but it said to not get your mouse over it and if you have windows xp or 200 you could press ctrl-alt-del, go to process and kill iexplore.exe. but it's just a joke!
"Say you're hanging from a huge cliff at the top of mt. everest and a guy comes along and says he'll save you, and proceeds to throw religious pamphlets at you while simultaniously giving a sermon." - Dustin G
kris: nothing dangerous. if you get mouse pointer over text "get mouse pointer here and you'll get milion $" it opens http://www.raus.de/crashme but you see warning to not get mouse pointer over that text. c'mon its a joke and thank you so much tom f. you ruined everything.
Lol I knew what it was anyway but I still clicked on it. It was a battle between my alt+f4 hnad mvements against the machines speed. As you can see I came out victorious!
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Pete Nattress Cheesy Bits img src/uploads/sccheesegif
Registered 23/09/2002
Points 4811
8th November, 2003 at 18:28:05 -
i've deleted it, because all it's going to do is annoy people. the essence of a joke is that jokes are FUNNY.
I could accept the joke not being funny, if it was subtle.
Don't advertise, man. That's like putting a kick me sign on someones back and then standing in the middle of the hall going "HEY EVERYONE, THIS GUYS GOT A KICK ME SIGN!"
You'd look like a tool.
Show me the power child,
I'd like to say,
That I'm down on my knees today,
Gives me the butterflies,
Gives me away,
'Til I'm up on my feet again,
I'm feeling outshined.
Sounds more like a practical joke than a 'joke'. Big difference there. Practical jokes are like when you put a piece of paper saying 'Kick me' on some guy. It would be funnier if it said something creative like 'I'm not wearing underwear', but it still would be a practical joke. Get your terms right.
Either way, practical jokes are not too funny on their victims. Cept for one I saw a few months back, but lost the link. And that thing Ashman said is right too...
Disclaimer: Any sarcasm in my posts will not be mentioned as that would ruin the purpose. It is assumed that the reader is intelligent enough to tell the difference between what is sarcasm and what is not.