In addition to whatever other insanity flourishes at Defcon each year, the last eight years have been witness to the amazing and ridiculous contest known as CoffeeWars. This single ludicrous event is really two contests. The first, and most important, is the attempt to select the finest coffee from all of hacker culture. The second is the loopy part: to find the upper limit on how much coffee the staff can drink. Every year, we succeed at the first task. Every year, we fail at the second. Here is a useful list of key factors contributing to the outbreak of coffee wars throughout history: 1 - because the Kona/JBM debate had to be settled 2 - because once was not enough 3 - because we went a little crazy 4 - because people responded to our brand of crazy 5 - because it is now an institution 6 - because we're actually getting good at running it 7 - because each year the competition gets more intense 8 - because of popular demand 9 - because you haven't yet had a chance to test your beans What's that, you say? You only recall eight coffee wars? And the list mentions a ninth? Very attentive of you, dear reader. The ninth coffee war will take place exactly when you would expect: on Friday, 8 Aug 2008, at the Riviera, at the opening of the con. The rules remain as few and as simple as we can manage: A. Whole coffee beans only: nothing ground, powdered, aerosolized, crystallized, liquified, etc. Just beans. If you submit something other than beans, it won't count as an entry. B. Unflavored beans only: we are trying to evaluate coffee, not somebody's science experiment. If you submit flavored coffee (and this includes stuff with chickory or for that matter any non-coffee ingredient), it won't' count as an entry. C. No decaf. Seriously, submitting decaf to Coffee Wars is like entering your Ford Granada* in the Indy 500-- it might technically be a car, and maybe it can actually complete a 500-mile distance, but it detracts from the whole experience for everyone. D. Time is critical. A coffee war lasts only a couple of hours, and it turns out there are limits on the intake capacity of the judges. If you wish to enter, you need to get your coffee to us at or before the opening of the contest area. If you want to get your coffee back, you need to make a plan for this when you submit it-- otherwise it will become part of the CoffeeWars legacy. [secret message to G Mark: it was agonizing having to turn away your entry last year solely because of timing] E. Volume is also important. We need to have enough coffee beans to brew two pots, plus have some beans left to pass around for inspection and smelling. 1/2 lb is a good amount; less than 1/4 lb is probably not enough. If your coffee is really, really good, you probably should submit as much as possible... [secret message to G Mark: come on man, make with the Kona!] Hey, look! In the Defcon contest area! It's CoffeeWars! Grab your glocks and call the cops. Wait, no. That's what you're supposed to do when you see Tupac. When you see CoffeeWars, you are supposed to submit your best coffee beans for judgment, in the hope that you will be awarded a much-coveted prize, plus 3.5 seconds of loving from the crowd at the closing ceremony. What do you say? Is your coffee good enough to endure the blazing crucible of CoffeeWars 9? Will you join the previous eight winners in glory? Only one way to find out, friend. So mobilize your beans and enter. --Foofus. * If you have actually driven a Ford Granada, well, you know what we mean. _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.grok.org.uk/full-disclosure-charter.html Hosted and sponsored by Secunia - http://secunia.com/