Voice, office, and lore? Is that a direct tap into a fan database?
Fool. Don’t you know B-4 when you see him?
Intern: “What’s the difference?”
Tech: “One is an outside connection. The others are not.”
I labeled mine as
.
Jack
OP do you live in a hotel?
No, I am not Eloise.
(Look it up, kids.)
I’d put Uhura on the voice one.
I understand you get voice calls from the voice jack, data from the data jack, do you get an office from the office jack?
Probably an intranet.
How else do you watch the reruns?
My science teacher my freshman year of high school wouldn’t let us pronounce it that way, and it stuck. So when I look at this, first I hear his voice saying, “Date-ah is a name, dat-ah is information.” Then, largely thanks to this community, it’s followed by Brent Spiner’s voice saying, “One is my name. The other is not.”
My freshman year of HS was in 93, so TNG was still on the air.
It apparently was dat-uh in the U.S. for a very long time, basically until TNG. In fact, the first time Patrick Stewart pronounced it the way we know it now, Brent Spiner asked the producers if it was pronounced the other way and he and Stewart debated it and the response from on high was, “from now on, whoever says the name first: that’s how it’s pronounced.”
Edit: Here’s him telling the story- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xeqTMTOxid8 (I got it slightly wrong, it came from Gene himself.)
This is a good way to note which of your ports are fully functional.
Noticing the little two eyes over the voice one, I think that would be a fun way to indicate if you were you were to run a POTS line over Ethernet, too. Not only would it look like a little guy with his mouth open, but it would also be a reminder that only two pins in that port are connected. (You can actually connect a phone line to a jack like that and just plug an old phone cable into the middle of the port and it will work)