The Internet Oracle: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Revision as of 00:59, 18 June 2019


The Internet Oracle, also known as The Usenet Oracle is one of the (if not the) earliest New Media collaborative works on the internet.

It was created by Steve Kinzler in October 1989, although the software predates his creation. Yes, The Internet Oracle is Older Than the Web (although, obviously, the website isn't).

How it operates is simple: one sends an email to a particular address, asking it to "askme" a question or "tellme" the answer to a question. Every "tellme" gets sent to an "askme", and the recipient of the question answers it and sends the answer back. The best questions and answers are added to the digests.

What sort of questions are asked, and what sort of answers are given? Let's put it this way: before the Web, the Usenet Oracle had its public home in the Usenet newsgroup rec.humor.oracle. This is not a place to ask about minutae of Oracle RDBMS queries. Nor is it a place to ask about the quantity of lumber that a groundhog could toss if groundhogs could toss lumber. They've heard that one before, with various wordings. Repeatedly. This is a place for original humor - and, with 30 years of questions and answers, that's asking a lot.

Of course, with three decades of humor under its belt, the Oracle has a few running gags. ...


Tropes used in The Internet Oracle include: