short takes
Oct. 9th, 2002 12:32 pmLarissa: I'm sorry. I can cast four third-level spells per day, but the only third-level spell I know is Fireball.
Turok: That's ok. When the only tool you have is a hammer, every bugbear looks like a nail.
The Hebrew word "z'vuv" (or maybe "zevuv"; didn't see it written) means "fly", so "z'vuvim" are "flies".
The word "ba'al" means "master".
Sometimes "b" and "v" sounds are semi-interchangable. Akiva and Akiba are the same person.
Putting all of this together, we can now see the probable origin of "Bealzabub" -- "ba'al z'vuv". Except that that's the lord of one fly, which isn't nearly so intimidating. :-) (And yeah, I know I probably misspelled the conventional name.)
I finally found out recently why someone has been having trouble sending me mail. (That is, I was finally able to look at a bounce message.) It seems that this person didn't understand that user names are case-sensitive, becuase Outlook helpfully capitalizes things in its presentation of your address book.
Perhaps Microsoft is baalzevuvim; that's often a safe bet. Maybe a fireball would help.
Turok: That's ok. When the only tool you have is a hammer, every bugbear looks like a nail.
The Hebrew word "z'vuv" (or maybe "zevuv"; didn't see it written) means "fly", so "z'vuvim" are "flies".
The word "ba'al" means "master".
Sometimes "b" and "v" sounds are semi-interchangable. Akiva and Akiba are the same person.
Putting all of this together, we can now see the probable origin of "Bealzabub" -- "ba'al z'vuv". Except that that's the lord of one fly, which isn't nearly so intimidating. :-) (And yeah, I know I probably misspelled the conventional name.)
I finally found out recently why someone has been having trouble sending me mail. (That is, I was finally able to look at a bounce message.) It seems that this person didn't understand that user names are case-sensitive, becuase Outlook helpfully capitalizes things in its presentation of your address book.
Perhaps Microsoft is baalzevuvim; that's often a safe bet. Maybe a fireball would help.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-09 11:56 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-10 05:05 am (UTC)It happened to me. While my first E-mail address at Yale was Goljerp@yalevm.ycc.yale.edu, by the time I left I was (among other things) Firstname.Lastname@yale.edu. Fine... except another guy (among the 30 in the country, according to that source Monica found the other day) with my first and last name came to Yale (law school). So his classmates sent him E-mail. Despite the fact that I was, at this point, living in Jersualem, I tracked down the guy they wanted (middle initial = N), and forwarded his E-mail to him (while explaining politely the situation to the people who had written).
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-10 06:22 am (UTC)Firstname.Lastname@domain is just asking for trouble. I haven't been bitten by it yet as a recipient, but I have as a sender. And I don't even want to think about how much trouble my friend Robert Smith would have under such a scheme....
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-10 06:56 am (UTC)Thanks. I don't remember what I did, but I think it was basically just finger. No, wait, I think that Yale used to have an on-line directory. And obviously I knew his name...
Firstname.Lastname@domain is just asking for trouble.
Yeah. I think it's used because it's "easy" (until the problems crop up). JTS has an interesting solution: you get the shortest unique combination of your first name and your last name. So you would probably be mcellio@jtsa.edu, but there might be a DavidAFine@jtsa.edu. I'm not sure how they deal with the problem of two people with identical names - perhaps they let the second person choose some permutation?
(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-10 08:27 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-10 08:06 am (UTC)Baal Z'vuv
Date: 2002-10-09 02:14 pm (UTC)Re: Baal Z'vuv
Date: 2002-10-09 02:27 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2002-10-10 07:14 am (UTC)