Something Random

ddrueding

Fixture
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All of my recent attempts to unsubscribe have eventually worked. Many say it may take a month because they outsource their messaging services.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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I am omnipresent
All of my recent attempts to unsubscribe have eventually worked.

I signed up for a random site because it was the only way to complain about some commercial software one of my customers uses. Now I get spam from every forum hosted on that site. And it's all in Italian. And some of it doesn't have unsubscribe links.

That's just about the only spam that ever makes it through my filters.
 

Will Rickards

Storage Is My Life
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Jan 23, 2002
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Gmail has this new labs feature for smart filters. It adds a bulk filter and a notification filter and a forum filter. You can change what the filter does. They seem to learn. The bulk filter cut out all the ad type mail I receive that isn't straight spam and auto archives it.
 

ddrueding

Fixture
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Why did Dell think it was a good idea to sell a computer with a 60GB C drive and a 480GB D drive? Did they think their users would figure this out on their own? Now I have a machine with so many backlogged updates that I can't clear the space fast enough.
 

ddrueding

Fixture
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If Win7, the built-in partition expansion works well (so long as you back up and delete the neighboring partition).

It was Win7, but no partition expansion was allowed, even after deleting the "data" partition. Even after taking that drive and moving it to another machine that was also Win7. Ended up using Partition Magic.
 

sdbardwick

Storage is cool
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It was Win7, but no partition expansion was allowed, even after deleting the "data" partition. Even after taking that drive and moving it to another machine that was also Win7. Ended up using Partition Magic.
Bummer. What a PITA. I didn't have expansion fail in approx 80 tries; but that was on essentially new installs (IT 'consultant' used 45GB partition image to set up new computers, then disappeared* - I did the final config on the DL for free as a favor to a panicked friend).

*I mean disappeared off the face of the earth; no contact, never sought final payment -but did cash first installment check.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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You can only expand volumes on Dynamic Disks. That option isn't available standard partitions on Basic disks. The Windows installer creates the C: drive as a basic disk with the C: drive and System partition as standard partitions.

New random thing: I got a graduation announcement for my co-worker's youngest daughter today. I remember her as a 10 year old girl and I probably haven't seen her since. Her graduation card features skintight clothes and a classic cheesecake pose. I am finally old enough to be troubled by the fact that someone I saw grow up is old enough that I now wish to ogle.
 

sdbardwick

Storage is cool
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North San Diego County
You can only expand volumes on Dynamic Disks. That option isn't available standard partitions on Basic disks. The Windows installer creates the C: drive as a basic disk with the C: drive and System partition as standard partitions.

The basic disk I just expanded would beg to differ. You can expand basic disks on the same physical drive, subject to restrictions.
You can add more space to existing primary partitions and logical drives by extending them into adjacent, contiguous unallocated space on the same disk. To extend a basic volume, it must be formatted with the NTFS file system.
Quote from here.
 
Last edited:

sdbardwick

Storage is cool
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Edit time expired:
Of course, I meant expanding a partition on a basic disk. I expanded the C: partition on a basic disk from 60GB to 100GB just before replying to ddrueding; I couldn't remember if my rescue mission involved dynamic or basic disks, so I made sure before posting.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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Never mind. I'm thinking of dynamic partition resize, the situation where all the volume's space is filled up, not simple expanding into empty space.
 

ddrueding

Fixture
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I was having lunch in the place referenced in the OP of this thread, minding my own business, when the alcohol vendor arrived with "samples". My wife had to come by and pick me up when she got off work. It wasn't the 6 bottles of wine spread between the two owners and myself, it was the bottle of Jack Daniels Honey.

I know this is going to suck tomorrow.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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Not drinking in the first place has served me well over the years.

One of the important things about losing weight has just been telling myself that sugary stuff, sweet stuff and the usual carb suspects are poison. I still eat bread and rice and the occasional tortilla in reasonable quantities but I haven't had candy or ice cream or potato chips in an entire year.

I have no idea how well that translates to booze though.
 

ddrueding

Fixture
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The biggest thing to cut down on is booze. Even worst than sugary stuff; more calories and less nutrition.

The only advantage is that if you are cutting down on food, and are a little hungry, you need far less booze to achieve the desired effect.

The corollary to that is that if you consume a fixed amount of booze (such as that necessary to properly evaluate a bunch of wines and a new spirit), you will suffer substantially more.
 

Buck

Storage? I am Storage!
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Blurry.
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ddrueding said:
Jack Daniels Honey. I know this is going to suck tomorrow.

Nasty! Gonna suck tomorrow? I'd get a headache within minutes - no thanks.


Mercutio said:
One of the important things about losing weight...
Merc, it's great to know your change in food habits is working out well. In my opinion, losing the weight simply makes one feel better. For me, that translates not only in feeling better physically, but also mentally and emotionally. Seriously Merc, good for you.
 

jtr1962

Storage? I am Storage!
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Jan 25, 2002
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Flushing, New York
Haven't in a decade. Just won't. For some reason it seems less appealing than paying the price of admission for the show I got.
I literally don't even remember the last time I puked, that's how long it's been. And I don't remember the exact date that I last fell off my bike for any reason at all except that it was before 9/11. Yep, going on at least 10 years with no "hit the ground" bike accidents whatsoever. Two weeks ago I hit a major pothole at ~22 mph, probably 9-10 inches deep, the GPS bracket broke from the shock, GPS went flying(it survived with minor scratches), but I didn't go down. That's the closest I've come to falling in ages. Since a picture is worth a thousand words, here's my battle-scarred GPS:

GPS_Scatched.jpg


GPS log of the pothole event, with the time stopped due to the pothole circled in red:

GPS_Log_Pothole.gif


The good that came out of it was I made a new, indestructible bracket from a solid piece of aluminum:

GPS_Aluminum_Bracket_5.jpg


Finished bracket mounted:

GPS_Aluminum_Bracket_Mounted.jpg
 

jtr1962

Storage? I am Storage!
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Are you just using the GPS as a speedometer? What do you need that for on a bike?
Actually, the GPS is pretty sucky as a speedometer which is why I also have a bike computer. The speed readings bounce around by about 1 mph even if you maintain a steady speed. I'm mainly using the GPS to record my rides. I'm interested, for example, in my average speeds over the same roads since to a first approximation that tells me if I'm doing a decent workout. And I just like to keep a record of exactly where I've ridden for posterity. With the GPS, I can just pay attention to traffic, then look at the data when I get home. The old way I did it might be to make a mental note of the time and odometer reading when I started and stopped on given segments of my ride. Obviously hard to keep track of much and also pay attention to NYC potholes at the same time. Bottom line-the GPS reduces my mental workload, and allows me to devote my full attention to keeping the bike on the road (which is no easy task on NYC streets). I only occasionally glance at it to see my average speeds (bike computers have that too, but the GPS is much easier to read).

No, the GPS doesn't show HR or watts output. It's a basic Legend HCx model. I do have a Sigma BC 1909 which I use occasionally for HR. And I'm using a Schwinn 240 in the basement for those times it's not conducive to riding outdoors. The Schwinn has both HR and watts. For a typical 1 hour workout I'll try to keep my average HR at 145 to 150 BPM. My personal best so far for 1 hour was 21.1 miles and 180 watts average power.
 

CougTek

Hairy Aussie
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Québec, Québec
When making your resume, under professional objectives, can you write "empty your pockets, fill mine"? I cited "honest" and "sincere" among my qualities and I want to be consistent.
 

Stereodude

Not really a
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Michigan
When making your resume, under professional objectives, can you write "empty your pockets, fill mine"? I cited "honest" and "sincere" among my qualities and I want to be consistent.
Only if you don't care about actually get the job you're sending your resume in for. :rofl:
 

jtr1962

Storage? I am Storage!
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Flushing, New York
Yeah, you both noticed that big drop in elevation also. :-D Kind of funny when you think about it. I should show it to the NYCDOT. I think the real reason it occurred might have to do with the sudden change in antenna orientation and possibly the shock from hitting the ground. That might have caused the quartz crystal to miss a few beats, and with GPS accurate timing is everything.

And I'm really surprised my rims came through without any dents. These are the strongest rims I've used thus far, bar none. I think the deep aero profile adds a lot of strength. If this had been the rims I used 20 years ago they would have "potato-chipped", and taken me down (happened once when I hit a pothole downhill @ 37 mph). In any case, the city actually filled the pothole a few days later. I guess someone complained. They usually never fill potholes unless they're craters. The streets incidentally are in the worst condition I ever remember them being in, not that they were anything to write home about before.
 

Bozo

Storage? I am Storage!
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Twilight Zone
Wouldn't you be able to go farther and faster if you didn't have all that extra weight on the bike? :wink:
 

jtr1962

Storage? I am Storage!
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Flushing, New York
Wouldn't you be able to go farther and faster if you didn't have all that extra weight on the bike? :wink:
Yeah, but then I wouldn't know exactly how much further or faster I'm going. :-D

Speaking of further and faster, if money were no object, I would be riding one of these.
 

Mercutio

Fatwah on Western Digital
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I don't know how to ride a bike at all and where I live now is not a healthy place to ride anyway. There's a skate park about a quarter mile from my apartment and one of the kids that hangs out there uses something that looks like a unicycle with half a skateboard attached to the back of it. You don't pedal it but push with your feet. He's quite agile with it from the little bit that I've seen.
 

time

Storage? I am Storage!
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Jan 18, 2002
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Brisbane, Oz
That Flevobike Orca looks awesome, but no price listed. I can only imagine it is one of those "if you have to ask..." things.

Very much the wrong side of $10k, based on the fact that their two-wheeler without any canopy or fancy drum brakes sells for $6K.
 
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