资料来源 : Free On-Line Dictionary of Computing
evil and rude
Both {evil} and {rude}, but with the additional connotation
that the rudeness was due to malice rather than incompetence.
Thus, for example: {Microsoft}'s {Windows NT} is evil because
it's a competent implementation of a bad design; it's rude
because it's gratuitously incompatible with {Unix} in places
where compatibility would have been as easy and effective to
do; but it's evil and rude because the incompatibilities are
apparently there not to fix design bugs in {Unix} but rather
to lock hapless customers and developers into the {Microsoft}
way. Hackish evil and rude is close to the mainstream sense
of "evil".
[{Jargon File}]
(1994-12-12)