From: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Kir=E1ly?= on
In comp.sys.mac.system dorayme <dorayme(a)optusnet.com.au> wrote:
> "I like your style John. I have always liked your style..."
>
> Who said these words in what first class movie? I will give
> whoever can get this right, a top class joke.

Josef Sommer, as Chief Paul Schaeffer in Witness (1985).

--
K.

Lang may your lum reek.
From: dorayme on
In article <FfCsn.592$Z6.243(a)edtnps82>,
me(a)home.spamsucks.ca (Király) wrote:

> In comp.sys.mac.system dorayme <dorayme(a)optusnet.com.au> wrote:
> > "I like your style John. I have always liked your style..."
> >
> > Who said these words in what first class movie? I will give
> > whoever can get this right, a top class joke.
>
> Josef Sommer, as Chief Paul Schaeffer in Witness (1985).

Well done Király!

A novice went to a monastery where the monks were
only allowed to speak two words a year, and those
only to the Abbot at a yearly audience with him.

Naturally, they were expected to be along the
lines of "Jesus loves" - in other words, eternal
verities.

However, at the end of his first year, the novice
offered, "Bed hard"

At the end of the second year, "Food bad"

And at the end of the third year, "I quit".

"I'm not surprised", said the abbot after the
last, "you've done nothing but whinge ever since
you came here"

--
dorayme
From: Johan W. Elzenga on
John <jwolf6589(a)NOSPAMgmail.com> wrote:

> Which one is better?

That is like asking what is the better plane: a Chessna or a Boeing 747.
Both are good planes, but for very different purposes. You can't fly 300
passengers from New York to Amsterdam in a Chessna. But you can't fly
any passenger at all to a remote airstrip in a Boeing 747.


--
Johan W. Elzenga johan<<at>>johanfoto.nl
Editor / Photographer http://www.johanfoto.com
From: dorayme on
In article <1jg8o3b.e84g354wjocqN%nomail(a)please.invalid>,
nomail(a)please.invalid (Johan W. Elzenga) wrote:

> John <jwolf6589(a)NOSPAMgmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Which one is better?
>
> That is like asking what is the better plane: a Chessna or a Boeing 747.
> Both are good planes, but for very different purposes. You can't fly 300
> passengers from New York to Amsterdam in a Chessna. But you can't fly
> any passenger at all to a remote airstrip in a Boeing 747.

A Chessna presumably being a Cessna with built in chess boards.

--
dorayme
From: erilar on
In article <1jg8o3b.e84g354wjocqN%nomail(a)please.invalid>,
nomail(a)please.invalid (Johan W. Elzenga) wrote:

> John <jwolf6589(a)NOSPAMgmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Which one is better?
>
> That is like asking what is the better plane: a Chessna or a Boeing 747.
> Both are good planes, but for very different purposes. You can't fly 300
> passengers from New York to Amsterdam in a Chessna. But you can't fly
> any passenger at all to a remote airstrip in a Boeing 747.

Nice comparison. I have two graphics programs I actually use. GC is
one, ColorIt!(which is a tiny fraction of the cost of PhotoShop and does
all the things I need it for) is the other. They overlap a bit, but not
enough to give up either one.

--
Erilar, biblioholic medievalist


http://www.mosaictelecom.com/~erilarlo