|
|
|
|
|
by shermantanktop
517 days ago
|
|
Sure, but the formula is so clunky. Just take: A) a person famous for their brilliance or other quality B) a humdrum everyday failing experienced by regular people, such as hubris, poor ability to predict the future, problems in school, difficulty in relationships, etc. Mix them together and you get "Einstein flunked math in primary school" and Freud saying "who knows what women want" and other stuff. I'm all for stories, but these aren't very good ones. |
|
1. Take some conditional and true statement: “The original IBM PC can address 1024KB memory of which 640KB are in user space.”
2. Remove all conditionalities: “The PC has 640KB RAM as that’s all one needs.”
3. Attribute it to a famous figure: “Bill Gates said that 640K is all anyone ought to need.”