posted by
pmsumner at 10:09pm on 10/06/2001
This week has been a tough one. I moved on Thursday, everything got packed up (apart from my chair *sobs*) and moved oop north to Helensburgh. I'm currently spodding from my parents house, through my own computer tho. Which is nice.
Nothing exciting happening. Got some nice pics (as you saw below), but otherwise. I'm throwing out all sorts of gumph that I should have done years ago, but hey. Uhhhm. I really ain't doing anything. Really. I'm not doing anything. Nothing.
Ahhhh well.
Nothing exciting happening. Got some nice pics (as you saw below), but otherwise. I'm throwing out all sorts of gumph that I should have done years ago, but hey. Uhhhm. I really ain't doing anything. Really. I'm not doing anything. Nothing.
Ahhhh well.
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please explain to the silly american ;-)
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spod
spod n. [UK] 1. A lower form of life found on talker systems and MUDs. The spod has few friends in RL and uses talkers instead, finding communication easier and preferable over the net. He has all the negative traits of the computer geek without having any interest in computers per se. Lacking any knowledge of or interest in how networks work, and considering his access a God-given right, he is a major irritant to sysadmins, clogging up lines in order to reach new MUDs, following passed-on instructions on how to sneak his way onto Internet ("Wow! It's in America!") and complaining when he is not allowed to use busy routes. A true spod will start any conversation with "Are you male or female?" (and follow it up with "Got any good numbers/IDs/passwords?") and will not talk to someone physically present in the same terminal room until they log onto the same machine that he is using and enter talk mode. Compare newbie, tourist, weenie, twink, terminal junkie, warez d00dz. 2. A backronym for "Sole Purpose, Obtain a Degree"; according to some self-described spods, this term is used by indifferent students to condemn their harder-working fellows. Compare the defiant adoption of the term `geek' in the mid-1990s by people who would previously have been stigmatized by it (see computer geek). 3. [obs.] An ordinary person; a random. This is the meaning with which the term was coined, but the inventor informs us he has himself accepted sense 1.
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nevermind, I was half asleep when I wrote that one...
*the silly american crawls into a hole*
:)