|
Hunting
Elephants
- Mathematicians
hunt elephants by going to Africa, throwing
out everything that is not an elephant, and
catching one of whatever is left.
- Experienced
Mathematicians will attempt to prove the
existence of at least one unique elephant
before proceeding to step 1 as a subordinate
exercise.
- Professors of
Mathematics will prove the existence of at
least one unique elephant and then leave the
detection and capture of an actual elephant
as an exercise for their graduate students.
- Computer
Scientists hunt elephants by exercising
Algorithm A:
- Go to
Africa.
- Start
at the Cape of Good Hope.
- Work
northward in an orderly manner,
traversing the continent alternately
east and west.
- During
each traverse pass,
- Catch
each animal seen.
- Compare
each animal caught to a known
elephant.
- Stop
when a match is detected.
- Experienced
Computer Programmers modify Algorithm A by
placing a known elephant in Cairo to ensure
that the algorithm will terminate.
- Assembly
Language Programmers prefer to execute
Algorithm A on their hands and knees.
- Hardware
Engineers hunt elephants by going to Africa,
catching gray animals at random, and stopping
when any one of them weighs within plus or
minus 15 percent of any previously observed
elephant.
- Economists
don't hunt elephants, but they believe that
if elephants are paid enough, they will hunt
themselves.
- Statisticians
hunt the first animal they see N times and
call it an elephant.
- Consultants
don't hunt elephants, and many have never
hunted anything at all, but they can be hired
by the hour to advise those people who do.
- Operations
Research Consultants can also measure the
correlation of hat size and bullet color to
the efficiency of elephant-hunting
strategies, if someone else will only
identify the elephants.
- Politicians
don't hunt elephants, but they will share the
elephants you catch with the people who voted
for them.
- Lawyers don't
hunt elephants, but they do follow the herds
around arguing about who owns the droppings.
- Software
Lawyers will claim that they own an entire
herd based on the look and feel of one
dropping.
- Vice Presidents
of Engineering, Research, and Development try
hard to hunt elephants, but their staffs are
designed to prevent it. When the vice
president does get to hunt elephants, the
staff will try to ensure that all possible
elephants are completely prehunted before the
vice president sees them. If the vice
president does happen to see a elephant, the
staff will:
- compliment
the vice president's keen eyesight
and
- enlarge
itself to prevent any recurrence.
- Senior Managers
set broad elephant-hunting policy based on
the assumption that elephants are just like
field mice, but with deeper voices.
- Quality
Assurance Inspectors ignore the elephants and
look for mistakes the other hunters made when
they were packing the jeep.
- Sales People
don't hunt elephants but spend their time
selling elephants they haven't caught, for
delivery two days before the season opens.
- Software Sales
People ship the first thing they catch and
write up an invoice for an elephant.
- Hardware Sales
People catch rabbits, paint them gray, and
sell them as desktop elephants.
|
|
|
|
|