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Start with Google.
If that doesn't help try here: Ask a question[^] - but two things:
1) Explain exactly what you have tried, and where you are stuck. The more accurate you are the better the response.
2) Pay attention to what you are doing in future: not bothering to look at instructions which tell you what not to do is a good way to annoy people. Annoyed people do not help as much as happy people...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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A maths question for you:
Susan has 18 Snickers bars.
She eats 4.
She trades 8 for 10 Mars Bars.
She sells six of them, and buys 3 Big Macs.
Why is she wearing lycra? Why?
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Many years and pounds ago, I rode bicycles. There was one guy who wore spandex that almost looked like fishnet it was stretched so tight.
Mongo: Mongo only pawn... in game of life.
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common core math
Charlie Gilley
<italic>Stuck in a dysfunctional matrix from which I must escape...
"Where liberty dwells, there is my country." B. Franklin, 1783
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
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LOL!
What do you get when you cross a joke with a rhetorical question?
The metaphorical solid rear-end expulsions have impacted the metaphorical motorized bladed rotating air movement mechanism.
Do questions with multiple question marks annoy you???
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Because these days it is not even strange for a sports shop to have an escalator
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The Dick's Sporting Goods store at my local mall has an escalator. When the store was originally built, there was a climbing wall between the up and down escalators.
Software Zen: delete this;
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OriginalGriff wrote: Why is she wearing lycra?
Because after 4 Snickers bars, who knows how many Mars bars, and 3 big macs, she needs something that stretches to fit her fat arse into?
Marc
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Beacuse she is 24 years old.
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Hi All
<< rant mode >> My parents are moving again and muggins has to set up the WiFi, Sky Box and other things again. Called BT (now there are BT Open Reach ports all about the new place!) 'umm no the earlest you can be connected is Jan the 4th, there are no BT lines laid there, would you like to cut your mobile bill'. There are hard lines laid to the place, is it worth phoning again on Monday to see if it's still the 4th or not, the guy sounded like a mobile sales man to me! << /rant mode >>(Possibly Saturday cover not really on that desk)...
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Call Sky's Moving Home Service. They have a much better grasp on what's what than BT I've found in the past. They can arrange reconnection directly too especially if you're already using SkyTalk.
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Not every supplier will take this long, even when they also use OpenReach.
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If you think about it, that's not as bad as it sounds: it's only about 1 1/2 working weeks if you think about the extended Christmas break and associated bank holidays.
Not that I'm used to defending BT - generally they are useless - but in this case it's reasonable(ish).
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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What extended break? Christmas Day and New Year's Day are Fridays, the Bank Holiday will be on the following Mondays. For services like BT there will be full working Tuesday through Thursday of both weeks.
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Which is only 3/5ths of the usual service - and a lot of people save annual leave to get a eleven day break for the cost of three days off!
[edit]
And I'm yet to be convinced that BT have ever offered a "full working service"
[/edit]
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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OriginalGriff wrote: And I'm yet to be convinced that BT have ever offered a "full working service"
Well yeah. That's why I suggest bypassing them altogether as I have for the last half dozen moves.
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Hmm matter of interest do you have a BT line or Sky?
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Line rental and telephone service go to Sky but all land line hardware is BT Open Reach's responsibility ultimately. When a repair was necessary here to a broken socket it was Open Reach who had to be summoned by Sky.
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Why does Google have so many open proxies, they are elite, https, and just sitting there flapping in the breeze?
Rage against the narrative.
"To Build a Fire" - A dystopian novel about project management, and I am the dog.
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To better can spy on you my dear.
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Honey pots did occur to me, no profit in it though.
Rage against the narrative.
"To Build a Fire" - A dystopian novel about project management, and I am the dog.
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The obvious 'answer' is "why not?"
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The cost in bandwidth, the reason-whats the profit reason? There are too many of them to be a security oversite.
Rage against the narrative.
"To Build a Fire" - A dystopian novel about project management, and I am the dog.
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Despite the EU's slippery grasp on reality not everything Google does is for profit (shouldn't really have to point that out when the whole thing is predicated on cost free services to users but ...). They already have servers dispersed across the world to provide localised services and back-up for each other. Why not use them to provide a little extra service too? It certainly makes more sense than having a small number constantly over-subscribed surely?
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