short takes

Oct. 9th, 2002 12:32 pm
cellio: (avatar)
[personal profile] cellio
Larissa: I'm sorry. I can cast four third-level spells per day, but the only third-level spell I know is Fireball.

Turok: That's ok. When the only tool you have is a hammer, every bugbear looks like a nail.


The Hebrew word "z'vuv" (or maybe "zevuv"; didn't see it written) means "fly", so "z'vuvim" are "flies".

The word "ba'al" means "master".

Sometimes "b" and "v" sounds are semi-interchangable. Akiva and Akiba are the same person.

Putting all of this together, we can now see the probable origin of "Bealzabub" -- "ba'al z'vuv". Except that that's the lord of one fly, which isn't nearly so intimidating. :-) (And yeah, I know I probably misspelled the conventional name.)


I finally found out recently why someone has been having trouble sending me mail. (That is, I was finally able to look at a bounce message.) It seems that this person didn't understand that user names are case-sensitive, becuase Outlook helpfully capitalizes things in its presentation of your address book.

Perhaps Microsoft is baalzevuvim; that's often a safe bet. Maybe a fireball would help.

(no subject)

Date: 2002-10-10 06:56 am (UTC)
goljerp: Photo of the moon Callisto (Default)
From: [personal profile] goljerp
You're awfully kind.

Thanks. I don't remember what I did, but I think it was basically just finger. No, wait, I think that Yale used to have an on-line directory. And obviously I knew his name...

Firstname.Lastname@domain is just asking for trouble.

Yeah. I think it's used because it's "easy" (until the problems crop up). JTS has an interesting solution: you get the shortest unique combination of your first name and your last name. So you would probably be mcellio@jtsa.edu, but there might be a DavidAFine@jtsa.edu. I'm not sure how they deal with the problem of two people with identical names - perhaps they let the second person choose some permutation?

(no subject)

Date: 2002-10-10 08:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jerusha.livejournal.com
I like the way my alma mater handled it. All the email addresses were of the form [your three initials][serial number]@po.cwru.edu. If you don't have (or didn't provide to the University) a middle initial, they'd use an 'x'. I don't know how high the serial numbers can go, but they'd already broken the three-digit barrier without problems by the time I graduated and left. They apparently aren't that worried about namespace, though - they don't deactivate alumni accounts. So all of the "same name" or "common name" problems are circumvented.

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