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Red Neck - Hilly Billy or Country Person, not a city
person. Called a red neck because usually outside with a shirt on, get a red
neck and a farmer's tan on the arms.
Michigander - Person from Michigan, USA
Smelt Dippin - More properly known as Smelt Dipping.
Process to use a net to catch small fish that are usually fried. See http://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/greatlakesfish/rainbowsmelt.html
Snagging Suckers - Snagging is another way to capture fish.
You havea lead weight and a big nasty hook and put the fish line under the fish
and pull it up suddenly to hook the fish's underside. Suckers are a type of fish
(formally known as a White Sucker or Mullet) that you catch this way because
they don't respond to normal bait fishing and are tough to net unless they are
spawning. You usually "smoke" sucker fish. By smoke I mean you put them in a
special cooker that cooks through indirect heat and flavors the fish with the
flavor of the wood used to create the heat. See http://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/greatlakesfish/whitesucker.html
Bullheads - Yet another type of fish, more formally known
as the Yellow Belly Bullhead. It is sort of like a catfish but with nasty spines
on the fins that can tear through your skin and infect you with whatever
bacteria comes from the bottom of a sludge filled lake. You tend to catch these
fish at night with nightcrawlers or pieces of corn on hooks. You will usually
fry bullheads. See http://www.thejump.net/id/yellow-bullhead.htm
Nightcrawlers - Name for large earthworms also
called red wrigglers you capture at night on the surface of the ground.
Great for fishing. See http://www.sarep.ucdavis.edu/worms/image7.htm
Crick - A small stream only a few inches deep. Also
known as creek. See http://www.bartleby.com/68/61/5761.html
Brookies - Brook trout. Another type of fish. Very pretty
fish. They tend towards smaller sizes but are extremely tasty, probably one of
the best tasting fish you can catch in Michigan along with the Walleye. Brookies
are generally grilled or pan fried in butter though some insane people will
bake them like Salmon or Tuna. They prefer very cold water and hang
out in areas that aren't generally the most conducive to fishing. They tend to
be more conducive to getting tied up in branches and nettles and bitten by
mosquitos and gnats and horse flies. See http://www.cffcm.org/gallery/images/trout/brook-05.jpg
Crayfish - Also known as a crawdad, smallish lobster
like animal. For some reason the older Michiganders like to make these into
soups with various other shellfish and turtles. See http://www.mackers.com/crayfish/crayfis2.jpg
Viddles - Food.
Dandilion Wine/Greens - Proper spelling is Dandelion but
the E is strongly pronounced as a short I in northern Michigan so it tends
to get spelled with an I. Wine and Salad made from a
common Michigan plant with pretty flower. This plant is generally
considered a weed because it grows of its own accord whereever it wants very
quickly upsetting many homeowners who only want grass on their lawn. See http://koti.mbnet.fi/~kakoskin/photos/dandelion.jpg
Snapper soup - Soup made from the fresh water Snapping
Turtle. An extremely agressive and hard biting turtle that is commonly caught
and tossed into soups with crayfish. You catch a snapping turtle by touching its
head with a stick, it will then clamp onto the stick and will not let go. You
can carry it all the way home this way, I used to carry them literally miles
when I was a kid to get them from various ponds and streams and rivers back to
my parent's house. See http://www.chelydra.org/snapping_turtle_serpentina.html
Walleye - Another fish. Great tasting like the Brookie.
Completely different type of fishing to get Walleye though, you usually have to
sit in a boat on a lake and spin cast for them. These fish are usually grilled
or pan fried in butter like brookies but are ok to bake if they are larger. See
http://www.fishweb.com/recreation/fishing/fishfacts/fish/walleye/walleye.html
You will note that most of that paragraph was about fish or
fishing or other creatures that live in fresh water. Michigan, being surrounded
by freshwater lakes, and having internal freshwater lakes and rivers and streams
and creeks everywhere is very much a fisherman's hangout. If you grow up in
Michigan, especially mid to northern Michigan, say Lansing or further north, you
will probably have a fishing pole or other fishing device in your hand for a
good portion of your childhood, even the dead of winter as you are ice
fishing[1]. You will often hear no end of fishing stories from Northern Michigan
people unless they have realized that most everyone else really doesn't care[2].
Most people get fish at the store, they don't have any exciting stories of
wrestling with a 10lb can of tuna for 90 minutes on 2lbs test filament.
joe
[1] This is fishing through a hole in the ice, not
actually fishing for ice - I could see where this might throw Dean so I put in
the explanation. ;o)
[2] My brother and I once when we were about 10 and 9
caught 2 18 inch steelheads by hand that were trying to escape from a private
stocked pond into the small stream (larger than a crick) that fed the pond that
was gated off. I won't explain any more there as I don't know what the statute
of limitations is on something like that. We were barefoot and covered in mud
and mosquito bites from following the stream through the woods. Ran like crazy
the entire 8 or so miles home holding the fish out away from
the front of us so we wouldn't get whacked with the flapping tails, too
afraid too look back to see if we were being chased.
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Almeida Pinto, Jorge de Sent: Friday, July 22, 2005 4:09 AM To: [email protected]; Send - AD mailing list Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] [OT]Delegation of privilege >> English? Is that what we are supposed to be
speaking?
>> I speak a red neck northern lower
Michigander form of North American. Anyone want to go smelt dippin? How about
goin' and snagging >> us some suckers? Or fishing fer bullheads, I got
the nightcrawlers all ready. Course we could always hit the crick lookin for
brookies and >> crayfish too... We had some good viddles for
supper last night, we had dandilion wine with dandilion greens and snapper
soup, Uncle >> >> Herbert cleaned the snapper
shell up so he can use it for a hat.
>> Hehe.
dictionary please! ;-) >> BTW, what's a meta for? <eg>
don't know.... get rid of it with the meta data cleanup procedure
;-)
#JORGE#
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of joe Sent: Thu 7/21/2005 11:34 PM To: 'Send - AD mailing list' Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] [OT]Delegation of privilege English? Is that what we are supposed to be speaking?
I speak a red neck northern lower Michigander form of North
American. Anyone want to go smelt dippin? How about goin' and snagging us some
suckers? Or fishing fer bullheads, I got the nightcrawlers all ready. Course we
could always hit the crick lookin for brookies and crayfish too... We had some
good viddles for supper last night, we had dandilion wine with dandilion greens
and snapper soup, Uncle Herbert cleaned the snapper shell up so he can
use it for a hat.
Hehe.
Yann, don't worry. I figure you speak my native language
far better than I speak your native language. I am working on a book though, so
I guess I should be more careful with when I say "in my book". It would be easy
for someone to think, hmmm cool, joe is going to put this in his book, another
reason to not buy it. I am refreshing an AD book, it doesn't much speak about
the underlying OS as I am not much caring about the underlying OS. If AD ran on
FreeBSD I might try working on it there.
BTW, what's a meta for? <eg>
joe
P.S. I
caught Dean spelling humour as humor a little while back. I had to catch it and
correct it for him.
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dean Wells Sent: Thursday, July 21, 2005 5:07 PM To: Send - AD mailing list Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Delegation of privilege Fear
not, joe's knowledge and use of English is only marginally better than yours and
he's been at it for decades ...
PS - I'm just teasing for those that didn't catch
that ;o)
-- http://msetechnology.com From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of TIROA YANN Sent: Thursday, July 21, 2005 5:00 PM To: [email protected] Subject: RE : [ActiveDir] Delegation of privilege OOOooopppsss .... sorry...
i did not understand joe's metaphors.... i'm a bit ashame :(
So please, do not laught at
me, i try my best to improve my english :o)
Now it is time for me to go to the
next chapter of my english training: Chap 3 "Understanding metaphors"
:-)
Cheers,
Yann De: [EMAIL PROTECTED] de la part de Rick Kingslan Date: jeu. 21/07/2005 22:20 À: [email protected] Objet : RE: [ActiveDir] Delegation of privilege >> "You honestly have two real answers in my book joe currently has one book (in process) and chapters in others. :o)
When he uses the phrase above, he is saying To my way of thinking, best practices say you have two things you can do English is a very strange language, and then us native speakers go and mess it up even more with metaphors and analogies. ;o) Rick From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of TIROA
YANN
Hi joe,
I now realize that my question was not safefull in an AD design. I wanted to do the same as a NT4 domain where it is (not very sure, but i think it is) possible to give someone admin privilege on only one DC. I thought i could do the same thing with AD 2003.
Yes this DC is also file&print server, but for more secure operations, we will probably (and certainly) move this role to a another member server, and so give THAT user server op privilege :)
Anyway, u said "You honestly have two real answers in my book". May i ask u what is the title of your book ? is it an AD or/and w2k3 book ? I would be interested about it's content...
Cheers,
Yann De:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] de la part de joe Sakari, you are scaring me here...
Yann, you are basically saying. "Hi, I need to give someone I don't trust enhanced rights on only a single domain controller so they can not hurt other domain controllers.". This is not really possible. You can do a lot of one of delegation pieces but you aren't really doing a whole lot to protect yourself from the fact that you don't trust this person to have access to all of your DCs. Once on the one DC, one of many techniques can be used to get themselves access to the rest.
You honestly have two real answers in my book.
1. Break the work up into something the non-trusted person can do and the rest is given to a DA to do.
2. Find some other way to do the work, usually some form of proxy based solution that has rules you can apply so the person can't just do what they want, but instead only what you allow them.
Of course the other thing to do is not do what it is you are doing with that DC which is probably something like sharing files or printers or something like that.
joe
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Sakari
Kouti Hi Yann,
You could grant your user those privileges that are listed as User Rights, by applying a corresponding Group Policy Object to only one DC. However, this is probably not enough for you. For example, you cannot grant a privilege to format hard drives or share folders this way.
Yours, Sakari
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- RE: [ActiveDir] [Even further OT]Delegation of privilege joe
