Quote from: Alice V on May 12, 2019, 09:24:46 AM
As I said, my problem is more linguistic. Probably you didn't get what I said due my bad explanation, sorry
We often just talking that way and usually don't call it humor but it still funny.
I think that all of the jokes were based on English puns, which someone might not get if they don't know all of the meanings of the words. In this sketch,
blackberry = kind of fruit = brand of smartphone;
juice = fruit juice = electrical power;
frozen = icy cold = 'phone or computer screen not changing or updating;
orange = kind of fruit = mobile network company;
black spots = dark patches = places with no mobile 'phone or Internet coverage;
desktop = top of desk = large personal computer that permanently stays on a desk;
mouse = small rodent = device for moving cursor and selecting objects on computer screen;
drag = move something by pulling it = use the mouse to move something on a computer screen;
I'm not sure what "drag the blackberry to the track" means. Is it something to do with trackpads, also known as touch pads? Perhaps someone else could interpret this one.
launch = set something in motion, e.g. launch a rocket into space = start or introduce a computer, 'phone or software application;
windows = panes of glass = Windows Operating System;
date = kind of fruit = calendar or diary day;
apple = kind of fruit = brand of computer;
dongle = in this context, suggestive of penis (sometimes called a dong) = usb device to e.g. connect to the Internet;
booting = kicking = starting computer;
crashed = smashed into something = computer operating system stopped working;
eggs box (sounds a bit like Xbox) = box of eggs = brand of gaming console.