Just had a support call with my old man. He got a new computer [on his own! he's all grown up] so we had to do the ShowMyPC thing. It took longer to get him to launch the showmypc exe than it did to resolve the issue. Also, he's about to print a 130 page PDF on his inkjet printer, even after we talk about how wasteful and expensive [in ink cost] that will be. sigh
One thing I dislike about Aerons is the lack of a seat cushion. It's next to impossible to crack off a silent one while sitting in an Aeron. On the other hand it doesn't accumulate in the cushion because the Aeron ain't got one.
@ConcernedOfTunbridgeWells Exactly, we've got the cheapest of cheap Office Maxpo chairs. They not comfortable, but they have a thick seat pad that really holds the smell.
Limburger is a cheese that originated during the 19th century in the historical Duchy of Limburg, which is now divided among modern-day Belgium, Germany, and Netherlands. The cheese is especially known for its pungent odor commonly compared to body odor.
Manufacture
Today, most Limburger is made in Germany, but Herve cheese is a type of Limburger cheese still produced in the Land of Herve, in the territory of the old Duchy of Limburg. Herve is located near Liège, and the borders separating Belgium from the Netherlands and Germany. The "Pays de Herve" is a hilly area between the Vesdre an...
@SimonRigharts you are trying to bring the town of this channel down? How can it get any lower then a bi-weekly link to a 55 gallon drum of lubricant for sale?
If you ever put a computer in that domain, you will get bizarre DNS failures, where when you attempt to visit some random site on the Internet, you arrive at yours instead.
Consider: You own the domain example.com. You set up your workstation and name it. ... let's say, yukon.example.com. Now yo...
Someone have any idea why this guy downvoted it?
Wait until ICANN creates the .local top level domain. A lot of people are going to be royally screwed.
And why would that be? Every single corporate place I've worked at (which is a lot) does this. It's very common practice and there is absolutely no down side to it. — Chris Lively2 mins ago
> Despite not being a valid top-level domain in the Internet, considerable DNS traffic that queries the local domain exists in the public Domain Name System.[1] In June 2009, the L root server received more than 400 such queries per second,[2] ranking 4th in DNS traffic of all TLDs after COM, ARPA, and NET.
OK, so you're left with "What is the best anti-virus for Windows Server 2012" and that's really not a question we can answer for you. — Michael Hampton10 secs ago
@MDMarra :damn... I researched that a bit before I decided to go with .local... and the only reason I went with .local was it was microsofts recommendation
@MattBear If I had my time again I wouldn't use .local but now that we've got it and are stuck with it, it's not as much of the sky is falling as (some people in here) like to make out
@MDMarra there was an article out there that said using .local was best practice, it's dead and gone though. Also IIRC (I don't have them anymore) the Win2k Official MS MCP Training material had you use .local
@MDMarra oh yea ... i think i read it around 03/04 and it was old then ... i'd do the same thing if I was them, since looking back it was never a good idea
@MDMarra I actually think it was this doc technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/Bb727030.aspx (seems very familiar) but it seems they redid their link structure around 2007 and can't find any older revs
@MDMarra We issue our own certificates for our exchange servers, and if you don't have our root installed, well fuck you you shouldn't be on our mail servers anyway
@MarkHenderson Lots of places are like that too. However, try working for a university that provides OWA to 20k students
no way are you getting your root cert on even a fraction of their machines
no matter how hard you try and how nice it would make your email situation, not to mention it would make your NAP/PEAP/MSCHAPv2 Cisco wireless auth much easier to deal with
Actually Lathe as a Service makes me think I might not actually mind 3D Printing as a Service... I upload my plans to your printer in the clouds then you mail me the weird plastic 3D shit I just printed.
You can get away with it for home projects because nobody is going ti sue Joe Bloggs who only has $10 to his name, but if you make a business out of it you'll get done for patent infrigement before you make your first sale
One of my favorite pastimes (hey don't judge me) is properly configuring my Windows Servers so that they complete a cold boot and log on of a user without a single error in the Application or System event logs. Even if the errors that are logged don't seem to have any impact on the system, I still don't want to see them. Maybe some people don't care that errors are being generated b…