Christopher Edward "Chris" Hansen (born March 26, 1959) is a United States television infotainment personality. He is well known for his work on Dateline NBC, in particular the former segment known as To Catch a Predator, which revolved around catching potential Internet sex predators using a sting operation.
Career
Chris Hansen became a reporter for Lansing NBC affiliate WILX in 1981 during his senior year at Michigan State University.
Dateline NBC
Hansen's notable work for Dateline includes coverage of the Columbine massacre, the Oklahoma City terrorist attack, the Unabomber and th...
@coredump If so, what does it take to be a Latin lover? Please don't tell me I need to come from a country where a Latin based language is spoken. All I've got going for me is this whole Dutch/Indonesian thing.
@Holocryptic Used Just switched namecheap from my DNS provider to my own nameserver, but apparently namecheap is still holding onto some records, because in spite of moving from them, the www subdomain hits their parking servers, not my own server. base domain is fine.
I just logged into the wordpress account on the domain in question. As I'm navigating my WP control panel, it will suddenly give my an IIS error because whatever server it's being redirected to is running IIS.
@drpcken you probably have one component that's blocking the updates. It sounds similar to something I had with my web filter. I had HTTPS/SSL filtering set to "medium", and it blocked Windows activation. I set it to "low" and it went through fine. Start picking it apart and see what's causing it. And with that nugget, I'm off to bed.
Method 1 -- The Slow Way Slowly decrease the TTL record over time such that you're in the neighborhood of 1 minute just before the cut over. Make the switch, and set it back.
Method 2 -- Fuck The Slow Way Set your TTL at 5 minutes or less. Now wait until your original timeout expires. Make the switch and set it back to something big.
Method 3 -- The Stupid Way Make your switch. Now watch as everything is screwed up for the duration of your original TTL.
hmm... the issue is that he works for accenture, I worked for them for a decade when they were andersen consulting and lots of the guys I joined with are now quite senior so I have a degree of...concern about the situation but unfortunately the project he's working on isn't a UK-owned one so my mates don't actually care too much and think it's funny that I'm being stalked by him
I use a lot of indian subcontractors and they have a culture of just putting everything they've heard of and even vaguely understand the basics of on their CVs, basically it's the CV with the most 'stuff' on it that generally gets the job over there. So when they come to the west and we say it talks about SANs we just assume that they know enough, I have to admit this took me 3-4 months to figure out and it's lesson I'm glad I learned, never trust their CVs, only their demonstrable knowledge
just a culture thing though, nothing in their intent
well I don't have a lot of choice really, I could have maybe 20-30 UK staff or 10 UK and 100 indians, and we need the man-power, just means you pay a bit more attention to recruiting
That happens BAD with us. Everyone claims to be an awesome network admin because they're a good sysadmin. I'm not sure why that particular model, but it's what's most prevalent around here (and it's hard to tell the diff before it's too late because the .mil likes to mix jobs).
i looked around and found a place offering £120 off the price my current insurer quoted, but even this new place's charge is a fair increase over what i was paying before.
@RobertMoir Redo the quote process with the same parameters and then take into a local office and make them explain to you why there's such a big difference.
its funny, I used to argue like I was in an middle eastern bazaar over contracts at work for as long as I remember, quite happily but never thought to apply it to home and i really shoulda done it sooner
@Iain that helps, I don't think brits are geared up to haggling as a rule, it involves talking about money and we're embarassed to do that
@Iain @RobertMoir Wow. I have what's classified as a sports car in the US with full coverage. When I was 19 it was almost 350USD and now it's down to $180 USD. I had a wreck when I was 16, so that shot up my costs.
When I lived in London I had an Impreza and was in my early 30's and had 9 points - insurance was silly, now I'm not far off 42, live in dorset, no points and drive a diesel 4x4 my insurance is about £250/pa
@TomOConnor I actually raced a modified Elise for 3 races back in about 98, sponsored by Nortel Networks in fact who were a key sponsor of this thing called the Elise Motorsport Challenge - came second to last in 2 and third from last in 1 :)
I did a lot of overtime when we moved the college to a new campus and worked tonnes of weekend and nights... earned a lot of overtime but spent most of it on house renovation, new tumbledrier, microwave, etc... so i got the xbox to make sure i got something fun out of giving up my time
it was a modified version with a centre seat, looked more like an exige but was actually more like an elise underneath - spent loads of time out in hethel, got to rag the nuts off just about every lotus they made at the time, including that one that was like a plastic bath
well normally we get time off in lieu too, but this wasn't a normal situation - we'd have earned something like 2 months time off in the 3 months we did the move and that would screw their staffing levels
I have been given the responsibility to manage a team of 4 system admins. They are managing 70+ servers. They don't yet have written processes/procedures/practices. I don't much about system administration. Is there a standard which we can follow to standardize our work or choose best practices?
i think methodologies can help where appropriate, adapt and adopt as needed just as iain says, but when people try and force it into an environment where it doesn't fit then chaos ensues
doesn't matter if you're talking about itil, agile or anything else
@TomOConnor the platform I've just delivered uses software from two companies, one does 90-releases, the other 2-3 per week - talk about a hard time dealing with them, thankfully I've handed it over so it's someone else's problem
I have a such a girlie bike, one of these combo jobs, may as well have a whicker basket with a kitten at the front, nice for following the coast though
I have no plans to go up Church street - I'll be coming up Cowleigh bank from by Knights Cider to get onto the A449. What's scarey about Jubilee Drive from your POV ?
Has anybody read anything from O'Reilly's Head First Series? I'm thinking about buying the one covering SQL (I'm not too hot with DB's), but I'd like to know if anyone has any thoughts on the style/series.
I understand there's a saying about judging books by their covers, but I'm not sure I could get past that shower of gurning twats on the front of those books.
@SmallClanger Yeah, I've got a couple of their "In a Nutshell" books for commands and such, but I figured I'd try a "Head First". It seems like a book I could see myself reading for fun.
@SmallClanger I would say they're definitely beginner of the beginner books, but I was looking for something that isn't dry. Something I could read while I relax, I suppose. Do you have any other ideas for something like that covering SQL lang?
@Vert. Not particularly. Don't get me wrong, it's an o'reilly book, it's probably great. I'm just whinging at the presentation rather than the content. I'd go for it. :)
for the same reason some people install windows enterprise to run a simple dns server, or for that matter spend ages fiddling with linux + wine to get MS office working instead of just installing windows