adj.
Not working; crashed (said of a computer). --pp.
Example Citations:
When a web server is sucking mud what is it doing? ... It is malfunctioning. The term is used in the oil exploration industry to describe a malfunctioning pump.
— Darrell Ince, "Online," The Guardian (London, England), January 3, 2002
Telecommuters may not always be available when someone at the corporate headquarters needs them. Particularly in the case of remote IT workers, any slowdown or problem will need fixing quickly.
For example, if your multimillion-dollar Web server is sucking mud, the remote administrator has to be notified of the problem immediately-it can't wait until he or she happens to read e-mail.
— Michael J. Demaria, "Telecommuniting: Keeping data safe and secure," Network Computing, November 26, 2001
Earliest Citation:
sucking mud [Applied Data Research] /adj./
(also `pumping mud') Crashed or wedged. Usually said of a machine that provides some service to a network, such as a file server. This Dallas regionalism derives from the East Texas oilfield lament, "Shut 'er down, Ma, she's a-suckin' mud". Often used as a query. "We are going to reconfigure the network, are you ready to suck mud?"
— Eric Raymond ed., "The New Hacker's Dictionary," MIT Press, September, 1991
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New words. 2013.