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I resemble that remark!
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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Depends, did you read the part about being fit?
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Jörgen Andersson wrote: Depends, did you read the part about being fit?
Darn, I knew there was a catch.
Once you lose your pride the rest is easy.
The report of my death was an exaggeration - Mark Twain
Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
I'm on-line therefore I am.
JimmyRopes
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There is always a catch.
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Jörgen Andersson wrote: did you read the part about being fit?
I'm to sexy for my shirt, to sexy for my clothes.
I workout.
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Jörgen Andersson wrote: did you read the part about being fit?
How many more vowels do you want!
"The whole idea that carbon dioxide is the main cause of the recent global warming is based on a guess that was proved false by empirical evidence during the 1990s." climate-models-go-cold
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If it weren't for the fat absorbing toxins in the "junk" food we eat, most of us would be dead quickly.
Of course the real answer is to not eat the junk food to begin with.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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You are obsessed with junk food, but tell me, what is wrong with a cheese burger if it is made from non US beef, organic veg and non US bread and non US cheese?
"The whole idea that carbon dioxide is the main cause of the recent global warming is based on a guess that was proved false by empirical evidence during the 1990s." climate-models-go-cold
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Previously, in adventures in bilious vocabulary, I posted about the delightful Yiddish word "Farpotshket" which I thought very appropriate for code (that someone else wrote, naturally) which has been totally screwed up by repeated attempts to fix it: [^].
Today's OED's word-of-the-day e-mail brought me to a virtual Broca's-Area-gasm: "Metagrobolize," meaning: to "puzzle, mystify, confound," with a rarer secondary meaning of "to puzzle-out."
Methinks this is a great word to describe the process of making oneself indispensable to an employer by creating code that only you can understand, and maintain, and its awesome, inscrutable, results.
“I'm an artist: it's self evident that word implies looking for something all the time without ever finding it in full. It is the opposite of saying : ‘I know all about it. I've already found it.’
As far as I'm concerned, the word means: ‘I am looking. I am hunting for it. I am deeply involved.’” Vincent Van Gogh
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This is phenakism!
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BillWoodruff wrote: Methinks this is a great word to describe the process of making oneself indispensable to an employer by creating code that only you can understand, and maintain, and its awesome, inscrutable, results My product code is the very picture of scrutability. While complex (I do UI's in C#/WPF), I try to keep in mind the poor mortal who will inherit my pigeon guano should I be run over by a London bus.
In my role as the DSJB(*), however, it's anything goes. Batch files, scripts, and little command-line tools of all sorts abound. Our automated build process is an unholy amalgamation of a Windows application, several batch files, several tool chains, and a VBScript that ties the whole thing together. I spawn SkyNet as a subprocess to ensure that the whole mess doesn't run too long and bring about the Singularity.
(*) DSJB: Departmental Sh't-Job Boy
Software Zen: delete this;
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Gary R. Wheeler wrote: My product code is the very picture of scrutability. While complex (I do UI's in C#/WPF), I try to keep in mind the poor mortal who will inherit my pigeon guano should I be run over by a London bus. Such aberrations from the sacred duty of a programmer to put implementing lifetime-employment-insurance first at all times can usually be explained by the programmer being either a founder (in the cash-starved start-up phase of the company), or a stockholder laboring under the delusion the stock will, in future, have more than fantasy value.
Bill
“I'm an artist: it's self evident that word implies looking for something all the time without ever finding it in full. It is the opposite of saying : ‘I know all about it. I've already found it.’
As far as I'm concerned, the word means: ‘I am looking. I am hunting for it. I am deeply involved.’” Vincent Van Gogh
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If you don't want your downloads to be stored for you in Workspace just go to your Settings, Articles, and turn off the option. Soren Madsen
"When you don't know what you're doing it's best to do it quickly" - Jase #DuckDynasty
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Oh! I was searching inside the workspaces themselves. I assumed the settings there applied to my (nonexistant) articles. Thanks.
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Thank you
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Whilst Googling for a Crystal Reports solution this afternoon, I clicked a link that exploded...started spawning new browser instances faster than I could close them! Actually, closing them seemed to be causing more harm than good, in a matter of seconds, resources were low enough that task manager seemed to take an eternity to load...long enough that I considered the only option would be a hard shutdown. Bummer!
The workstation did come back, so far the only damage was a SQL database that went into Suspect mode. Thank goodness it could be restored easily. As I was surveying the damage, and looking for anything suspicious, my mobile phone rang, the call displaying as a 'Private Call'. I answer and an automated voice informs me that my debit card has been suspended and gives the option to re-activate the account. They never identified the name of the bank, never used my name, and never referenced an 'account ending in XXXX'. I chose option 'hangup'. I am sure it was a scam, but could it be connected to the browser mishap earlier? I did check my accounts, and had no messages or alerts.
BTW, the exploding behavior happened on an article from businessintelligence.ittoolbox.com using IE 11. I won't say for sure this website and/or browser is to blame until I can replicate it in a VM. Weird huh?
I checked the website (it still showed up in history) above in a VM and it didn't explode.
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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When something like that happens the first thing to do is disconnet from the network.
It is easy for me just to yank a cable rather than trying to navigate to disable the network card.
If you had your cell phone number some where on the system it is possible that what ever that thing was doing got ahold of that number. along with other info.
You may be able to do a Wireshark trace while doing it in the vm to see whaere the flurry of activity is going and possibly see what is going.
You may also run process monitor.
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Restore from enterprise base image.
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Didn't have to go that far! It must have just been something like a buggy menuribbon or something...it's fixed now!
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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