“Chips – The Poet’s Well”
Potato chips; computer chips;
My tree in chips; and bison chips –
Such basics are the bread of life,
For in behind exists great might –A field of spuds exploding food;
Arrays of code bring digi-good;
Pollution’s dam stops chemical;
First Nations’ life archaical.Life flows along like rivers fast,
Across the plains, down mountains vast;
As time goes on we’re swept there too –
For some, life’s done before they’re through.For wait! I see! Assembly code!
Of “Oh’s” and “ones” – which carry load –
As higher languages we use
With twisted thought are now infused.But listen – life within the code
Reflects some mind in ways untold –
“Efficiency” impresses me
With “elegance” that’s hard to see –For one must learn a language new
If one would cross a boundary’s view;
“N-twenty-H” to worldly ways –
“A-H-Zero-Nine” from former days.A “Dollar-sign” each program ends;
“The past is gone”; “ahead attends
Each structured action we would make”,
Each step in life we’d like to take.The “G-command” – for “go” that is –
Assembles, executes, our biz;
“G” has address, just like our church,
Which in the past was really “First” –But, like Nee says, “The starting point
For every project God anoints
Has ‘Oh-One Hundred’ as address –
When that’s in God, one’s life works best”.Thanks Lord for this.
Note:
"n20h" ends all programs to prevent looping;
"O-100" - is the start point for all programs;
"G" command - compiles and exicutes all programs;
"$" - ends all programs;
"O-09" - move something along or around;
All programs must move forward, there is no going back into past code-events to pull something of use.
Assembly language, like all languages, does indeed stimulate reflection from within its structures.navigation