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Python Programming

Python Joins Movement To Dump 'Offensive' Master, Slave Terms (theregister.co.uk) 1342

Python creator Guido van Rossum retired in July, but he's been pulled back in to resolve a debate about politically incorrect language. The Register reports: Like other open source communities, Python's minders have been asked whether they really want to continue using the terms "master" and "slave" to describe technical operations and relationships, given that the words remind some people of America's peculiar institution, a historical legacy that fires political passions to this day. Last week Victor Stinner, a Python developer who works for Red Hat, published four pull requests seeking to change "master" and "slave" in Python documentation and code to terms like "parent," "worker," or something similarly anodyne. "For diversity reasons, it would be nice to try to avoid 'master' and 'slave' terminology which can be associated to slavery," he explained in his bug report, noting that there have been complaints but they've been filed privately -- presumably to avoid being dragged into a fractious flame war. And when Python 3.8 is released, there will be fewer instances of these terms.
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Python Joins Movement To Dump 'Offensive' Master, Slave Terms

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  • Re (Score:5, Insightful)

    by pele ( 151312 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:27AM (#57306078) Homepage

    So what about people who are unable to have children, will they get offended by references to 'parent'?
    This has gotten out of hand, definitely.

    • Re:Re (Score:5, Insightful)

      by stealth_finger ( 1809752 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:32AM (#57306148)

      So what about people who are unable to have children, will they get offended by references to 'parent'? This has gotten out of hand, definitely.

      What about orphans, will they take kindly to constantly be reminded of parents? Why won't anyone think of the childrens?

      • Re:Re (Score:5, Funny)

        by SCVonSteroids ( 2816091 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:51AM (#57306432)

        What about when you destroy the parent?
        You've effectively orphaned its children. Now thats some pretty nasty nomenclature.

        • Re:Re (Score:5, Funny)

          by qzzpjs ( 1224510 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @12:06PM (#57307328)

          What about when you destroy the parent?

          Well, normally the parent is expected to destroy all their children first, then die themselves. Can't have orphan processes running around your system... So we probably shouldn't use parent/child either for the analogy. Maybe manager/worker? Then we can think layoffs. :^)

        • Re:Re (Score:5, Funny)

          by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @02:56PM (#57308954)

          Always kill the children before you terminate the parent.

      • Re:Re (Score:5, Insightful)

        by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:12AM (#57306710)
        There are many more orphans today in the US than there are slaves, which makes it even more imbecilic.
    • Re:Re (Score:5, Informative)

      by lgw ( 121541 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:50AM (#57306418) Journal

      The worst part is

      given that the words remind some people of America's peculiar institution

      Really? Slavery was a thing for all of recorded human history. Even now it's alive and well in places like Qatar. American slavery is an embarrassment to America, as we were slow to abandon it compared to Europe, and it took a war to do so. But slavery as a concept? It's hard to find any location on Earth with a written history that doesn't include slavery staining that history. It's not in any way "America's peculiar institution".

      I've heard there are Millennials who were never taught that there were slaves in Europe, Rome, Egypt, Sumeria, etc, basically any place with government established enough to leave written records.

      • Re:Re (Score:5, Informative)

        by rl117 ( 110595 ) <rleigh@cOPENBSDodelibre.net minus bsd> on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:24AM (#57306884) Homepage
        It's fairly certain that they don't know that "slave" and "serf" are derived from "Slav". What, white people were slaves? Surely not! Only blacks suffered from slavery in their world, despite it being a historically worldwide phenomenon.
      • Re:Re (Score:5, Informative)

        by thrich81 ( 1357561 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:43AM (#57307094)

        This probably violates some written or unwritten /. rule, but I'm going to repeat a reply I made to someone else since your point is the same as theirs. You aren't interpreting "America's peculiar institution" as the historians who use it professionally do.
        The reference to slavery as America's "Peculiar Institution" is a term which goes back deep into the 19th century and isn't meant to imply that slavery is peculiar (as in "unique") to America but that slavery in the US was peculiar in the "different from other institutions" sense. It seems to have been coined by by the Southern pro-slavery politician John C Calhoun in 1837. A quick reference:
        "PECULIAR INSTITUTION was a euphemistic term that white southerners used for slavery. John C. Calhoun defended the "peculiar labor" of the South in 1828 and the "peculiar domestick institution" in 1830. The term came into general use in the 1830s when the abolitionist followers of William Lloyd Garrison began to attack slavery. Its implicit message was that slavery in the U.S. South was different from the very harsh slave systems existing in other countries and that southern slavery had no impact on those living in northern states." -- from https://www.encyclopedia.com/h [encyclopedia.com]... [encyclopedia.com].
        The term is seen fairly commonly in scholarly works, including this book from 1956, "The Peculiar Institution: Slavery in the Ante-Bellum South" by Kenneth M. Stampp (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Peculiar_Institution).

        • Re:Re (Score:4, Interesting)

          by Immerman ( 2627577 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @01:59PM (#57308458)

          And in fairness it *was* rather peculiar in that it departed greatly from the historical norm for slavery. Pretty much everywhere else the children of slaves were born free, and quite often had a clear route to citizenship as well. Quite often there was a generally accepted route for captured slaves to earn their freedom as well. The idea that someone could be born into lifelong slavery was fairly uncommon.

          • Re:Re (Score:5, Informative)

            by nukenerd ( 172703 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @06:30PM (#57310458)

            Pretty much everywhere else the children of slaves were born free, and quite often had a clear route to citizenship as well.

            Nope. You think those Spanish galley slaves, Roman gladiators, Chinese eunichs etc had a route to freedom? Some slaves got to high rank as slaves went, and did not lead a bad life, but they were a minority. Most slaves in history would be lucky ever to have the chance of children (certainly not eunuchs unless they grew one).

    • Re:Re (Score:5, Funny)

      by msauve ( 701917 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:54AM (#57306484)
      I think they should use bourgeois and prole instead.
    • Re:Re (Score:5, Funny)

      by magarity ( 164372 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:56AM (#57306510)

      So what about people who are unable to have children, will they get offended by references to 'parent'?

      I suggest the terms "coordinator" and "volunteer".

    • by vux984 ( 928602 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:11AM (#57306686)

      I'm firmly in the camp that thinks this is much ado about nothing.

      But in the spirit of it being much ado about nothing, it seems absurd for me to get worked up about it. So if let them try to change it if it makes them feel better... if it gets traction and sticks... fine, whatever.

    • Re:Re (Score:5, Interesting)

      by R3d M3rcury ( 871886 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @12:25PM (#57307552) Journal

      Depends on whether you've experienced it.

      Back in the '80s, I was working with a contractor who was writing an external process to do some work for the main process that I was working on. We were developing this and doing some testing and his process crashed. So I gave him a call to let him know what messages I was sending it when it crashed. I called him up and said, "Hey, Phil, I just got a child died event..."

      *Click*. He hung up the phone.

      I called back. No answer.

      My co-worker, sitting next to me, told me that I really fucked up. "How so?" "Phil's kid died about 2 months ago. SIDS."

      It didn't really matter that the header identified it as a "Child Died Event." And parent/child processes are a common term, as is having a process "die." And I had no idea that this had happened to his kid.

      But I still felt like an absolute jerk for the pain that I brought him. And to this day, I try to avoid that terminology when I can.

      Dare I say it, there may be terminology that brings up really bad memories in other people. Not everyone has the same experiences as you and certain things may offend them more than they would offend you because of those experiences.

  • more pc stupidity (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:27AM (#57306080)

    good fucking god. you stupid fucking pc idiots are ruining the world for the majority.

    • Re:more pc stupidity (Score:5, Interesting)

      by wizkid ( 13692 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:36AM (#57306212) Homepage

      good fucking god. you stupid fucking pc idiots are ruining the world for the majority.

      So what's next.... No more /sbin/kill for processes?

      Ya know, any app that has "client" in the name probably refers to prostitution... Thats got to go too.

      Oh My God! /usr/bin/touch promotes sexual assult. That's got to go too.

      totem is going to offend Native Americans....

      mount is sexist also....

      reject.. That's going to hurt someones feelings, GONE.
      Fuck it, lets just burn all the computers and go back to using bows and arrows, and hunting in the woods.....

      • by Scarred Intellect ( 1648867 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:48AM (#57307154) Homepage Journal

        Fuck it, lets just burn all the computers and go back to using bows and arrows, and hunting in the woods.....

        Shit, the Butlerian Jihad [wikipedia.org] is coming sooner than we thought (and for more inane reasons!).

  • facepalm (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ganjadude ( 952775 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:27AM (#57306082) Homepage
    seriously? this is what the world is becoming????
    • Re:facepalm (Score:5, Funny)

      by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:37AM (#57306232)

      The Progressive religion is coming for you sinners and blasphemers!

    • Re:facepalm (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:46AM (#57306352)

      Where you see doom and gloom I see opportunity.

      master -> general
      slave -> private

      master -> professor
      slave -> grad student

      master -> manager
      slave -> Individual Contributor (IC)

      master -> landlord
      slave -> tenant

      master -> bourgeoisie
      slave -> proletariat

      master -> oenophillic
      slave -> hophead

      master -> overlord
      slave -> feckless heathens

      master -> Hard Working American
      slave -> Parasite

      master -> owner
      slave -> laborer

      master -> manager
      slave -> H1B

      I could do this all day. The major takeaway is you can change the words, but the relationship is still there. I say do away with master/slave if only because it is somewhat outdated. In the spirit of hacktivism, let's choose a relationship that's more near and dear to problems we have today!

    • Re:facepalm (Score:5, Interesting)

      by lgw ( 121541 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:54AM (#57306480) Journal

      seriously? this is what the world is becoming????

      Meh, it's not new. Editorial guidance for ANSI/ISO stanrds from 20 years ago included avoidance of "slave" (the oddball "master/peer" was recommended), as well as "cancelled, not aborted or killed" and "processed, not executed".

      It gets silly, but then some technical terms become more offensive in translation, and that's a reasonable concern for a global audience.

  • I nominate: (Score:5, Funny)

    by leftCoaster ( 803026 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:28AM (#57306088)
    "Gru" and "Minion"
  • Oh for fuck's sake (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SensitiveMale ( 155605 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:29AM (#57306110)

    Does PC cultures have to infect everything?

    Everyone knows that it won't stop there. A few years later there will be more "offensive" words that need to be changed. Personally, I won't stop being offended until we're all coding in machine code and then I'll fight for machine rights because who are we to tell them their language?

    • by Dan541 ( 1032000 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:42AM (#57306298) Homepage

      We need to abolish arrays.

      Idea of placing one thing before another is offensive to retards.
      All elements should get equal participation.

    • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:47AM (#57306360)

      Does PC cultures have to infect everything?

      Everyone knows that it won't stop there. A few years later there will be more "offensive" words that need to be changed. Personally, I won't stop being offended until we're all coding in machine code and then I'll fight for machine rights because who are we to tell them their language?

      I personally don't see the need.

      But I give more weight to the offence felt by the descendants of slaves (who still deal with racism and slavery apologists) than the offence felt by people asked to use a different set of technical terms.

      • by BronsCon ( 927697 ) <social@bronstrup.com> on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:46AM (#57307132) Journal

        But I give more weight to the offence felt by the descendants of slaves (who still deal with racism and slavery apologists) than the offence felt by people asked to use a different set of technical terms.

        While I can see why this would be the case, you also need to give consideration to the implication of allowing the terms to change. Whatever takes their place will have the same meaning and will, in short order, become offensive to the same group, in a never-ending cycle. It's not that we're offended by the suggestion that we change the terminology (thus why someone else's offense might hold more weight than ours -- because we are not offended to begin with), but that we recognize that it is a futile and wasteful effort and choose not to entertain it.

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:57AM (#57306516) Homepage Journal

      Well, every orthodoxy, left or right, has its own version of it; it always looks ridiculous when viewed from the outside. To me it seems kind of silly to get upset about a ball player kneeling during the national anthem, but I don't doubt that people are sincerely offended.

      This particular form of PC comes out two things: (1) Niceness -- a desire not to hurt anyone's feeligns and (2) Optimism, of a sort peculiar to young people and engineers: if there's a problem we can just *fix* it.

      Well some problems just can't be fixed. You can't eliminate friction from mechanical systems, and you can't eliminate social friction from human societies. The only way to keep people from offending each other would be to separate them so thoroughly that nobody ever encounters anyone who was in any way different from them in opinions and outlook. If you've ever been married you'll realize that pretty much means we'd all be on our own.

      So either we learn to live with each other, which may make us miserable, or we learn to live apart, which will certainly make us miserable.

  • I agree (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:29AM (#57306112)

    The terms are needlessly evocative. I propose we use "dom/sub" instead

  • by michaelmalak ( 91262 ) <michael@michaelmalak.com> on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:30AM (#57306124) Homepage
    The use of "peculiar institution" without quotation marks or preceded by "so-called" is even more offensive. At least the Register article has it as a hyperlink, but the Slashdot blockquote lacks it.
  • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:30AM (#57306132) Homepage Journal
    How is slavery America's "peculiar institution"? Slavery has existed for centuries in many countries. It still exists to this day, even though people continue to ignore it.
    • by ErikTheRed ( 162431 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:34AM (#57306190) Homepage

      If something terrible is happening but it's not trending on social media then nobody gives a shit. The overwhelming majority of people in the US only get outraged when their peer group tells them to. Whether such outrage is sensible, proportionate, or useful is never a consideration. Being seen to "care" is what's important.

    • by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:40AM (#57306258)

      How is slavery America's "peculiar institution"?

      Playing victim in the US can get you paid.

    • How is slavery America's "peculiar institution"?

      You might check with John C. Calhoun, who coined the term [encyclopedia.com] in the 1820s.

    • by thrich81 ( 1357561 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:59AM (#57306544)

      I'm not a historian but ... The reference to slavery as America's "Peculiar Institution" is a term which goes back deep into the 19th century and isn't meant to imply that slavery is peculiar (as in "unique") to America but that slavery in the US was peculiar in the "different from other institutions" sense. It seems to have been coined by by the Southern pro-slavery politician John C Calhoun in 1837. A quick reference:
      "PECULIAR INSTITUTION was a euphemistic term that white southerners used for slavery. John C. Calhoun defended the "peculiar labor" of the South in 1828 and the "peculiar domestick institution" in 1830. The term came into general use in the 1830s when the abolitionist followers of William Lloyd Garrison began to attack slavery. Its implicit message was that slavery in the U.S. South was different from the very harsh slave systems existing in other countries and that southern slavery had no impact on those living in northern states." -- from https://www.encyclopedia.com/h... [encyclopedia.com].
      The term is seen fairly commonly in scholarly works, including this book from 1956, "The Peculiar Institution: Slavery in the Ante-Bellum South" by Kenneth M. Stampp (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Peculiar_Institution).

      • Thats great. So why use it in this context? Is the article writer pro-slavery? It is hardly a peculiar institution and to use that term is offensive in itself.
    • longer than it was even useful (the Northern states were out performing the Southern one's economically because the south had too much capital tied up in slaves). We also fought a civil war over it.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        No we didn't keep it longer than anyone. It is amazing how ignorant people are of human history. In addition, slavery exists to this day. Furthermore the Civil War wasn't fought over slavery. Back to school for you.
  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:32AM (#57306158)

    5) Windshield/Bug

    4) Ampulex compressa / Periplaneta americana [iflscience.com]

    3) Eastwood / Punk

    2) Wall / Mime

    1) PC / Wrongthink

  • by The Original CDR ( 5453236 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:32AM (#57306164)
    The Los Angeles County tried to ban Master/Slave [snopes.com] for IDE cables in 2003

    One such recent example included the manufacturer’s labeling of equipment where the words “Master/Slave” appeared to identify the primary and secondary sources. Based on the cultural diversity and sensitivity of Los Angeles County, this is not an acceptable identification label.

    • by Ambassador Kosh ( 18352 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:15AM (#57306752)

      IDE cables are a great way to show the problem.

      Many motherboards had primary and secondary slots and each slot had a master and a slave connector.

      There are still a number of things like to DNS and other network services where primary and secondary are not the same as master and slave and a primary or secondary dns server can have slave servers.

      I understand coming up with different terms but we also need to make sure the new terms are not more confusing than what we have already.

    • by dissy ( 172727 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @01:24PM (#57308172)

      The Los Angeles County tried to ban Master/Slave for IDE cables in 2003

      In the electronic manufacturing industry I work kinda-in (purely IT, but still) we had a similar push not long ago to ban Male/Female when referring to connectors and instead use Plug/Jack.
      "Mating", the verb form, was changed to "Connect"

      A bit later this was changed again as the previously-female term "Jack" was offensive being a predominantly male name, so it became Plug/Socket.

      Even later as more complex connectors came into common use, it was noticed that things like the USB-A connectors had an outside shield component that made ground contact when plugged in, but at the same time the inserting component went *into* the cable where the 4 conductive plate traces were.
      Basically the previously-male side has a shroud that completely envelops the entire previously-female side when connected.

      The decades old term for these are "hermaphroditic shrouded connectors", which was also found offensive and changed to "surround connector"

      There was also "hermaphroditic non-shrouded connectors" previously called "genderless" which can connect both cable-to-panel as well as cable-to-cable, which are now to be called "combination connectors"

      The latest change we had to make was to retain the Plug/Socket terms but on the technical side no longer use "Plug" to replace "Male" and "Socket" to replace "Female"
      Instead "Socket" is whichever end is fixed in place (IE on a circuit board or a panel) and "Plug" to refer to a movable connector (IE at the end of a cable)
      So, the terms no longer indicate the obvious physical appearance of the connector, but how the connector is used.

      This also means for the previously-genderless instances of a cable-to-cable connection, you are to say it is two *sockets* connecting, and you can't have two plugs that connect.

      Confused yet?

  • Slavery is American! (Score:5, Informative)

    by Glarimore ( 1795666 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:36AM (#57306214)

    given that the words remind some people of America's peculiar institution

    I find it odd how 'slavery' is so often framed as an American phenomenon, when it was/is a worldwide institution. The US was simply the last superpower to abolish it locally. Slavery is unfortunately alive and well, which should be clear to anyone willing to take a look around.

    As for the topic at hand: The folks arguing for this might have a point if the terms being used were 'whitey' and 'blackey' or something equivalently racist, but I find the terms 'master' and slave' to be sufficiently "anodyne" considering they refer to a relationship between two things and neither term explicitly refers to a particular type of individual. Are we going to get rid of 'parent' and 'child' as well because some people were beaten by their parents?

    • The US was simply the last superpower to abolish it locally.

      China still has labor camps. That's state-sponsored slavery, right on its face. Here in the USA, we do things like pay Inmates $1/day to fight fires. While that technically involves payment, in reality that's just disguised slavery.

      Many developed nations continue to have institutionalized slavery, including superpowers.

  • by oldgraybeard ( 2939809 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:37AM (#57306228)
    Ugh This PC Correctness just makes me shake my head. I can live with some of the doing away with the 12 year old boy locker room stuff and the vulgar stuff . After all we do want to create an environment for all.
    But I write code and create things. Everything around this safe space, I'm offended by everything! environment just gives me heart burn because it has nothing to do with writing code and creating tech.
    If an individual is capable (but kinda) and ass. Hey that happens in the real world. If an individual or Company are jerks I can move on.
    But renaming thing because some might be offended even when the terms are completely out of the bad context is a waste of time that might be used for more productive things.
    This is all just my personal feelings and opinions. So I hope we can just have a discussion.

    Just my 2 cents ;)
  • by Jahoda ( 2715225 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:44AM (#57306334)
    I don't know. On the one hand we can say that this is the result of "feel good but do nothing" culture taken too far. On the other hand, slavery is pretty fricking gross.

    I really just don't know, but I guess in the larger context of life it seems like a pretty dumb thing for me to care about. Being upset about changing the terminology, that is.
  • by ErikTheRed ( 162431 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @10:53AM (#57306476) Homepage

    This trend of seeking offense where none is intended is incredibly toxic to humanity. In the English language many words have different meanings based on their context. It's plainly obvious that no allusion to human slavery is meant in the context of software or hardware module relationships.

    Let's be blunt about what has happened: people have been abusively harmed by others lying to them and telling them that context is meaningless. They have been given invented forms of discomfort in order to make them slaves to unpleasant emotional responses that have no underlying basis in reality. That's the irony here. The people complaining about the terminology are behaving in a herd manner, controlled by powermongers who benefit from it. Power flows from irrational group cohesion, and the cheapest and easiest form irrational group cohesion is hatred of the other. There are many ways to define the "other" and you can see it everywhere in politics: race, nationality, language, religion, gender, sexual orientation, and (seriously, humanity actually went here) word choice. Both conservatives and progressives exploit these shamelessly. Stop playing their games.

  • by grumpy-cowboy ( 4342983 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:24AM (#57306892)

    It's time to ban 0 and 1 because it can offends non-binary peoples!

  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:24AM (#57306898) Homepage Journal

    The thing that makes slavery wrong is that it treats people as if they were things without free will or feelings or purpose other than to serve us. Software modules actually are things without free will, feelings, or purpose other than to serve us.

    It's offensive to call an adult black man "boy". It doesn't mean "boy" is an inherently offensive word or concept.

    If you take a consequentialist view of ethics, the consequences of banning the word "slave" is that we no longer have a word to describe that concept. It does nothing for people actually are or were enslaved. How would you write a biography of Frederick Douglass? If you have a deontological view of ethics, there is no equivalence between describing an act and participating in the act; you can't end rape by not allowing people to use the word "rape".

    People overall have a magical.view of words, which is why everyone is keen to police everyone else's language. That's how we ended up calling the place we poop the "rest room", which is kind of bizarre when you think of it.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:51AM (#57307192)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by SlithyMagister ( 822218 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @11:57AM (#57307252)
    Master and Slave are metaphors for the controller and the controlled.

    So use those, or synonyms of them.

    Done
  • by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Thursday September 13, 2018 @12:29PM (#57307606) Homepage Journal

    While we are at this, when will the sexist man command be renamed?..

    I'd say, let's name it doc, but that's not very egalitarian either, as it implies a level of education unattainable to so many of the less fortunate. Plus, to some it also invokes the horribly racist imagery of Looney Tunes [vulture.com].

    If you've read this far and aren't outraged, you are a racist too — buy some racism credits to atone for the incorrect thoughts.

  • "Makers" (Score:4, Insightful)

    by slipped_bit ( 2842229 ) on Thursday September 13, 2018 @01:17PM (#57308102) Homepage

    I have no problem with master and slave used to define relationships of subsystems, but here are a few terms that should be reverted:

    "makers" -- They're hobbyists.
    "life hack" -- a useful tip
    "shield" -- Why the heck did this term come to replace the phrase "daughter board"?
    "ends" -- Connectors. Seriously, I bought some cable from a guy once and he asked if I wanted the "ends." The what? "The ends. The ends for the cable." At the time I had worked with electronics for 25+ years and had never heard that term used to describe a connector.

    But at least now when I hear that a "maker" has a "life hack" on how to attach the "ends" to his "shield" I know what the hell he or she is talking about. Now I just need to figure out if that shield is the parent or child.

An adequate bootstrap is a contradiction in terms.

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