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Parody: Modern SCO Executive

From:  Rick Moen <rick@linuxmafia.com>
To:  linux-elitists@zgp.org
Subject:  [linux-elitists] Modern SCO Executive
Date:  Tue, 3 Jun 2003 23:38:34 -0700

Archived copy will be at
http://twiki.iwethey.org/twiki/bin/view/Main/PiratesOfPenguinance


  	           Modern SCO Executive
    (Apologies to Gilbert, Sullivan, and most of humanity)
      (Send brickbats to:  Rick Moen and Karsten Self)

[The scene:  Major-General Darl McBride has stepped up to the fo'castle
of HMS SCaldera, which has just fought its first skirmish against the
dread Pirates of Penguinance.  He prepares to hold a press conference^W^W^W^W
address the troops:]


McBride:

  I am the very model of a modern SCO executive.
  Our market share is minuscule; our losses are consecutive.
  But from our labs deep in U-T, you very soon will surely see
  The ultimate, the pinnacle, in high-technolo-barratry.
  "Live free or die" philosophies are very well, but still, you see:
  Our contracts and our trade secrets make Unix seem our property.
  Never mind what we really own (a question not rhetorical):
  We have thirty thousand contracts, though most are quite historical.

Lawyer Chorus:

  We have thirty thousand contracts, though most are quite historical.
  We have thirty thousand contracts, though most are quite historical.
  We have thirty thousand contracts, though most are quite historical.


McBride:

  While our profit's been elusive, our tort claims are unremitting,
  And Blake Stowell's PR quota is still dozens at each sitting.
  In short, in matters litigual, continual, accusative,
  I am the very model of a modern SCO executive.

Lawyer Chorus:

  In short, in matters litigual, continual, accusative,
  He is the very model of a modern SCO executive.


McBride:

  Our history's mythological (per Eric, it's not factual).
  I answer simple questions with evasions indeciph'rable.
  I'm quoted in the IT press, first one and then another way,
  And if that's not quite sufficient, then Sontag runs some blocking play.
  I'm not so good with copyrights, Novell's got those (they say to us),
  Our patent holding's very slim, our valuation's perilous.
  But please don't ever hit me with our POSIX system standard score.
  I'm always quite confused by that infernal nonsense System 4.

Lawyer Chorus:

  He's always quite confused by that infernal nonsense System 4.
  He's always quite confused by that infernal nonsense System 4.
  He's always quite confused by that infernal nonsense System 4.


McBride:

  That freaky hippie GPL, you'd think we'd never heard of it!
  And all that code we say they took?  The Stevens book's got every bit.
  In short, with markets minimal and losses quite consecutive,
  I am the very model of a modern SCO executive.

Lawyer Chorus:

  In short with markets minimal and losses quite consecutive,
  He is the very model of a modern SCO executive!


McBride:

  Our name is "SCO" (although we really still are Caldera):
  Our Eighties business plan seemed good; why permit a change of era?
  That old IP that passed to us seemed ripe for legal mining.
  We're not quite clear on what it is, but it must have been worth buying.
  I look with great anxiety on Linux and on BSD.
  I've signed up with the Devil:  Chairman Bill sent a huge license fee.
  He says he has a high regard for intellectual property,
  But I really haven't thought much what he'll do when he's done with me.

Lawyer Chorus:

  But he really hasn't thought much what he'll do when he's done with him.
  But he really hasn't thought much what he'll do when he's done with him.
  But he really hasn't thought much what he'll do when he's done with him.


McBride:

  Our contract reach is deep and broad, and gives us exclusivity:
  The lawyers tell us to shoot wide.  (Who'll notice things like privity?) 
  From the penguinista rabble, I've earned naught but opprobrium.
  But dare I'll say I'm twice the man of anyone at I-B-M.

Lawyer Chorus:

  But dare'e'll say he's twice the man of anyone at I-B-M.
  But dare'e'll say he's twice the man of anyone at I-B-M.
  But dare'e'll say he's twice the man of anyone at I-B-IBM.


McBride: 

  So though we have run quite amok, we readily will go away,
  If for our worthless capital, you were this tidy sum to pay.
  In short, with markets minuscule and losses quite consecutive,
  I am the very model of a modern SCO executive.

Lawyer Chorus:

  In short, with markets minuscule and losses quite consecutive,
  I am the very model of a modern SCO executive.


-- 
Cheers,               I have /usr/sbin/coffee mounted from /dev/mug right now, 
Rick Moen             and you can't have it.  Oh no, I just tried to seek past 
rick@linuxmafia.com   end-of-beverage. *sigh*  -- Graham Reed, in the Monastery
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Parody: Modern SCO Executive

Posted Jun 4, 2003 14:36 UTC (Wed) by alspnost (guest, #2763) [Link]

dd if=/dev/missiles/cruise of=/companies/useless/SCO count=lots

Parody: Modern SCO Executive

Posted Jun 4, 2003 14:52 UTC (Wed) by danny (guest, #1540) [Link]

Does someone can explain this for a non US person?

I think this must be about a music, but what music?

Parody: Modern SCO Executive

Posted Jun 4, 2003 15:01 UTC (Wed) by shahms (guest, #8877) [Link]

This is a parody of the Gilbert and Sullivan song (well, show tune) that begins "I am the very model of a modern Major General . . . " from the Pirates of Penzance

Parody: Modern SCO Executive

Posted Jun 4, 2003 15:05 UTC (Wed) by fergal (guest, #602) [Link]

It's a parody of "I am the very model of a modern major-general" from the The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan. You can find the original and a midi here

http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/pirates/html/p13.html

Actually, Gilbert was an attourney

Posted Jun 4, 2003 18:15 UTC (Wed) by james (subscriber, #1325) [Link]

It might be worth noting that William Gilbert was an attorney by profession. Many of his works include digs at stupid laws, stupid lawyers, and stupid lawyerese. This is right up his street.

It might be relevant to note that the "pirates" in Pirates of Penzance was aimed at American pirates in the modern, software sense, who, in the days before strong trans-Atlantic copyright protection, made and performed innumerable copies of Gilbert and Sullivan's previous work. The author and composer were not amused.

Actually, Gilbert was an attourney

Posted Jun 4, 2003 20:56 UTC (Wed) by rickmoen (subscriber, #6943) [Link]

James wrote:

It might be worth noting that William Gilbert was an attorney by profession. Many of his works include digs at stupid laws, stupid lawyers, and stupid lawyerese.

Most memorably in "Trial by Jury", but also in "The Mikado", "Iolanthe", and (as you say) many others.

Rick Moen
rick@linuxmafia.com

Parody: Modern SCO Executive

Posted Jun 5, 2003 10:28 UTC (Thu) by Wol (subscriber, #4433) [Link]

And why should the US know anything about it? Bear in mind it's the Pirates of PENZANCE - a small town near Land's End in Cornwall (I won't say "England" because the Cornish might moan at me).

One of the last British places an emigrant might see as they steamed from Southampton to New York.

PS. I knew about the Americans ignoring copyright, but I didn't realise the "Pirates" bit was a direct dig at them ...

Cheers,
Wol

Another suggested verse

Posted Jun 5, 2003 12:44 UTC (Thu) by sab39 (guest, #2185) [Link]

The claims we file don't reconcile with any actual history,
So why we think Big Blue will blink is something of a mystery.
It's all a fake so we can make those Linux users terrified:
The falsitude of all we've spewed is trivially verified!


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