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About an hour north of seattle, yeah. I was born there when the peanut farmer was president of the US. I'm only old to children.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Seattle in the 1960s was a great place. Always enjoyed a bit of shore leave there, and sneaking into The Blue Banjo, for beer and music (under 21 at the time).
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No it is helpful. Reduces my confusion. thank you.
Good Systema
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Setting up OneDrive on your computer is a straightforward process. Here's how:
1. Open Start.
2. Search OneDrive and click the top result to open the app.
3. Confirm your Microsoft account address.
4. Click the Sign in button.
5. Confirm your account password.
6. Click the Sign-in button.
7. (Optional) Click the Change location option if you want to specify a different path for the folder. 8. (Usually, the default location is preferred.)
9. Click the Next button.
10. (Optional) Clear the Desktop, Documents, and Pictures options.
11. Click the Skip button (or Continue button).
12. Click the Not now button.
13. Click the Next button.
14. Continue with the on-screen directions for a quick tour or click the Close (X) button.
After you complete the steps, you can start uploading files to OneDrive.
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I hate getting "This message has been flagged as potential spam and is awaiting moderation"
Why do I get this when I answer to a msg?
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Because you only have 12 posts, so the site still treats you like a potential spammer. CP gets lots of it, so have patience and keep posting good stuff!
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There is an automated system which monitors every post before it appears, and if it decides it may be spam (or you have a black mark against you already) your message will be passed to a moderation queue for a human to review. If the human decides to let it through, the system learns from that and treats similar messages and users less "spammishly". If it's blocked, the the system learns from that as well and will apply "black marks" to the user as appropriate.
The system works well - we had floods of spam from time to time and they have been either mitigated or eliminated by this. I know it's a PITA - I've had to moderate my own messages in the past because the system got a bit over-zealous - but it's a necessary evil in a world where a site with nearly 15,000,000 active members is a spam target.
Try to live with it, it generally doesn't last long and we do try to release messages as fast as we can - but we are all volunteers so we do have other things to do from time to time!
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Can I just add to this that codeproject is usually right on top of clearing their moderated items so if something gets flagged my experience is it doesn't take horribly long for it to get checked, nor does it disappear forever once flagged like it does on a lot of sites. Someone will get to it eventually. I like that about this place.
Real programmers use butterflies
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As I've never posted spam here before and I've been using my account for years, I still find it dumb that CodeProject is just assuming my rare but sincere new posts are spam. It's a weird flex, when at least a little AI could be applied to save the human moderators some effort.
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just integrated its diff/blame/log feature, and I amazed that it is so convenient to use TortoiseSVN inside Visual Studio. before I just used regular way...
diligent hands rule....
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not using git in 2020?
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I still use TortoiseSVN for our legacy SVN repository and TortoiseGIT for our new repositories.
One of my colleagues however claims:
Quote: I don't need no turtle
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We use git via visual studio 2019 now and devops.
I have never tried TortoiseGIT. Used to use TortoiseSVN back in 2012.
We migrated everything over to DevOps and Git repos, last year.
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devops is a service provider or a concept(DevOps)?
diligent hands rule....
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Now available: Azure DevOps Server 2019 | Azure Blog and Updates | Microsoft Azure[^]
and this integrates very nicely with VS 2019 and Git. Git is used internally in VS, so that you technically can do almost all of your Git commands through an easy to use GUI in VS, no command line stuff....unless you want to.
You can also point VS Git source control to another provider such as MS GitHub, etc. You don't have to use DevOps as your source control provider/server.
fyi - azure dev ops used to be TFS.
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your link is great. I will take a look..
diligent hands rule....
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Check my signature, released just last week!
Azure DevOps is basically a tool by Microsoft that enables you to practice DevOps (the development method).
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thanks for the free books
diligent hands rule....
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We've used both, and now just use Git in VS2019.
The "everyone has a copy of everything" mentality of Git has saved us a few times.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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I used a paid SVN service long time ago, and TortoiseSVN works very well since then...
diligent hands rule....
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git and svn are different configuration management tools, git is not a "better" version of SVN.
git uses a decentralized approach which is an overkill in most small team use-cases.
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Used this in a job some years ago. I wish I could remember specific details, but I read at the time that there were issues in a Windows environment depending on something or other (and that's the condition I can't remember, sorry!).
However, one evening, I've been running the project I was working on and doing tests. Next morning it won't build. I found 40+ files that had all changed in the space of one second, when I had been at home.
Not saying it was anything to do with T-SVN - could have been an issues with the company's automated backup process, but something BAD happened!
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And I've just found a way that I can lose it, at least in Outlook.
Outlook is a special case for me: it has half a monitor dedicated to it, because it's always there. always running, and - pretty much - always busy ...
But the Ribbon takes up a big chunk of space, and since the things I use most often aren't associated with "normal" keys I end up with the damn ribbon blocking my screen most of the time.
Except on my Surface, where there is a small, neat set of keys that do much of what I want: Toggle "Read" status, reply, delete, flag ... which isn't on my desktop.
And I just worked out it's "Touch mode" which enables it. So I can hide the stupid Ribbon, and just remember "F9 is refresh, not F5" and gain a good chunk of space back!
(If you want to try it, click the "Customise Quick Access Toolbar" in the top right, and enable the "Touch / Mouse Mode" button. In Touch mode, it's there, in Mouse mode, it's not).
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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In Word you can unpin it so it only appears when you click a top level menu item (something I just learned).
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