LAWS of LIFE


Air Force Law
   2% don't get the word.

Airplane Law
   When the plane you are on is late,
   the plane you want to transfer to is on time.

Allison's Precept
   The best simple-minded test of expertise in a particular area is the
   ability to win money in a series of bets on future occurrences in that
   area.

Anderson's Law
   Any system or program, however complicated, if looked at in exactly the
   right way, will become even more complicated.

Anthony's Law of Force
   Don't force it, get a larger hammer.
     
Anthony's Law of the Workshop
   Any tool, when dropped, will roll into the least accessible corner of the
   workshop.

Corollary to Anthony's Law
   On the way to the corner, any dropped tool will first always strike your
   toes.

Army Axiom
   Any order that can be misunderstood has been misunderstood.

Axiom of the Pipe. (Trischmann's Paradox)
   A pipe gives a wise man time to think and a fool something to stick in his
   mouth.

Baker's Law
   Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays is insists on it.

Barber's Laws of Backpacking
   1) The integral of the gravitational potential taken around any loop trail
   you chose to hike always comes out positive.
   2) Any stone in your boot always migrates against the pressure gradient to
   exactly the point of most pressure.
   3) The weight of your pack increases in direct proportion to the amount of
   food you consume from it.  If you run out of food, the pack weight goes on
   increasing anyway.
   4) The number of stones in your boot is directly proportional to the number
   of hours you have been on the trail.
   5) The difficulty of finding any given trail marker is directly
   proportional to the importance of the consequences of failing to find it.
   6) The size of each of the stones in your boot is directly proportional to
   the number of hours you have been on the trail.
   7) The remaining distance to your chosen campsite remains constant as
   twilight approaches.
   8) The net weight of your boots is proportional to the cube of the number
   of hours you have been on the trail.
   9) When you arrive at your chosen campsite, it is full.
   10) If you take your boots off, you'll never get them back on again.
   11) The local density of mosquitos is inversely proportional to your
   remaining repellent.

Barth's Distinction
   There are two types of people: those who divide people into two types, and
   those who don't.

Boren's First Law
   When in doubt, mumble.

Brook's Law
   Adding manpower  to a  late software  project makes  it later.

Barzun's Laws of Learning
   1) The simple but difficult arts of paying attention, copying accurately,
   following an argument, detecting an ambiguity or a false inference, testing
   guesses by summoning up contrary instances, organizing one's time and one's
   thought for study -- all these arts -- cannot be taught in the air but only
   through the difficulties of a defined subject. They cannot be taught in one
   course or one year, but must be acquired gradually in dozens of
   connections.
   2) The analogy to athletics must be pressed until all recognize that in the
   exercise of Intellect those who lack the muscles, coordination, and will
   power can claim no place at the training table, let alone on the playing
   field.

Forthoffer's Cynical Summary of Barzun's Laws
   1) That which has not yet been taught directly can never be taught
   directly.
   2) If at first you don't succeed, you will never succeed.

Decaprio's Rule
   Everything takes more time and money.

Dijkstra's Law of Programming Inertia
   If you don't know what your program is supposed to do, you'd better not
   start writing it.

Etorre's Observation
   The other line moves faster.

First Maxim of Computers
   To err is human, but to really screw things up requires a computer.

Gallois's Revelation
   If you put tomfoolery into a computer, nothing comes back out but
   tomfoolery. But this tomfoolery, having passed through a very expensive
   machine, is somehow ennobled, and no one dares to criticize it.

   Corollary- An expert is a person who avoids the
   small errors while sweeping on to the Grand Fallacy.

Glib's Laws of Reliability
   1.   Computers are unreliable, but humans are even more unreliable.

   Corollary- At the source of every error which is blamed on the computer you
   will find at least two human errors, including the error of blaming it
   on the computer.

   2.   Any system which relies on human reliability is unreliable.
   3.   The only diffrence between the fools and the criminal who attacks a
   system is that the fool attacks unpredictably and on a broader front.
   4.   A system tends to grow in terms of complexity rather than
   simplification, until the resulting unreliability becomes intolerable.
   5.   Self-checking systems tend to have a complexity in proportion to the
   inherant unreliability of the system in which they are used.
   6. The error detection and correction capabilities of a system will serve
   as the key to understanding the types of error which they cannot handle.
   7.   Undetectable errors are infinite in variety, in contrast to detectable
   errors, which by definition are limited.
   8.   All real programs contain errors unless proven otherwise, which is
   impossible.
   9. Investment in reliability will increase until it exceeds the probable
   cost of errors, or until somebody insists on getting some useful work done.

The Golden Rule of Arts and Sciences
   Whoever has the gold makes the rules.

Golub's Laws of Computerdom
   1. Fuzzy project objectives are used to avoid the embarrassment of
   estimating the corresponding costs.
   2.   A carelessly planned project takes three times longer to complete than
   expected; if carefully planned, it will take only twice as long.
   3. The effort required to correct course increases geometrically with time.
   4.   Project teams detest weekly progress reporting because it so vividly
   manifests their lack of progress.

Goodin's Law of Conversions
   The new hardware will break down as soon as the old  is disconnected and
   out.

Gordon's First Law
   If a research project is not worth doing at all, it is not worth doing
   well.

Gray's Law of Programming
   N+1 trivial tasks are expected to be accomplished in the same time as N
   trivial tasks.

   Loggs Rebuttal- N+1 trivial tasks take twice as long as N trivial tasks for
   N sufficiently large.

Grosch's Law
   Computer power increases as the square of the costs.  If you want to do it
   twice as cheaply, you have to do it four times as fast.

Halpern's Observation
   The tendancy to err the programmers have been noticed to share with other
   human beings has often been treated as if it were an awkwardness attendant
   upon programming's adolescence, which (like acne) would disappear with the
   craft's coming of age.  It has proved otherwise.

Hoare's Law of Large Programs
   Inside every large program is a small program struggling to get out.

   Howe's Law
   Every man has a scheme that will not work.

IBM Pollyanna Principle
   Machines should work.  People should think.

Law of Computability as Applied to Social Science
   Any system or program, however complicated, if looked at in exactly the
   right way, will become even more complicated.

Law of Computability as Applied to Social Science
   If at first you don't succeed, transform your data set.

Laws of Computer Programming
   1.   Any given program, when running, is obsolete.
   2.   Any given program costs more and takes longer.
   3.   If a program is useful, it will have to be changed.
   4.   If a program is useless, it will have to be documented.
   5.   Any given program will expand to fill all available memory.
   6.   The value of a program is proportional to the weight of its output.
   7. Program complexity grows until it exceeds the capability of the
   programmer who must maintain it.
   8. Make it possible for programmers to write programs in English, and you
   will discover that programmers cannot write in English.
   9. Software is hard.  Hardware is soft.  It is economically more feasible
   to build a computer than to program it.
   10. An operating system is a feeble attempt to include what was overlooked
   in the design of a programming language.

Law of Selective Gravity
   An object will fall so as to do the most damage.

   Jenning's Corollary- The chance of the bread falling with the buttered side
   down is directly proportional to the cost of the carpet.

Lubarsky's Law of Cybernetic Entomology
   There's always one more bug.

Paperboy's rule of Weather
   No matter how clear the skies are, a thunderstorm will move in 5 minutes
   after the papers are delivered.

Project scheduling "99" rule
   The first 90 percent of the task takes 90 percent of the time.  The last 10
   percent takes the other 90 percent.

Sattlinger's Law
   It works better if you plug it in.

Segal's Law
   A man with one watch knows what time it is.  A man with two watches is
   never sure.

Shaw's Principle
   Build a system that even a fool can use and only a fool will want to use
   it.

Troutman's Programming Postilates
   1. If  a test  installation  functions perfectly,  all subsequent systems
   will malfunction.
   2. Not until a program  has been in production for  at least six months
   will the most harmful error be discovered.
   3. Job  control  cards  that  positively  cannot   be arranged in proper
   order will be.
   4.  Interchangeable tapes won't.
   5. If the input editor has been designed to reject all bad input, an
   ingenious idiot will discover a method to  get bad data past it.
   6.  Profanity is the one language all programmers  know best.

The Unspeakable Law
   As soon as you mention something...if it's good, it goes
   away; if it's bad, it happens.

Weinberg's Law
   If builders built buildings  the way programmers  wrote programs, then the
   first woodpecker  that came along  would destroy society as we know it.

   Corollary - An expert is a person who avoids the small errors while
   sweeping on to the Grand Fallacy.


Obtained from The New Bananna Republic in St. Louis, Mo.