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DOESN鈥橳 IT drive you insane when a company answers the phone with one of
those horrid, time-consuming, automated systems? Press 1 for this, 2 for that, 3
for the other. And then press 1 for something else, 2 for something different,
and so on, until you end up saddled with something completely different from
what you were looking for, with no easy option to go back and listen to the
options again.

Feedback has been told of a trick that can often defeat this electronic hoop
jumping. Just go on pressing 0 like a machine gun. And, hey presto, a real live
human being comes on the line.

鈥淵es, it can work, but don鈥檛 tell too many people,鈥 a telecoms expert begged
us. But we鈥檝e decided only good can come from passing on the tip. If it does not
work on the switchboard you are calling, nothing is lost. If it does work, the
company that installed the wretched, humiliating system may finally have to
accept that it is driving customers to distraction.

THE US ARMY has a lab outside Boston where scientists and engineers create
better food, clothing and shelter for its soldiers. What goes into soldiers
must, of course, come out, so the lab has developed what one proud page on its
website calls a Family of Latrines
(www.sbccom.army.mil/products/field/latrines.htm).

The family turns out to be rather like the bear family in the Goldilocks
story. There is the Baby Bear of the group, a basic model for operations lasting
under one month, or Modular Initial Deployment Latrine. Momma Bear is the 30 to
120-day model, the Maturing Theater Latrine. American rock concert veterans will
instantly recognise this as a Porta Potti clone, even though the army has
covered it with camouflage paint.

Last of all comes the Poppa Bear of latrines, the Follow On Latrine, an
elaborate structure with flush toilets and hot and cold running water. The army
felicitously describes it as designed 鈥渇or the rear area鈥.

FROM time to time we have complained in this column about the absurdities of
corporate disclaimers that are tacked onto the end of e-mails. It鈥檚 good to see
that someone鈥攕adly we don鈥檛 know who鈥攈as now produced an
鈥淎ntidisclaimer鈥 that is circulating round the Net. Hopefully people will start
using it instead of the 鈥渞eal鈥 ones. Here it is.

鈥淚mportant. Antidisclaimer. This e-mail is not and cannot, by its nature, be
confidential. En route from me to you, it will pass across the public Internet,
easily readable by any number of system administrators along the way. If you
have received this message by mistake, it would be ridiculous for me to tell you
not to read it or copy to anyone else, because, let鈥檚 face it, if it鈥檚 a message
revealing confidential information or that could embarrass me intensely, that鈥檚
precisely what you鈥檒l do. Who wouldn鈥檛?

鈥淟ikewise, it is superfluous for me to claim copyright in the contents,
because I own that anyway, even if you print out a hard copy or disseminate this
message all over the known Universe. I don鈥檛 know why so many corporate mail
servers feel impelled to attach a disclaimer to the bottom of every e-mail
message saying otherwise. If you don鈥檛 know either, why not e-mail your
corporate lawyers and system administrators and ask them why they insist on
contributing so much to the waste of bandwidth.鈥

SIGN affixed to the outside of the cash machines at the HSBC bank in Horley,
Surrey: 鈥淭hese machines are functioning normally. Please ignore any notices
affixed to the outside of the machines.鈥

Two-litre tubs of divine cream sold in new zealand display a prominent notice
saying: 鈥95 per cent fat free per 100 millilitre serving鈥

A COLLEAGUE was searching for a mugshot of a medical scientist to illustrate
a news story, but Google鈥檚 image browser failed until, on a whim, our friend
switched off Google鈥檚 鈥渁dult content鈥 filter. At which point the elusive
scientist appeared鈥攖ogether with pictures of the covers of the journals
Science, Nature,
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and Neuron.

Why, we wonder, does Google think these are 鈥渁dult鈥 journals? Should
librarians be putting them on the top shelf?

A possible explanation is that Google filtered them out because they are on
the University of California鈥檚 Anatomy Department website. If 鈥渁natomy鈥 is too
salacious for Google, just think what else you might be missing in your
searches.

IF YOU are making grand claims, it鈥檚 best to stick with them rather than
start hedging them. For his work as a marine surveyor, reader Mike Thomson hired
a small Bowtech underwater camera system to view the seabed. Going carefully
through the manual to set it up, he came across this in the technical
specifications page: 鈥淔ocus Range: 110 mm to Infinity (approx).鈥

Is that give or take a few light years?

MEANWHILE, reader David Bustard was studying Web publishing on a learndirect
course with MS FrontPage 2000.

鈥淢ost users,鈥 it told him, 鈥渃onnect to the Internet by using a modem that can
only download information at a finite speed.鈥

Who manufactures the modems that the others use, Bustard wondered. And where
could he buy one?

TALKING of speed, reader Stephen Sykes spotted an advert in New Media Age for
a company called Global Crossing. It states: 鈥淥ur fast, secure, seamless global
network, powered by Hitachi Telecom (USA), Inc, transmits data at speeds that
practically break the sound barrier.鈥

Wow. At that rate, a data packet sent from London will arrive in New York
only four and a half hours later.

FINALLY, one must respect the concern supermarkets show in providing accurate
and informative labelling on the goods for sale. For example, the Co-op store in
Cranleigh, Surrey, sells 20-centilitre wine glasses at 拢2 each. The Co-op
is then careful to inform customers that this represents a price of 拢10
per litre.

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