• (disco) in reply to FrostCat
    FrostCat:
    I don't. :P

    didn't think so.

    that's why i "resemble" the remark that i'm a :older_woman:

  • (disco) in reply to accalia
    accalia:
    >FrostCat: Hannah Minx.

    .... who?

    [Son I am disappoint] that you didn't go look on Youtube. I am also disappointed you didn't quote more of that line, because you would've gotten a clue.

  • (disco) in reply to FrostCat
    FrostCat:
    [Son I am disappoint] that you didn't go look on Youtube

    i'm currently at work and i know how many trolls infest this place

    FrostCat:
    I am also disappointed you didn't quote more of that line, because you would've gotten a clue.

    so..... not a looker?

  • (disco) in reply to Yamikuronue
    Yamikuronue:
    If there was that much dust, the cleaning staff clearly had the better idea here...

    Just be glad they didn't clean it with a vacuum cleaner (plastic hose, static...)

  • (disco) in reply to accalia
    accalia:
    so..... not a looker?

    Yes, depending on what you mean by looker.

    accalia:
    i'm currently at work and i know how many trolls infest this place

    Her channel is probably more or less not NSFW, but you can wait until you get home to look her up, or use a proxy or whatever.

  • (disco) in reply to FrostCat
    FrostCat:
    or use a proxy or whatever.

    they make proxies for your monitor now?

    it's not the net traffic i worry about. ;-)

    FrostCat:
    Yes, depending on what you mean by looker.

    i've been told i have a very unconventional sense of beauty... so i wouldn't go using me as a yardstick for that sort of thing... ;-)

  • (disco) in reply to chubertdev
    chubertdev:
    The front panel had a lock, but it was never used, because no one should ever touch the Membrain.

    I took that as it had a locking case, which makes it even worse as that would imply that there is no racking at all for it to go in to.

  • (disco) in reply to accalia
    accalia:
    i've been told i have a very unconventional sense of beauty... so i wouldn't go using me as a yardstick for that sort of thing...

    sigh. She's not skinny, but she's not really fat, either. Some people like that kind of thing, some people don't. My joke, which was clearly too obscure, involved that she's a looker, but it might be good looks or bad looks, depending on the eye of the beholder.

    200 years ago she'd probably be considered more or less a 10, given that people used to like women a bit less thin than they do now.

  • (disco) in reply to FrostCat
    FrostCat:
    sigh. She's not skinny, but she's not really fat, either. Some people like it, some people don't. My joke, which was clearly too obscure, involved that she's a looker, but it might be good looks or bad looks, depending on the eye of the beholder.

    I would not use that joke on my wife.

  • (disco) in reply to chubertdev
    chubertdev:
    I would not use that joke on my wife.

    not unless you like sleeping in the garage.

  • (disco) in reply to chubertdev
    chubertdev:
    I would not use that joke on my wife.

    Ok, I won't use it on your wife.

    Edit: I personally don't think she looks bad at all.

  • (disco) in reply to accalia
    accalia:
    not unless you ***like*** sleeping in the garage.

    I do have a leather bench seat out there...from time to time...

  • (disco) in reply to chubertdev
    chubertdev:
    I do have a leather bench seat out there...from time to time...

    sometimes the mouth is faster than the brain?

  • (disco)

    I'm waiting to hear about their backup tapes. Certainly with their entire business running on one machine, they're backing it up, yes? But the conversation sounds like no one knew if the tapes existed, were current, or were tested. This would make a much more interesting WTF story.

  • (disco) in reply to accalia
    accalia:
    sometimes the mouth is faster than the brain?

    it's a constant race

  • (disco) in reply to chubertdev
    chubertdev:
    it's a constant race

    ouch... that's gotta lead to some interesting evenings.

  • (disco) in reply to accalia
    accalia:
    ouch... that's gotta lead to some interesting eventings.

    stellar spellar...

  • (disco) in reply to chubertdev
    chubertdev:
    stellar spellar...

    I suspect that @accalia actually meant eventings in this case.

  • (disco) in reply to abarker

    With her, you never know.

  • (disco) in reply to chubertdev

    true

  • (disco) in reply to abarker

    no, it was a tyop....

    :blush:

  • (disco) in reply to FrostCat
    FrostCat:
    I find it easier to assume every female on the internet looks like Hannah Minx.

    Never underestimate the power of wishful thinking.

  • (disco) in reply to accalia
    accalia:
    no, it was a tyop....

    :blush:

    Too bad. Eventings actually kind of made sense, what with talking about brain/mouth racing.

  • (disco) in reply to abarker
    abarker:
    Too bad. Eventings actually kind of made sense, what with talking about brain/mouth racing.

    it was a fortuitous tyop, but a tpyo none the less.

    tpyo turns out to be a very hard word for me to misspell...

  • (disco)

    When the machines become sentient and rise against us, cleaning staff will be the first against the wall.

  • (disco) in reply to FrostCat
    FrostCat:
    Hannah Minx.

    I'd hit it, she would have to get rid of the stupid headbands though.

  • (disco) in reply to antiquarian
    antiquarian:
    Never underestimate the power of wishful thinking.

    That, too.

  • (disco)

    Today I added a new abbreviation SDT, and proceeded to mistype it STD all day...

  • (disco)

    'Twas back in 1997, and I was assigned my first PC, as I was being seconded from the DEC VAX FORTRAN team to a special one-off sales project using some damnfool map tool interfaced with some VB that we had been tasked to write, which we would send to our man in Lisbon and Dusseldorf (and wherever else he needed to be). Discs were not very big (memory-wise) in those days, a mere few megabytes, and I soon ran out of space -- so I was given a second disc drive. Wow, that was the thing. I think it might have had 8MB on it.

    The job was a bit stressy and time-intensive, so my colleague and I would spend the entire weekend round his place working on this damn program which we were less than completely enthused about. This meant carting around these great heavy desktop PCs from office to his place each weekend (this was before laptops with an appropriate quantity of power were available for an affordable price).

    All went fairly well, in the end: we ate a lot of pizza, told each other a lot of very funny sick jokes, and watched a lot of Xena, and we actually solved all the technical programming problems that we had been assigned to solve, and were on the point of shipping the product to the sales manager.

    All went well, until suddenly my PC went bang and the magic smoke all came pouring out of the sides. When we dismantled the PC, we found that the second disc drive had come loose. Turns out that it had been affixed inside the cabinet with ...

    ... sellotape.

    (That is: Scotch tape.)

  • (disco) in reply to boomzilla
    boomzilla:
    chubertdev:
    I don't want none of this fancy 3.5" technology!
    http://nymag.com/scienceofus/2014/11/what-its-like-to-have-a-micropenis.html

    Since the definition (at least 2.5 SD smaller than the mean average of the species) equates to 2¾'', a "3''" floppy is 27% larger than the articles described in your - er - article.

    So, not entirely useful..

  • (disco) in reply to xaade
    xaade:
    It is less correct for contracted cleaning workers to speculate on what and how they should clean.

    Kipling: (McAndrew's Hymn) Ye thought? Ye are not paid to think. Go sweat it off again!

    But in reality cleaners are paid to think to a degree - not all cleaning is purely repetitive - and it is someone else's job to tell them what to clean and what not to clean. This is a management failure, not a cleaner failure.

  • (disco) in reply to Zylon
    Zylon:
    When the machines become sentient and rise against us, cleaning staff will be the first against the wall.

    The cleaning staff will be the only humans left, because robots are useless at cleaning in corners and no self respecting world dominating AI wants fluff in its cabinet. CEOs now...crunchy.

  • (disco) in reply to PJH
    PJH:
    boomzilla:

    http://nymag.com/scienceofus/2014/11/what-its-like-to-have-a-micropenis.html

    Since the definition (at least 2.5 SD smaller than the mean average of the species) equates to 2¾'', a "3''" floppy is 27% larger than the articles described in your - er - article.

    So, not entirely useful..

    Midsection pendantry pedantry?

  • (disco) in reply to kupfernigk
    kupfernigk:
    But in reality cleaners are paid to think to a degree - not all cleaning is purely repetitive - and it is someone else's job to tell them what to clean and what not to clean. This is a management failure, not a cleaner failure.
    Not sure if you're trolling or really this dumb. Any time a janitor decides to unplug something, or disassemble something, or otherwise tamper with something that he doesn't know exactly what it is, that's an intelligence failure, not a management failure.

    But then, some people spend their entire careers as janitors for just that reason.

  • (disco) in reply to Zylon
    Zylon:
    But then, some people spend their entire careers as janitors for just that reason.

    I'd like to know why it's so hard to put the trash can in my office back where it was, instead of leaning against the wall at an angle (as in, one bottom edge is actually on the wall, not the floor), or on a different wall, or under my desk, even if I put my chair right exactly where the can was the last time they tried that, so this time they had to MOVE THE CHAIR TO AVOID PUTTING IT BACK WHERE THEY FOUND IT!

    Why yes, it tasks me.

  • (disco) in reply to FrostCat
    FrostCat:
    they had to MOVE THE CHAIR TO AVOID PUTTING IT BACK WHERE THEY FOUND IT!

    They might be doing it deliberately just to fuck with you for entertainment. How exciting do you think their job usually is?

  • (disco) in reply to boomzilla
    boomzilla:
    It allowed you to copy from one floppy to another. You'd get prompts to insert a disk into A: or B: at the appropriate moments.

    I probably knew that at one time, but I'd long ago forgotten it.

  • (disco) in reply to accalia
    accalia:
    if you can count DOB 1986 as older...

    I hadn't quite graduated from college then.

  • (disco) in reply to another_sam
    another_sam:
    They might be doing it deliberately just to fuck with you for entertainment. How exciting do you think their job usually is?

    I will admit to being rankled by it. I'm ready to track down some caution tape for a "trash can goes here" zone and to ask someone how to say "trash can goes here" in colloquial Spanish, rather than the near-gibberish someone put on the server room door.

  • (disco) in reply to another_sam

    I can only assume this is the motive behind the actions of our office cleaner. They only come once a week, at the weekend when the office is empty. I would say my desk is pretty tidy in general but still accumulates some dust.

    Every Monday morning I come in to find that the contents of my desk have been rearranged in some fashion, yet no dust has actually been cleaned! As far as I'm concerned, the cleaner is making my desk more untidy, and if I want it dusted I have to do it myself.

    I have nothing against cleaners in general (I have been one of sorts myself before), just this one in particular!

  • (disco) in reply to Matt_Westwood
    Matt_Westwood:
    Discs were not very big (memory-wise) in those days, a mere few megabytes, and I soon ran out of space -- so I was given a second disc drive. Wow, that was the thing. I think it might have had 8MB on it.

    Wow, in 1997 I had a zip drive. 100MB per disk. Of course it was plugged into a 386 which had a 80MB HDD. I still have the zip drive - it worked last time I tried, no click of death - but no computer with a parallel port any more. Or any use for such a small capacity! Next year I'll take it out for a drink.

    (Fwiw i was in high school in 1997 and the following year it was useful for university)

  • (disco) in reply to another_sam
    another_sam:
    They might be doing it deliberately just to fuck with you for entertainment.

    They would never see the results, because they never come in until long after I've left for the day. If they're going to live with imagining my irkedness, they should just imagine putting the can in the wrong place, too, and save us all the bother.

  • (disco) in reply to Zemm
    Zemm:
    but no computer with a parallel port any more.

    You can still buy I/O cards with parallel ports on 'em.

    I had a SCSI zip drive because duh.

  • (disco) in reply to FrostCat
    FrostCat:
    They would never see the results,

    Also, I think they may just be stupid, because they sometimes forget to actually EMPTY the cans.

  • (disco) in reply to Zemm
    Zemm:
    [...] office warming party. [...] servers were sitting on desks.

    I can see how that works ;)

  • (disco) in reply to FrostCat
    FrostCat:
    TBH that might actually be faster than copying with only one floppy drive.

    Faster because you don't have to play DJ a few times (diskcopy read the disk contents to RAM, so if available RAM was less than the size of the disk, you'd have to swap disks multiple times).

    Accessing files on the copied disk might also have been faster when using [x]copy and the hard drive as temporary storage:

    A fragmented source disk can slow down the process of finding, reading, or writing files. To avoid transferring fragmentation from one disk to another, use copy or xcopy to copy your disk. Because copy and xcopy copy files sequentially, the new disk is not fragmented.

    Warning

    • You cannot use xcopy to copy a startup disk.

    You could work around that warning by doing a sys <targetdrive> after xcopying your files.

  • (disco) in reply to OffByOne
    OffByOne:
    You could work around that warning by doing a sys <targetdrive> after xcopying your files.

    hmm... i remember my dos startup floppy.

    loved that thing. had everything i ever needed on it. was slow as flack to boot up because it had to decompress that utilities archive to a 6MB ramdrive but after it was done there wasn't anything that i couldn't do with that thing....

    then i got a laptop of my own and could stop co-opting the public computers at the library for my.... interests. ;-)

  • (disco) in reply to OffByOne
    OffByOne:
    Faster because you don't have to play DJ a few times

    That was indeed what I was thinking of.

  • (disco) in reply to FrostCat
    FrostCat:
    That was indeed what I was thinking of.

    Starting from DOS 6, the hard drive was used as temporary storage.

    Options /M - Forces DISKCOPY to use only conventional memory for interim storage during the copy procedure. Normally, DISKCOPY uses the hard disk for this purpose. (New with DOS Version 6.)

    I forgot that I didn't have to switch disks ~27 times anymore starting from a certain DOS version.

  • (disco) in reply to Zylon
    Zylon:
    Not sure if you're trolling or really this dumb. Any time a janitor decides to unplug something, or disassemble something, or otherwise tamper with something that he doesn't know exactly what it is, that's an intelligence failure, not a management failure.

    But then, some people spend their entire careers as janitors for just that reason.

    Not trolling, but someone who has real world experience of management, not just an armchair CEO. You obviously have never had to manage real world cleaners. In some office environments cleaners will be told to unplug lamps and the like where necessary to get power for their vacuum cleaners. They may also be expected to dust files - old manual files can become heavily coated with dust and are a health hazard. In other office environments, the "Never, ever unplug anything, dismantle anything or open any cupboard" rule applies. Cleaning staff need to be instructed properly in what to do in each area they clean; agency cleaners have to be told what the rules are and the contract should specify that they be enforced. If you have, for instance, an ISO 9002 environment, cleaning rules may well form part of your quality document (at one time I used to assess ISO 9002 for suppliers.) The fact that somebody knows something you obviously don't does not make them dumb; your restricted imagination and understanding of the range of real world environments suggests a mirror might help you.

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