>I know the legend, and I know what Kubric himself said in an interview.
>
>As for which is true? beats me!
>
>Chuck
>old enough to actually remember some of this stuff
>old enough to remember when 2001 was a date movie


Yep, yep.

IBM variant or Heuristic Algorithmic Logic.

>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
>Bryan Long (Richmond VA)
>Sent: Wednesday, June 27, 2001 2:43 PM
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: OT Re: POD, what is that? [7:10128]
>
>
>As long as we are on a tear here..
>A piece of trivia -  Does anyone know where Hal the computer from 2001 got
>it's name. Get right and you get the door prize. The pod bay door that is.
>
>Bryan
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Allen May"
>To:
>Sent: Wednesday, June 27, 2001 4:35 PM
>Subject: Re: POD, what is that? [7:10128]
>
>
>>  I dunno.  But it makes me think of "Open the pod bay doors HAL".
>>
>>  ----- Original Message -----
>>  From: "Jack Nalbandian"
>>  To:
>>  Sent: Wednesday, June 27, 2001 3:05 PM
>>  Subject: RE: POD, what is that? [7:10128]
>>
>>
>>  > I know this might veer off topic:
>>  >
>>  > Maybe I am biased (and partly curious), mostly due to working at a
>company
>>  > that actually did refer to its building sub-units as "pods," and
>>  > subsequently its network subnets (with a scheme pretty much dictated by
>>  the
>>  > company  campus' physical subdivisions) as "pods," but does the Cisco
HQ
>>  > campus have multiple building "pods" as well?  It is an actual term
used
>>  in
>>  > architecture.  Has it perhaps slipped over into being part of Cisco's
>>  > network terminology?
>>  >
>>  > Perhaps this preconception on my part had me thinking of the pods in
the
>>  > BSCN book in this manner.  I did notice, perhaps I am wrong, but the
>>  > individual "pods" in the Cisco book tend to have separate areas (in
OSFP
>>  > scenarios This might seem like a stupid question, but sometimes having
>>  > english as my
>>  > >2nd language, makes it more difficult for me to understand what the
>>  writer
>>  > >is trying to tell me.
>>  > >
>>  > >I am in the middle of my BSCN book, and are now seeing the word POD
>>  showing
>>  > >up several times. It tells me that each POD has a number of routers,
>and
>>  > >there are a certain amount of POD's.
>>  > >
>>  > >Reading the explanation at http://www.dictionary.com gave me NO
answers
>>  to
>>  > >this one, and the closest thing I can guess my self to is that POD's
>are
>>  > >kind of departments or subnets, unless the Prince Of Darkness has been
>>  > >involved with Cisco networks lately :-)
>>  > >
>>  > >Thanks for any replies to this one.
>>  > >
>>  > >Ole
>>  > >
>>  > >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>>  > >  Ole Drews Jensen
>>  > >  Systems Network Manager
>>  > >  CCNA, MCSE, MCP+I
>>  > >  RWR Enterprises, Inc.
>>  > >  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>  > >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>>  > >  http://www.OleDrews.com/CCNP
>>  > >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>>  > >  NEED A JOB ???
>>  > >  http://www.oledrews.com/job
>>  > >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>>  > ________________________
>>  >
>>  > Priscilla Oppenheimer
>>  > http://www.priscilla.com




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