on Linux-based parallel supercomputers..."
Fry's (Score:1)
Bzzt, sorry. (Score:2)
What! No! It can't be! I really want a DVD player! I have to have a Palm Pilot! I need another computer for my firewall!
I guess there's some redemption in the "What you will actually do" category: buy a spare Palm VII for the bathroom.
But y'know, a magazine for the bathroom beats a Palm VII every time. You can't tear out pages from a Palm if you run out of toilet paper.
Re:I must not be . . . (Score:2)
Surely the comfort of knowing the future is worth the several billion dollars this will cost
Superstitious Claptrap! (Score:2)
Scorpio: "Your New Year's resolution: Stop spending money on expensive electronic gadgets."
Perhaps I should take this seriously . . . I mean, it can't be healthy saving up for a dual K7 box. They're not even out yet . . .
"What you will actually do: Buy a spare Palm VII for the bathroom."
Damn! I hadn't thought of that! Now I'll have to postpone that K7 box another month . . . at least, unless they don't come out till I've got the money together . . .
himi
Addicted? Me? Well, yes . . .
Not true! (Score:1)
Making the simple complicated ... (Score:4)
Geek Tarot (Score:4)
And of course the best way for a geek to read tarot is with a deck custom-built [svtarot.com] with him in mind.
My favorite cards:
Yes, these can be used just like real Tarot cards. Don't know how to use Tarot cards? I'd suggest starting with the alt.tarot FAQ [texas.net], just like any good Internet junkie would.
Re:First Haiku (Score:1)
Not to mention the only thing on slashdot that's made me laugh out loud!
Re:The major problem with .... - Not always (Score:2)
On a side note, I somewhat agree, since only really once has a horroscope of mine "come true" But having that happen (In the place I read it, it was almost word for word what happened) was one of the trippiest (Is that a word?) things that ever happened to me. A few times I've had minor things "come true", but nothing worth being special.
Maybe we *do* control our own fate, and can sort-of warp events in some wild way to make other events happen because we believe they will happen. =] Just my thought.
Re:The major problem with horoscopes... (Score:1)
Re:Making the simple complicated ... (Score:2)
Right and wrong (Score:1)
-Chris
Libras tend to believe that stuff.... (Score:1)
Re:Bzzt, sorry. (Score:2)
-Chris
Re:Fry's (Score:2)
That sounds familiar... (Score:1)
Geek Horrorscope (Score:2)
Re:Making the simple complicated ... (Score:2)
-Chris
(It's for when you're REALLY desparate to waste time...)
Re:Another Project? (Score:1)
Re:Bzzt, sorry. (Score:2)
Don't you just hate geek impulse buying? Last week, I saw a 600MHz Alpha workstation for $1600 and bought it on the spur of the moment. My wife's gonna kill me...
Aquarius -> Pisces (Score:1)
In most horoscopes I see Aquarius ends 19th February, but in others 20th or 18th (like in
this one).
Re:NO SHIT!!!! DEAD SPOT ON!!!! I CAN'T BELIEVE IT (Score:1)
Pocket Protectors?? (Score:1)
Just curious, but i thought that NERDS wore pocket protectors. Isn't slashdot a GEEK oriented site?
Then again.. 'News for nerds, Stuff that matters."
Of course, one might argue that none of this matters.. so this whole post is redundant.
(How many of you actually wear pocket protectors??)
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Re:The major problem with horoscopes... (Score:1)
"Astrology gained a huge amount of support by the scientific community today when one twelfth of the worlds population got hit by a truck"
Astrology started when the Egyptians noticed that as soon as a certain constellation rose over the horizon, the Nile would floor four days later (or something similar). In short, using the sky as a calendar and using that to work out the seasons. It makes as much sense as looking at a calendar and predicting that it will be five days until Christmas, and calling that "astrology".
And FWIW, I don't know what my sign is. My birthday is May 21 - next time you read a horoscope, check for me. It varies!
Fortune cookies are more scientific (Score:1)
But that's not the whole picture! (Score:2)
Astrology isn't about predicting events, it's about going with the flow of energy, living in tune with the motions of the heavens, and seeking out the patterns in your life. Sounds like New Age hippie talk to most of you, I imagine, but like any religion or form of divination, you have to have a little blind faith. A real astrologer works mathematical equations and ponders the mysteries of life...those psychic hotlines give astrology a bad rap.
Here are some other useful links, ranging from the informative to the silly.
Real Astrology [beautyandtruth.com]
Astrology Zone [go.com]
JavaScopes [holophrastic.com]
The Divine Creatrix in a Mortal Shell that stays Crunchy in Milk
Here's why: (Score:2)
Basically, there is a day that is on the "cusp" of two signs. Some people born on that day are one sign, some are another. It has to do with the time and location of the person's birth, in that case. In fact, any astrology that goes beyond just your sun sign makes use of the time and place of birth as well as just the date (and I've found that the more-complex astrology has a degree of specificity and accuracy that the simple newspaper column lacks, but I still don't base my life on it).
Why do I know this? Mostly because I was born on the Libra/Scorpio cusp (October 23rd). I spent several years insisting I was a Scorpio because my mom's a Libra and we look sufficiently alike that for a while I heard "You must be Diane's daughter!" constantly and was sick of it and didn't want to be like mom. Then I had a natal chart done and well, it turns out I'm a Libra after all.
Don't have a star sign (Score:1)
lets see (Score:1)
Re:First Haiku (Score:1)
it's a haiku, not 'First Post!'
i sense a new trend
Re:Bzzt, sorry. (Score:1)
I hear you, man (Score:2)
"The Stars Are Right" ? (Score:1)
Sounds like Y2K's going to be worse than we thought. Time to memorize "Come All Ye Old Ones"...
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Re:Geek Horrorscope (Score:1)
This is as offtopic as an offtopic thing with a degree in offtopicness from the Massachusetts Institute of Offtopicality, but the abovementioned site [stileproject.com] has a link [pdq.net] to the funniest and most entertaining thing I've read since Old Man Murray [oldmanmurray.com] was slashdotted [slashdot.org] a couple of weeks ago. It's blurbed as follows (for those who prefer to teleport non-blind):
On another lighter note, let me tell you the story of Fry, and how the Internet got him laid. He was in a Yahoo chat room talking to a married woman who lived near him, and they decided to meet. The story isn't as simple as that though, as you will find out if you decide that you feel like reading a true account of a regular [21] year old guy who found out that there is more to life than playing Quake 3. Check out the story here [pdq.net], it's pretty erotic in a perverted Dawson's Creek sort of way.
I could bring this back ontopic by linking the obligatory Richard Dawkins Astrology 99 buglist [astrologer.com], or citing 'the very real phenomenon that the birth days of proficient sports people tend to be distributed very non-uniformly across the seasons' [skepdic.com] [Dudink, A. (1994), Birth date and sporting success, Nature 368, p.592.], or whiffle on about horoscopes as Dicemanesque Mission Packs.
But how unfunny would that be on an 'It's funny. Laugh.' topic? And anyway, I aint no steenkin' Jon Katz.
Re:dammit (Score:1)
astrology valuable as another mind-frame (Score:1)
Year of the Dragon (Score:1)
Re:Bzzt, sorry. (Score:1)
LONG LIVE ALPHA [alphalinux.org]!!!
Astrology (Score:2)
If you believe in it wholeheartedly without question, you are either a time traveler from long ago or a flake (or a new-age freak, but they usually fall under 'flake' anyway). However, it is a fun diversion, and one of the superstitions that is semi-acceptable in our society. It's ok to look up your horoscope avidly every day - especially if you talk about it with the prefix "I don't believe in this crap, but...."
We do need some superstitions - regimentalized ones called religion, sporadic ones that are still called superstitious, whatever they are, we need myths in our lives. Even those who are heavily atheist believe in something - themselves, the universe, Science, whatever. Without these beliefs we become soulless beasts, we lose our sense of wonder. There is almost always some form of illogical cling to something Bigger Than Ourselves. Lonely life without that, and horribly depressing.
On the note of these predictions in particular, they don't seem to think much of the Geek Set. Particularly not capricorns - they think we're all doomsaying, paranoid freaks with hyperactive egos and big mouths. Ok, so I've got the big mouth. *grin* And I do tend to argue myself blue in the face trying to get the last word in when I feel it's important. But I'm not paranoid, I swear!
They really are out to get me! I saw it on a button! I swear! *wicked grin*
-Elthia
Hmmmm... (Score:1)
Can someone explain me the logic (Score:1)
/. Poll for Pocket Protectors?? (Score:1)
For me, at least, and the only other true geek I know, this is rubbish
Re:First Haiku (Score:1)
Re:First Haiku (Score:1)
Lost its form when posted here
Gotta do preview!
OLD HAIKU:
Do you think that
we can have a haiku forum
to write down our thoughts?