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gizmoguy
hacking Mark Unseen   Oct 3 15:40 UTC 2003

HACKING

58 responses total.
gizmoguy
response 1 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 3 15:41 UTC 2003

talk and ask about hacking
jp2
response 2 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 3 15:49 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

remmers
response 3 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 3 15:59 UTC 2003

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913):

Hack \Hack\, v. i.
   To ride or drive as one does with a hack horse; to ride at an
   ordinary pace, or over the roads, as distinguished from
   riding across country or in military fashion.

cmcgee
response 4 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 3 16:16 UTC 2003

I thought hacking was driving a taxi.
albaugh
response 5 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 3 17:19 UTC 2003

Start with the right kind of saw...
scott
response 6 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 3 18:00 UTC 2003

Hacking... yeah, that brings back last night's dream.  I was fighting the
devil again, and he had his hands my throat, so I kept hacking and hacking
at him with the kitchen knife she gave me on our anniversary... oh shit, it
was one of *those* dreams again.  Good thing the ground isn't too frozen for
digging yet.
alexnn
response 7 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 3 20:12 UTC 2003

What are you say?
gelinas
response 8 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 3 21:18 UTC 2003

My front yard could use some hacking; the prairie didn't work out quite the
way I had hoped.
asddsa
response 9 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 4 16:08 UTC 2003

gismoguy
sj2
response 10 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 5 10:14 UTC 2003

I will assume you mean hacking as in computer hacking. Hacking in the 
computer world also has lots of meanings.

Traditionally it's meant, pouring over source code and making various 
changes to it in order to see what you can make it do - improving, 
finding bugs, bringing it to its knees etc. Hence the term "hacked the 
code".

Breaking into other computers is probably better labelled as cracking 
and not hacking. So you may want to start a thread called "cracking".
slash
response 11 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 5 15:13 UTC 2003

Man, I've been really sick as of late, all I've done for the past couple
nights is hack up a ton of crud, lemmie tell ya, it was GROSS.
jep
response 12 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 10 19:26 UTC 2003

I've been reading comments from people for 15 years at least, objecting 
that "hacking" isn't something done by teenagers to break into 
computers.  About a day or two later, I subscribed to the idea that 
words mean what they mean, not what a few specialists wish they mean.  
Hacknig is what people think it is.  Time for the experimental coders 
to come up with a new label for themselves.
dolgr
response 13 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 10 19:27 UTC 2003

I guess "programmer" is out of the question, hey? 
murph
response 14 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 14:45 UTC 2003

Can't agree with #12.  There are at least a few ways to define a word: what
the people who invented it meant, what current experts in the field use it
to mean, and what it is people mean when they say it.

Generally, when people use a word to mean something other than what experts
or the people who originated it meant, it's considered to be either "slang"
or "wrong".

When the Washington Post starts discussing, "Saddam's 1337 forces", then we
can maybe consider that usage makes something right.  Meanwhile, using
"hacker" as a criminal slur will continue to be incorrect, oeven if
unfortunately widespread.
slynne
response 15 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 14:48 UTC 2003

Not according to the American Heritage Dictionary...

hacker1  
SYLLABICATION: hack er 
PRONUNCIATION: AUDIO: hkr     KEY  
NOUN: Informal 1. One who is proficient at using or programming a 
computer; a computer buff. 
2. One who uses programming skills to gain illegal access to a computer 
network or file. 
3. One who enthusiastically pursues a game or sport: a weekend tennis 
hacker.  
ETYMOLOGY: Perhaps from hacker, amateurish or inept golfer or tennis 
player (possibly from hack1), or perhaps from hack, practical joke, 
clever scheme (from dialectal hack, to embarrass, confuse, play a trick 
on). 
asddsa
response 16 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 17:52 UTC 2003

You people have no life.
tod
response 17 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 19:20 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

slynne
response 18 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 22:25 UTC 2003

Please, I dont need YOU to tell me I have no life ;)
murph
response 19 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 23:39 UTC 2003

Obviously.  If I had a life, would I be grexxing?
slynne
response 20 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 12 01:27 UTC 2003

Hello. It is Saturday night and I am sitting at home alone with my 
puppies listening to NPR while I work on my computer and occasionally 
check in on grex. Yup. no life ;)
dah
response 21 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 12 02:00 UTC 2003

Me too, except my animal is a SPIDER which I saw crawl into my sheet over
there and I'm vaguely worried it'll, you know, bite me and cause necrosis and
stuff.  I'm afraid to go to sleep.
slynne
response 22 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 12 02:18 UTC 2003

I have a cat who eats the spiders for me.
tod
response 23 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 12 16:27 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

asddsa
response 24 of 58: Mark Unseen   Oct 16 22:46 UTC 2003

A Romanian delicacy.

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