"that “sounds like a respiratory disease”."
or
"that “sounds like a respiratory disease with the last letter wrong ”. or "that “sounds like a respiratory cisease”. Oh good grief !
We only break out Logowatch for special occasions, and this one surely counts: Cisco has decided that its OpenStack Private Cloud is a tad dull, uses too many words and, worst of all, gave rise to jokes. As of now, The Borg wants users to kindly remember that the correct name for Cisco OpenStack Private Cloud is "Cisco MetaPod …
@ Pascal Monett; To be fair, the only people who'll get these jokes in the first place are twenty-something Pokemon obsessives and the aforementioned japanophiles.
And we all know that if Cisco waste any more time on "weeaboos", they'll be bankrupt by the end of the month! ;-)
The only thing I know about Pokemon is that you had to catch them all. I didn't catch any, nor did I even look around for some.
With this renaming, I think Cisco may just have given enough impetus to create a whole new crowd of MetaPodians exchanging entirely new, non-Pokemon related jokes. And maybe some network-related horror stories as well.
Time will tell.
@ Pascal Monett; That's pretty much the boat I'm in- I was already in my twenties by the time it came out (i.e. at least twice the age of the target audience) and knew the vague concept, but that was about it. If Cisco had called their thing the Pikachu or (possibly) Squirtle, even I might have got the reference and thought it silly, but "Metapod"? Nope.
That said, I've since come across enough on the web to know that Pokemon is something some people are really obsessive about and seems to have held its popularity better than other toy fads of the 80s and 90s. (I mean, who cares about Tamagotchi nowadays except as a childhood memory for twentysomething millennials?)
Pokemon was a fun little RPG. Play Crystal Edition on an emulator or something.
As for Metapod, if you evolved from a Caterpie you would at least have Tackle, so it's not the most useless Pokemon. That distinction goes to Magikarp, which can only Splash (doing nothing) until it evolves into Gyarados.
Sounds about right- I seem to remember the Pokemon fad started circa the late 90s. Given that it was aimed at kids (let's say under 13 at most), most of the earliest fans are still likely to be under 30.
Though I suspect most under 30s in the general population probably still wouldn't get the reference, I'm also guessing that the proportion of Pokemon fans in the computer industry is probably higher than average. :-/