- cats: erik,
- humor,
- links,
- viz
random bits
My bathroom scale isn't accurate enough to weigh Erik, but it feels like his ribs are getting less prominent. He's still bony and underweight, but I think he's gaining. I hope so. We have an appointment with the vet on Monday where I'll find out. (On average he's been eating 7-8oz of canned food per day. More on the weekends and sometimes less on weekdays, because it works better in small doses every few hours.)
I've been at my synagogue for something every day for the last week. We just interviewed a candidate for a rabbinical position, which is a big part of that. That's been an educational process for me.
In a few weeks our comapny's network configuration will change in major ways. One change is that we'll be using an Exchange server for mail instead of our current IMAP server. (No, we don't get a vote on this.) So all of us who have been using other mailers have to move to Outlook, and we're being smart and doing that part of it before the server change. It'll be fine in the end, but I keep feeling like I've just moved five years' worth of mail and now I can't find anything. (I had to move all of my saved mail onto the server so I could then download it into Outlook, as no direct translation path existed.) On the bright side, the tech-support person the company sent to get everyone configured was one of the most fun I've worked with. I'm pretty sure she's a Unix user when her employer isn't looking; she definitely groks geeks.
Seen in a locked entry: "You know you're living in 2006 when... you pull into your own driveway and use your cell phone to see if anyone is home to help you carry in your groceries." Guilty. :-) Hey, calls between our phones are free...
A lab report that's
more honest than most (link from
ian_gunn).
The Slow Crash
argues that civilization will fall not with a bang but with a whisper
(link from
brokengoose). I'm reminded of one episode of the
short-lived Dilbert TV show where there was some sort of economic
crash and the very next day everything looked like a scene out of the
middle ages. It was a nice spoof.
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(Outlook .PST files can suffer the same kinds of corruption, but are somewhat less likely to kill themselves that completely.)
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Thanks for reminding me to explicitly back up the PST file periodically. There will, of course, be official backups of our desktop machines; I predict that actually accessing those backups won't be any easier than it is now (which is to say, not very).
Comments from the war zone.
An unnamed Fortune 500 company uses Unix-variety servers as the connections to the Internet and gateway to the Exchange servers to handle the volume, spam control, virus filtering, etc.
Archive messages onto your local files, and back them up.
Exchange, especially if they're using the Directory services for the variety of services available, needs several full time administrators.