"Davis, Jerry - Voodoo Computer Healer" - читать интересную книгу автора (Davis Jerry) predecessor --- a negative person, from what I'd heard about him.
A real ogre. Hated customers, hated fellow employees, loved only his computer --- and only his computer. He now makes six figures programming for the Department of Defense. You know --- space based weapon systems? So all these inert, dead computers he left behind had owners who needed them back. Needed them living, working, running their businesses and doing their taxes. Entertaining their children. And they would call everyday, begging for their machines back. Screaming at me! Calling me names! Sucking away all my positive energy and leaving me dry like a sack of old sticks. When the music played, however, it was different. Music made things flow. Music lubricated things, eased frictions, speeded work. I started catching up. Janet would walk into the tech room every once in a while just to watch and smile. Nick would wander back to get away from the pressures of his job, and stand there listening to the music. His feet would start tapping, then his head would sway. At one point he began to mimic playing the drums. When Steve saw this, he came back and began playing the "air guitar" --- unlike myself, these guys both had musical backgrounds --- so "air guitars," "air drums," and jam sessions were part of their everyday lives. It was inevitable. Inevitable! Steve and Nick jamming, and I'd start to dance. Janet laughed, thinking this was the greatest thing she'd ever seen, and I said, "Come on! Dance with me!" "Come on!" Her grin straightened out. She thought a moment. Then she let go and we were dancing, dancing, bodies gyrating to that spring-gone-haywire beat, bouncing and jumping and laughing about it all. Steve playing that phantom guitar, Nick slamming out that beat on the tech bench with pencils. Bob, hearing all the laughter, excused himself from a customer and came back to see what was happening. His face lit up like a sunny day at the beach. "Yes!" he said. "Yes! I like it! I like working here." He went back to the sales floor and sold a big, fat computer system. It was energy we were generating, living positive energy. It flowed out of that tech room and filled the whole store. The building vibrated with it. It was alive, living. Now, computers are neutral things. Not living yet not dead, not smart but full of thought. Not its own thoughts --- our thoughts. The thoughts of the user and the thoughts of the programmer. So, depending on who is using it and what program it's running, a computer can become positive or negative. Over the hours and days of good feelings and good times, the positive energy in that tech room became so intense I could feel it like heat. While the music played and my friends were happy, I worked on those poor, sick, dead computers . . . I felt the energy flowing down my arms, through my hands, and into what I was doing. Spare parts were becoming more and more unnecessary. Things, in |
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