Going to the bar and getting a quick drink before going home or getting back to work. 1 and dones are followed by a 2 and through, 3 and flee, or a 4 and door, etc.. Anything after 4 and door is a full on party and you were just kidding yourself about "getting a quick drink".
1. Yo where you going for lunch? You down for a 1 n done?
2. Damn these folks at work stressin me out.. I may need a 1 n done before I go home.
A very cool person who keeps on getting put in very awkward situations. Very fun to talk to :)
“Wow is that _r.1.n?”
“It is! They’re so cool”
“Ikr”
1. Gary Glitter's Magnum Opus.
2. The morale boosting theme for sports; NFL, NHL, NBA, PGA, etc....
Rock n' Roll part 1 and 2 is plays during NFL football games and in the 1996 movie Happy Gilmore.
A phrase most commonly used by the bicycling community, n+1 refers to the amount of a thing one should own, a thing which they are obsessed with and brings joy.
The correct number of bikes to own is n+1. While the minimum number of bikes one should own is three, the correct number is n+1, where n is the number of bikes currently owned.
The equation n+1 can also be used to describe pizza, beer, puppies, or even autographed baseball cards.
John B: "I'm really considering buying a road bike to go a bit faster and have in addition to my townie and mountain bike, but don't know if that would be too many bikes."
Nate C: "N+1 my friend, go buy that bike!"
Whereas a modern web software application has separate layers for presentation (user interface), business logic, and storage etc. (because modular construction is easier to build and debug) it is usually called an "n-tier architecture", where n represents the number of modules or layers. It is much more secure and robust than the "old way" (1-tier), where one machine was the web server, file server, database, and firewall. A program which has illogical or insufficient rules (i.e. absence of business logic) can be termed "(n-1) tier", as a crucial part (usually the part that makes the software smart or helpful) has obviously been omitted by scatterbrained developers, detached managers, clueless requirements analysts, dumb pilot members, etc.
Employee A: Did you submit your travel costs yet?
Employee B: No, our stupid online expense system kept giving me a cryptic error.
Employee A: Yup, that EOM app is an (n-1) tier system...
Boss: I need you to fix your time charges for last week. You entered 45 hours instead of 4.5 hours on Wednesday.
Subject: Must've been a fat-finger. Too bad our accounting system can't catch that obvious error. It's just another (n-1) tier waste of code.
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