The Jargon File


The Jargon File
Introduction
How Jargon Works
How to Use the Lexicon

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [^a-zA-Z]

Appendix A --- Appendix B --- Appendix C

K

 /K/ n.  [from kilo-] A kilobyte.  Used both as a
   spoken word and a written suffix (like meg and gig for
   megabyte and gigabyte).  See quantifiers.

K&R

 [Kernighan and Ritchie] n.  Brian Kernighan and Dennis
   Ritchie's book "The C Programming Language", esp. the
   classic and influential first edition (Prentice-Hall 1978; ISBN
   0-113-110163-3).  Syn.  White_Book, Old_Testament.  See
   also New_Testament.

k-

 pref.  Extremely.  Not commonly used among hackers, but
   quite common among crackers and warez_d00dz in compounds such
   as `k-kool' /K'-kool'/, `k-rad' /K'-rad'/, and `k-awesome'
   /K-aw'sm/.  Also used to intensify negatives; thus, `k-evil',
   `k-lame', `k-screwed', and `k-annoying'.  Overuse of this
   prefix, or use in more formal or technical contexts, is considered
an
   indicator of lamer status.

kahuna

 /k*-hoo'n*/ n.  [IBM: from the Hawaiian title for a
   shaman] Synonym for wizard, guru.

kamikaze packet

 n.  The `official' jargon for what is
   more commonly called a Christmas_tree_packet. RFC-1025,
   "TCP and IP Bake Off" says:

     10 points for correctly being able to process a "Kamikaze" packet
     (AKA nastygram, christmas tree packet, lamp test segment, et
     al.).  That is, correctly handle a segment with the maximum
     combination of features at once (e.g., a SYN URG PUSH FIN segment
     with options and data).

   See also Chernobyl_packet.

kangaroo code

 n.  Syn. spaghetti_code.

ken

 /ken/ n.  1. [UNIX] Ken Thompson, principal inventor
   of UNIX.  In the early days he used to hand-cut distribution
   tapes, often with a note that read "Love, ken".  Old-timers still
   use his first name (sometimes uncapitalized, because it's a login
   name and mail address) in third-person reference; it is widely
   understood (on Usenet, in particular) that without a last name
   `Ken' refers only to Ken Thompson.  Similarly, Dennis without last
   name means Dennis Ritchie (and he is often known as dmr).  See
   also demigod, UNIX.  2. A flaming user.  This was
   originated by the Software Support group at Symbolics because the
   two greatest flamers in the user community were both named Ken.

kgbvax

 /K-G-B'vaks/ n.  See kremvax.

KIBO

 /ki:'boh/  1. [acronym] Knowledge In, Bullshit Out.
   A summary of what happens whenever valid data is passed through an
   organization (or person) that deliberately or accidentally
   disregards or ignores its significance.  Consider, for example,
   what an advertising campaign can do with a product's actual
   specifications.  Compare GIGO; see also SNAFU_principle.
   2. James Parry <kibo@world.std.com>, a Usenetter infamous for
   various surrealist net.pranks and an uncanny, machine-assisted
   knack for joining any thread in which his nom de guerre is
   mentioned.

kiboze

 v.  [Usenet] To grep the Usenet news for a string,
   especially with the intention of posting a follow-up.  This
   activity was popularised by Kibo (see KIBO, sense 2).

kick

 v.  [IRC] To cause somebody to be removed from a
   IRC channel, an option only available to CHOPs.  This is
   an extreme measure, often used to combat extreme flamage or
   flooding, but sometimes used at the chop's whim.  Compare
   gun.
   

kill file

 n.  [Usenet] (alt. `KILL file') Per-user
   file(s) used by some Usenet reading programs (originally Larry
   Wall's `rn(1)') to discard summarily (without presenting for
   reading) articles matching some particularly uninteresting (or
   unwanted) patterns of subject, author, or other header lines.  Thus
   to add a person (or subject) to one's kill file is to arrange for
   that person to be ignored by one's newsreader in future.  By
   extension, it may be used for a decision to ignore the person or
   subject in other media.  See also plonk.

killer micro

 n.  [popularized by Eugene Brooks] A
   microprocessor-based machine that infringes on mini, mainframe, or
   supercomputer performance turf.  Often heard in "No one will
   survive the attack of the killer micros!", the battle cry of the
   downsizers.  Used esp. of RISC architectures.

   The popularity of the phrase `attack of the killer micros' is
   doubtless reinforced by the movie title "Attack Of The Killer
   Tomatoes" (one of the canonical examples of
   so-bad-it's-wonderful among hackers).  This has even more flavor
   now that killer micros have gone on the offensive not just
   individually (in workstations) but in hordes (within massively
   parallel computers).

killer poke

 n.  A recipe for inducing hardware damage on a
   machine via insertion of invalid values (see poke) into a
   memory-mapped control register; used esp. of various fairly
   well-known tricks on bitty_boxes without hardware memory
   management (such as the IBM PC and Commodore PET) that can overload
   and trash analog electronics in the monitor.  See also HCF.

kilo-

 pref.  [SI] See quantifiers.

KIPS

 /kips/ n.  [abbreviation, by analogy with MIPS
   using K] Thousands (*not* 1024s) of Instructions Per
   Second.  Usage: rare.

KISS Principle

 /kis' prin'si-pl/ n.  "Keep It Simple,
   Stupid".  A maxim often invoked when discussing design to fend off
   creeping_featurism and control development complexity.
   Possibly related to the marketroid maxim on sales
   presentations, "Keep It Short and Simple".

kit

 n.  [Usenet; poss. fr. DEC slang for a full software
   distribution, as opposed to a patch or upgrade] A source
   software distribution that has been packaged in such a way that it
   can (theoretically) be unpacked and installed according to a series
   of steps using only standard UNIX tools, and entirely documented by
   some reasonable chain of references from the top-level README_file
   .  The more general term distribution may imply that
   special tools or more stringent conditions on the host environment
   are required.

klone

 /klohn/ n.  See clone, sense 4.

kludge

 1. /klooj/ n.  Incorrect (though regrettably
   common) spelling of kluge (US).  These two words have been
   confused in American usage since the early 1960s, and widely
   confounded in Great Britain since the end of World War II.
   2. [TMRC] A crock that works. (A long-ago "Datamation"
   article by Jackson Granholme similarly said: "An ill-assorted
   collection of poorly matching parts, forming a distressing
   whole.")  3. v. To use a kludge to get around a problem.  "I've
   kludged around it for now, but I'll fix it up properly later."

   This word appears to have derived from Scots `kludge' or
   `kludgie' for a common toilet, via British military slang.  It
   apparently became confused with U.S. kluge during or after
   World War II; some Britons from that era use both words in
   definably different ways, but kluge is now uncommon in Great
   Britain.  `Kludge' in Commonwealth hackish differs in meaning from
   `kluge' in that it lacks the positive senses; a kludge is something
   no Commonwealth hacker wants to be associated too closely with.
   Also, `kludge' is more widely known in British mainstream slang
   than `kluge' is in the U.S.

kluge

 /klooj/  [from the German `klug', clever] 1. n. A
   Rube Goldberg (or Heath Robinson) device, whether in hardware or
   software.  2. n. A clever programming trick intended to solve a
   particular nasty case in an expedient, if not clear, manner.  Often
   used to repair bugs.  Often involves ad-hockery and verges on
   being a crock.  3. n.  Something that works for the wrong
   reason.  4. vt. To insert a kluge into a program.  "I've kluged
   this routine to get around that weird bug, but there's probably a
   better way."  5. [WPI] n. A feature that is implemented in a
   rude manner.

   Nowadays this term is often encountered in the variant spelling
   `kludge'.  Reports from old_farts are consistent that
   `kluge' was the original spelling, reported around computers as
   far back as the mid-1950s and, at that time, used exclusively of
   *hardware* kluges.  In 1947, the "New York Folklore
   Quarterly" reported a classic shaggy-dog story `Murgatroyd the
   Kluge Maker' then current in the Armed Forces, in which a `kluge'
   was a complex and puzzling artifact with a trivial function.  Other
   sources report that `kluge' was common Navy slang in the WWII era
   for any piece of electronics that worked well on shore but
   consistently failed at sea.

   However, there is reason to believe this slang use may be a decade
   older.  Several respondents have connected it to the brand name of
   a device called a "Kluge paper feeder", an adjunct to mechanical
   printing presses.  Legend has it that the Kluge feeder was designed
   before small, cheap electric motors and control electronics; it
   relied on a fiendishly complex assortment of cams, belts, and
   linkages to both power and synchronize all its operations from one
   motive driveshaft.  It was accordingly tempermental, subject to
   frequent breakdowns, and devilishly difficult to repair -- but oh,
   so clever!  People who tell this story also aver that `Kluge' was
   the the name of a design engineer.

   There is in fact a Brandtjen & Kluge Inc., an old family business
   that manufactures printing equipment -- interestingly, their name
   is pronounced /kloo'gee/!  Henry Brandtjen, president of the
   firm, told me (ESR, 1994) that his company was co-founded by his
   father and an engineer named Kluge /kloo'gee/, who built and
   co-designed the original Kluge automatic feeder in 1919.
   Mr. Brandtjen claims, however, that this was a *simple* device
   (with only four cams); he says he has no idea how the myth of its
   complexity took hold.

   TMRC and the MIT hacker culture of the early '60s seems to
   have developed in a milieu that remembered and still used some WWII
   military slang (see also foobar).  It seems likely that
   `kluge' came to MIT via alumni of the many military electronics
   projects that had been located in Cambridge (many in MIT's
   venerable Building 20, in which TMRC is also located) during
   the war.

   The variant `kludge' was apparently popularized by the
   Datamation article mentioned above; it was titled "How
   to Design a Kludge" (February 1962, pp. 30, 31).  This spelling was
   probably imported from Great Britain, where kludge has an
   independent history (though this fact was largely unknown to
   hackers on either side of the Atlantic before a mid-1993 debate in
   the Usenet group alt.folklore.computers over the First and
   Second Edition versions of this entry; everybody used to think
   kludge was just a mutation of kluge).  It now appears that
   the British, having forgotten the etymology of their own `kludge'
   when `kluge' crossed the Atlantic, repaid the U.S. by lobbing the
   `kludge' orthography in the other direction and confusing their
   American cousins' spelling!

   The result of this history is a tangle.  Many younger U.S. hackers
   pronounce the word as /klooj/ but spell it, incorrectly for its
   meaning and pronunciation, as `kludge'.  British hackers mostly
   learned /kluhj/ orally and use it in a restricted negative sense
   and are at least consistent.  European hackers have mostly learned
   the word from written American sources and tend to pronounce it
   /kluhj/ but use the wider American meaning!

   Some observers consider this mess appropriate in view of the word's
   meaning.

kluge around

 vt.  To avoid a bug or difficult condition by
   inserting a kluge.  Compare workaround.

kluge up

 vt.  To lash together a quick hack to perform a
   task; this is milder than cruft_together and has some of the
   connotations of hack_up (note, however, that the construction
   `kluge on' corresponding to hack_on is never used).  "I've
   kluged up this routine to dump the buffer contents to a safe
   place."

Knights of the Lambda Calculus

 n.  A semi-mythical
   organization of wizardly LISP and Scheme hackers.  The name refers
   to a mathematical formalism invented by Alonzo Church, with which
   LISP is intimately connected.  There is no enrollment list and the
   criteria for induction are unclear, but one well-known LISPer has
   been known to give out buttons and, in general, the *members*
   know who they are....

Knuth

 /knooth/ n.  [Donald E. Knuth's "The Art of
   Computer Programming"] Mythically, the reference that answers all
   questions about data structures or algorithms.  A safe answer when
   you do not know: "I think you can find that in Knuth."  Contrast
   literature,_the.  See also bible.

kremvax

 /krem-vaks/ n.  [from the then large number of
   Usenet VAXen with names of the form foovax]
   Originally, a fictitious Usenet site at the Kremlin, announced on
   April 1, 1984 in a posting ostensibly originated there by Soviet
   leader Konstantin Chernenko.  The posting was actually forged by
   Piet Beertema as an April Fool's joke.  Other fictitious sites
   mentioned in the hoax were moskvax and kgbvax.  This was
   probably the funniest of the many April Fool's forgeries
   perpetrated on Usenet (which has negligible security against them),
   because the notion that Usenet might ever penetrate the Iron
   Curtain seemed so totally absurd at the time.

   In fact, it was only six years later that the first genuine site in
   Moscow, demos.su, joined Usenet.  Some readers needed
   convincing that the postings from it weren't just another prank.
   Vadim Antonov, senior programmer at Demos and the major poster from
   there up to mid-1991, was quite aware of all this, referred to it
   frequently in his own postings, and at one point twitted some
   credulous readers by blandly asserting that he *was* a
   hoax!

   Eventually he even arranged to have the domain's gateway site
   *named* kremvax, thus neatly turning fiction into fact
   and demonstrating that the hackish sense of humor transcends
   cultural barriers.  [Mr. Antonov also contributed the
   Russian-language material for this lexicon. -- ESR]

   In an even more ironic historical footnote, kremvax became an
   electronic center of the anti-communist resistance during the
   bungled hard-line coup of August 1991.  During those three days the
   Soviet UUCP network centered on kremvax became the only
   trustworthy news source for many places within the USSR.  Though
   the sysops were concentrating on internal communications,
   cross-border postings included immediate transliterations of Boris
   Yeltsin's decrees condemning the coup and eyewitness reports of the
   demonstrations in Moscow's streets.  In those hours, years of
   speculation that totalitarianism would prove unable to maintain its
   grip on politically-loaded information in the age of computer
   networking were proved devastatingly accurate -- and the original
   kremvax joke became a reality as Yeltsin and the new Russian
   revolutionaries of `glasnost' and `perestroika' made
   kremvax one of the timeliest means of their outreach to the
   West.

kyrka

 /shir'k*/ n.  [Swedish] See feature_key.


The Jargon File
Introduction
How Jargon Works
How to Use the Lexicon

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [^a-zA-Z]

Appendix A --- Appendix B --- Appendix C