Friday, 2 March 2007

Haiku for Dummies....

In Japan, they have, apparently, replaced the impersonal and unhelpful Microsoft error messages with Haiku poetry messages.

Haiku poetry has strict construction rules -- each poem has only 17 syllables....5 syllables in the first, 7in the second, 5 in the third. They are used to communicate a timeless message, often achieving wistful, yearning and powerful insight through extreme brevity.

Here are 16 actual error messages from Japan:

The Web site you seek
Cannot be located,
but Countless more exist.

Chaos reigns within.
Reflect, repent, and reboot.
Order shall return.

Program aborting:
Close all that you have worked on.
You ask far too much.

Windows XP crashed.
I am the Blue Screen of Death.
No one hears your screams.

Yesterday it worked.
Today it is not working.
Windows is like that.

Your file was so big.
It might be very useful.
But now it is gone.

Stay the patient course.
Of little worth is your ire.
The network is down.

A crash reduces
Your expensive computer
To a simple stone.

Death, taxes and lost data.
Guess which has occurred.

You step in the stream,
But the water has moved on.
This page is not here.

Out of memory.
We wish to hold the whole sky,
But we never will.

Having been erased,
The document you're seeking
Must now be retyped.

Serious error.
All shortcuts have disappeared.
Screen. Mind. Both are blank.


Certainly beats: "Your computer has performed an illegal operation"

1 comment:

Delon said...

Hi, these are really funny, but seem so true... I like the one that ends "Windows is like that"

Seems really difficult to compose a Haiku!