@HopelessN00b I don't trust my users to power on their desktops much less a server. No really, I have a tool that sends a WOL signal at 5 AM to make sure everyone's computer is on in the morning.
To me it wasn't ever as reliable. I always kept losing the connection, especially with the MX keyboards. Had to "join" them together constantly. Since then I switched to the unifying "thing" from Logitech and have just used their mouse for the past 6 years.
@pauska Because our nation has become a nation of political correctness. You can't tell someone their a fat fucking moron that needs to put the god damn cake down.
I have come to appreciate ServerFault now. After venturing into the TechNet "help" forums I have realized the "helpers" aren't even !@*%@ qualified to be on Super User...
@84104 No snapshots and I wouldn't think snapshots would have any effect on the OS itself. Datastore maybe but not OS. It's a SQL server so I was thinking maybe the MDF was getting bigger but it's not.
How is my disk drive dropping 2 GB/day, every day..and nothing shows up in the directory structure showing a total 2 GB increase in file size? Here's a photo of the difference between yesterday evening and today. It only seems to happen in the evening because when I looked at space this morning I had dropped by 100MB. Now it's down 2.2 GB for the day.
On a side note...does anyone still using AOL Instant Messenger? I haven't used it in decades and saw a signature on the bottom of a company's email that has an AIM ID.
This is a comical representation of a common style of control knob seen in many cheaper motel chains. The outer text is describing the reality of the control knob. If you turn it a little too far clock wise you get impossibly hot. A little bit counter-clockwise and you get too cold. There is a sweet spot (in green) on this style and good luck finding it. Living in the South East USA I have seen many, many dual knob controls. My house has dual control on every faucet except my kitchen sink as it has been converted to a single lever.