Toaster Oven Reviews
What if toasters had Operating Systems? Would you skip breakfast more often? This is for everyone who ever wondered why you had to click on start to shut down a windows machine. I tried to track down the author of this but as of now I don’t know who to credit for this. If you wrote this let me know.
a) Windows toaster:
The windows toaster looks nice, but sometimes it just won’t make toast, it either comes out burnt or raw, or it stops half way through. Also, you have to unplug the toaster, plug it back in again, and wait 5 minutes each time you want to try and make some toast. For every loaf of bread you buy, you are forced to buy a license for a new toaster to go with it, and you will get sued if you let someone else have some of your toast.
b) MAC toaster:
The MAC toaster has no settings or controls and it looks very stylish, but will only accept proprietary size bread which can only be bought from Apple main dealers at 10 times the price of regular bread. If it breaks you will have to ship it to a licensed repair shop for service. The toast is fine except that the size of the bread is so odd, you can’t actually eat the toast it produces, although it does look good.
c) Linux toaster:
The linux toaster looks awful, it has wires crimped together hanging out of it, and pieces grafted from other toasters. The first time you make toast with it it burns it, the next time its raw, but after you read the man pages and invoke the command line, toast -verbose -breadsize 50132 -eject -o z3321 > /dev/toast | more, then it makes perfect toast forever and never breaks.
I had to laugh when reading this post. None the less, it is a great way of looking at the major operating systems that are currently out. Definitely kudos goes to for coming up with this interpretation.
great Toaster Oven Reviews buddy. i’m ubuntusl. thanks.