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A Programmer
and an Engineer
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A computer
programmer and an engineer were sitting next to each other on a transcontinental
flight. The
programmer
leaned over to the engineer and asked whether he would like to play a game.
The engineer only
wanted to
take a nap, so he politely declined, rolled over toward the window and
closed his eyes.
The programmer
persisted and stated that the game was both very easy and a lot of fun.
He explained "I ask you
a question
- if you don't know the answer, you pay me five bucks. Then you ask me
a question, and if I don't
know the answer,
I'll pay five bucks to you."
Again, the
Engineer politely declined and closed his eyes. The programmer, somewhat
agitated, said, "OK, if you
don't know
the answer you pay me five bucks, but if I don't know the answer, I'll
pay you fifty bucks!"
This caught
the engineer's attention, and - seeing no end to his torment unless he
played the game - agreed to
play. The
programmer asked the first question: "What's the distance between the Earth
and the Moon?"
The engineer
wordlessly reached into his wallet, pulled out a five dollar bill and handed
it to the programmer.
Now it was
the engineer's turn. He asked the programmer: "What goes up a hill with
three legs, and comes down
on four?"
The programmer looked puzzled, then took out his laptop computer and searched
through all his
reference
material. He tapped into the AirPhonex with his modem and searched through
the Internet and the
Library of
Congress, all to no avail. Then he sent urgent E-mail inquiries to all
of his brightest colleagues, but could find no help anywhere.
After an hour
or so he woke the engineer and forked over $50. The engineer accepted the
money politely and
closed his
eyes again.
The programmer,
more than slightly frustrated, shook the engineer's shoulder and demanded,
"So, what's the
answer?".
The engineer
just smiled, reached again into his wallet, handed the programmer a five
dollar bill, and went right
back to sleep.
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