Local Word Flu
Apr. 14th, 2010 10:39 amA big buzzword these days in my local social circles is "decrufting." I'd never heard the word before last year, and now I see and hear it constantly. It means to dispose of clutter in your house, office, etc. But it's not in any dictionary I can find (except Urban Dictionary, which doesn't make it a word) so I don't know where it came from.
Prior to this, the epidemic buzz phrase was "signal boost," which is still big (it means to spread the word on behalf of someone else). In both cases, once I'd heard it 50,000 times within a short period I started to recoil from it. I don't use either, myself. I "spread the word" or I "throw shit out."
Wikipedia doesn't have an article for "decrufting," but it has this for the noun "cruft:"
Cruft (occasionally kruft) is computing jargon for "code, data, or software of poor quality".[1] The term may also refer to debris that accumulates on computer equipment. It has been generalized to mean any accumulation of obsolete, redundant, irrelevant, or unnecessary information, especially code. An alternative usage is becoming more generalized to refer to any unneeded or unwanted computer hardware or obsolete equipment.[2]
Prior to this, the epidemic buzz phrase was "signal boost," which is still big (it means to spread the word on behalf of someone else). In both cases, once I'd heard it 50,000 times within a short period I started to recoil from it. I don't use either, myself. I "spread the word" or I "throw shit out."
Wikipedia doesn't have an article for "decrufting," but it has this for the noun "cruft:"
Cruft (occasionally kruft) is computing jargon for "code, data, or software of poor quality".[1] The term may also refer to debris that accumulates on computer equipment. It has been generalized to mean any accumulation of obsolete, redundant, irrelevant, or unnecessary information, especially code. An alternative usage is becoming more generalized to refer to any unneeded or unwanted computer hardware or obsolete equipment.[2]