Re: Ken Campbell is a god (was: pc components)

2001-05-19 Thread Damian Conway

   > > > > Im nogat samting til ridim insait long pastaim Klingon!
   > > > > 
   > > > > Damian (longlong tisa Perlpela)
   > > > 
   > > > Lingua::TokPisin::Perlpela?
   > > 
   > > Nooo!
   > > 
   > > Damian - as a sponsor, I'm _begging_ you not to do this :)
   > 
   > if that works you just have to hope the blackstar people don't decide
   > it's a good idea :)

You know, I had been wondering how I was going to find funding to continue
my work next year.

Now it's *obvious*...with a Raskol ransom:

saLIm ManI LOng MI nO rAITim PoiSEn kOmPuTApeLa KolIm tOKpiSIn!


Or maybe I could put the right to stop me writing the module up on eBay?

;-)

Damian





Re: pc components

2001-05-18 Thread Matthew Byng-Maddick

On Fri, May 18, 2001 at 02:54:41PM +0100, Cross David - dcross wrote:
> From: Simon Wistow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Friday, May 18, 2001 11:04 AM
> > Matthew Byng-Maddick wrote:
> > > He was touring with Norman Lovett, who wasn't nearly as good.
> > I found Norman Lovett really funny. Managed to keep the whole audience
> > laughing without actually saying anything for a few minutes and thena
> > few minutes more just by saying "what?"

After Chris Barrie, he wasn't as good. He was, however, a lot better than
Craig Charles (who I saw a different time).

He just seemed to be a bit depressed about being old. :/

> (Norman Lovett)++

If you say so. :)

> I've got a recording of Lovett telling a joke about my school.
> "I went to a comprehensive school in Clacton-on-Sea[1].
>  (pause)
>  I left that school with one O Level.
>  (longer pause)
>  But they caught up with me and made me give it back."

:) I think the pauses are his strong point. And this kind of joke is
actually funny when he does it. But he's a bit of a one-trick wonder
IYSWIM.

> [1] I have no reason to believe that Norman Lovett actually _did_ go to my
> school[2].
> [2] Sade did tho'. She was a couple of years older than me. Everyone hated
 ^^^
> her because she was a stuck-up bitch. I still can't listen to her music.

Are you older than her now? :)

MBM (feeling silly on a friday afternoon. :)




Re: Ken Campbell is a god (was: pc components)

2001-05-18 Thread Struan Donald

* at 18/05 14:51 +0100 Cross David - dcross said:
> From: Robin Houston <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Friday, May 18, 2001 2:34 PM
> 
> > On Fri, May 18, 2001 at 06:05:44AM +1000, Damian Conway wrote:
> > > Im nogat samting til ridim insait long pastaim Klingon!
> > > 
> > > Damian (longlong tisa Perlpela)
> > 
> > Lingua::TokPisin::Perlpela?
> 
> Nooo!
> 
> Damian - as a sponsor, I'm _begging_ you not to do this :)

if that works you just have to hope the blackstar people don't decide
it's a good idea :)

struan



RE: pc components

2001-05-18 Thread Cross David - dcross

From: Simon Wistow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, May 18, 2001 11:04 AM

> Matthew Byng-Maddick wrote:
> 
> > He was touring with Norman Lovett, who wasn't nearly as good.
> 
> I found Norman Lovett really funny. Managed to keep the whole audience
> laughing without actually saying anything for a few minutes and thena
> few minutes more just by saying "what?"

(Norman Lovett)++

I've got a recording of Lovett telling a joke about my school.

"I went to a comprehensive school in Clacton-on-Sea[1].
 (pause)
 I left that school with one O Level.
 (longer pause)
 But they caught up with me and made me give it back."

Dave...

[1] I have no reason to believe that Norman Lovett actually _did_ go to my
school[2].
[2] Sade did tho'. She was a couple of years older than me. Everyone hated
her because she was a stuck-up bitch. I still can't listen to her music.


The information contained in this communication is
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of this message is not the intended recipient, you are
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If you have received this communication in error, please 
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RE: Ken Campbell is a god (was: pc components)

2001-05-18 Thread Cross David - dcross

From: Robin Houston <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, May 18, 2001 2:34 PM

> On Fri, May 18, 2001 at 06:05:44AM +1000, Damian Conway wrote:
> > Im nogat samting til ridim insait long pastaim Klingon!
> > 
> > Damian (longlong tisa Perlpela)
> 
> Lingua::TokPisin::Perlpela?

Nooo!

Damian - as a sponsor, I'm _begging_ you not to do this :)

Dave...

-- 


The information contained in this communication is
confidential, is intended only for the use of the recipient
named above, and may be legally privileged. If the reader 
of this message is not the intended recipient, you are
hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or
copying of this communication is strictly prohibited.  
If you have received this communication in error, please 
re-send this communication to the sender and delete the 
original message or any copy of it from your computer
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Re: Ken Campbell is a god (was: pc components)

2001-05-18 Thread Robin Houston

On Fri, May 18, 2001 at 06:05:44AM +1000, Damian Conway wrote:
> Im nogat samting til ridim insait long pastaim Klingon!
> 
> Damian (longlong tisa Perlpela)

Lingua::TokPisin::Perlpela?

 .robin.

-- 
"Have you been certain you came to me the real reason explain anything
else that I came to you the real reason explain anything else that I
came to you the real reason explain anything else?" --eliza



Re: pc components

2001-05-18 Thread Simon Wistow

Matthew Byng-Maddick wrote:

> He was touring with Norman Lovett, who wasn't nearly as good.

I found Norman Lovett really funny. Managed to keep the whole audience
laughing without actually saying anything for a few minutes and thena
few minutes more just by saying "what?"

Simon 
[easily amused]



Re: Ken Campbell is a god (was: pc components)

2001-05-18 Thread Damian Conway

   > "What's it like then, Macbeth in Wol Wantok? An improvement..."
   
Im nogat samting til ridim insait long pastaim Klingon!

Damian (longlong tisa Perlpela)





Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Simon Cozens

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 08:12:52PM +0100, Leon Brocard wrote:
> The same happened to me.  I've given up buying things on the
> Internet. I do all my research on the web, and then head down to
> Tottenham Court Road to actually buy it. The prices are generally
> comparable, and you get it *there and then*.

   They're calling it shops or `S-Commerce' and it's being rolled out in
   cities and towns nationwide.

   "It's a real revelation," according to Malcolm Fosbury, a middleware
   engineer from Hillingdon. "You just walk into one of these "shops"
   and they have all sorts of things for sale."

   Fosbury was particularly impressed by a clothes shop he discovered
   while browsing in central London. "Shops seem to be the ideal medium
   for transactions of this type. I can actually try out a jacket and
   see if it fits me. Then I can visualize the way I would look if I
   was wearing the clothing." This is possible using a high definition
   2D viewing system, or "mirror" as it has become known.

   Shops, which are frequently aggregated into shopping portals or
   "high streets", are becoming increasingly popular with the cash-rich
   time-poor generation of new consumers. Often located in densely
   populated areas people can find them extremely convenient.

   And Malcolm is not alone in being impressed by shops. "Some days I
   just don't have the time to download huge Flash animations of
   rotating trainers and then wait five days for them to be delivered
   in the hope that they will actually fit," says Sandra Bailey, a
   systems analyst from Chelsea. "This way I can actually complete the
   transaction in real time and walk away with the goods." Being able
   see whether or not shoes and clothing fit has been a real bonus for
   Bailey, "I used to spend my evenings boxing up gear to return.
   Sometimes the clothes didn't fit, sometimes they just sent the
   wrong stuff."

   Shops have a compelling commercial story to tell too, according to
   Gartner Group retail analyst Carl Baker. "There are massive
   efficiencies in the supply chain. By concentrating distribution to a
   series of high volume outlets in urban centres-typically close to
   where people live and work-businesses can make dramatic savings in
   fulfillment costs. Just compare this with the wasteful practise of
   delivering items piecemeal to people's homes."

   Furthermore, allowing consumers to receive goods when they actually
   want them could mean an end to the frustration of returning home to
   find a despatch notice telling you that your goods are waiting in a
   delivery depot the other side of town. But it's not just the
   convenience and time-saving that appeals to Fosbury, "Visiting a
   shop is real relief for me. I mean as it is I spend all day in front
   of a bloody computer."

   from Benjamin Gill, Information & Research, P-Four Consultancy Ltd, TEL:
   (44) 0171 924 3233, FAX: (44) 0171 978 5304, E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  

-- 
We *have* dirty minds. This is not news. - Kake Pugh



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Paul Makepeace

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 08:12:52PM +0100, Leon Brocard wrote:
> The same happened to me.  I've given up buying things on the
> Internet. I do all my research on the web, and then head down to
> Tottenham Court Road to actually buy it. The prices are generally
> comparable, and you get it *there and then*.

Comparable to http://www.pricewatch.com/ ?

I buy stuff online because it's less hassle/takes less time than
finding parking downtown :-)

And besides, by the time it arrives (few days later, I'm a cheapskate
Ground shipping junkie) I've usually forgotten about it so it's a
nice surprise.

Paul



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Leon Brocard

Simon Cozens sent the following bits through the ether:

> My motherboard from Dabs has spent two days "awaiting credit card clearance"
> and two days "awaiting despatch".

The same happened to me.  I've given up buying things on the
Internet. I do all my research on the web, and then head down to
Tottenham Court Road to actually buy it. The prices are generally
comparable, and you get it *there and then*.

Leon
-- 
Leon Brocard.http://www.astray.com/
Iterative Software...http://www.iterative-software.com/

... Useless invention no. 404: Caffeine-free Diet Coke 



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Dave Hodgkinson


www.insight.com - they 0wn Action, and they've never let me down.


-- 
Dave Hodgkinson, http://www.hodgkinson.org
Editor-in-chief, The Highway Star   http://www.deep-purple.com
  Interim CTO, web server farms, technical strategy
   



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Matthew Byng-Maddick

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 05:27:17PM +0100, Dominic Mitchell wrote:
> On Fri, May 18, 2001 at 02:18:16AM +1000, Ian Brayshaw wrote:
> > I saw Craig Charles at the Melbourne Comedy Festival a couple of years ago 
> > and it was a waste of time and money. He walked out on stage, said he was 
> > p1ssed, drank beer in front of the audience for an hour, occasionally 
> > screamed juvenile jokes centred around his "manhood", then suddenly
> > declared that he'd had enough and swaggered off stage. Complete w4nker,
> > really, given the price of the tickets.
> I have to concur, having forked out good money to see him in Brighton.
> Now Ken Campbell was worth watching, but a bit of a head fuck.

I have to agree about CC too. The other part was protesting his innocence
about the whole rape thingy. I would, however, recommend going and seeing
Chris Barrie live, because he was *absolutely* fantastic, and really on
the ball about current affairs, and funny. He was touring with Norman
Lovett, who wasn't nearly as good.

MBM




Ken Campbell is a god (was: pc components)

2001-05-17 Thread Robin Houston

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 05:27:17PM +0100, Dominic Mitchell wrote:
> Now Ken Campbell was worth watching, but a bit of a head fuck.

Ken Campbell is a god.
Here is my proof:
http://www.puffinry.freeserve.co.uk/wol-wantok/narafaladei.mp3

 .robin.

ps. The other day I randomly met someone who speaks fluent
Melanesian Pidgin.


"What's it like then, Macbeth in Wol Wantok? An improvement. Reducing
iambic pentameters to rude voodoo telegrams is just the thing the
piece has been needing. The plot seems much more likely in Pidgin -
there are a couple of holes which become apparent when you
de-soporificise the text and these I've deftly bunged. Like, for
example, Fleance (Flanis). The witches (Klevas) tell Banquo (Banekhu)
that his kids and his kids' kids are going to be kings (bigfala jifs)
in the future (bambae). The only child we meet is Fleance, and he gets
away, but then some arse makes Malcolm (Melekem) jif (king, I mean). I
don't think the New Millennium Wol wants to be served this sort of
dramatic sloppiness, so I've fixed that. (Mi bin fiksimap.)"

-- 
"Images have limits.  i am grateful for that." --Catherine Milne



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread jduncan

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 05:27:17PM +0100, Dominic Mitchell wrote:
> On Fri, May 18, 2001 at 02:18:16AM +1000, Ian Brayshaw wrote:
> > I saw Craig Charles at the Melbourne Comedy Festival a couple of years ago 
> > and it was a waste of time and money. He walked out on stage, said he was 
> > p1ssed, drank beer in front of the audience for an hour, occasionally 
> > screamed juvenile jokes centred around his "manhood", then suddenly declared 
> > that he'd had enough and swaggered off stage. Complete w4nker, really, given 
> > the price of the tickets.
> 
> I have to concur, having forked out good money to see him in Brighton.

I met him on the beach in Weymouth once.  He was marching around drunk, shouting
at everybody to tell them/us how famous he was.  Not very funny really.

--james 


 PGP signature


Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Dominic Mitchell

On Fri, May 18, 2001 at 02:18:16AM +1000, Ian Brayshaw wrote:
> I saw Craig Charles at the Melbourne Comedy Festival a couple of years ago 
> and it was a waste of time and money. He walked out on stage, said he was 
> p1ssed, drank beer in front of the audience for an hour, occasionally 
> screamed juvenile jokes centred around his "manhood", then suddenly declared 
> that he'd had enough and swaggered off stage. Complete w4nker, really, given 
> the price of the tickets.

I have to concur, having forked out good money to see him in Brighton.

Now Ken Campbell was worth watching, but a bit of a head fuck.

-Dom



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread will

- Original Message -
From: Ian Brayshaw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2001 11:18 AM
Subject: Re: pc components


> will <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote something that looked like the
following:
>
> >Apparently it is Craig 'Red Dwarf' Charles's regular and he was
> >there a few weeks ago when we were there. Not as pretty as Buffy or
> >Willow about as close as you can get (sort of).
>
> I saw Craig Charles at the Melbourne Comedy Festival a couple of years ago
> and it was a waste of time and money. He walked out on stage, said he was
> p1ssed, drank beer in front of the audience for an hour, occasionally
> screamed juvenile jokes centred around his "manhood", then suddenly
declared
> that he'd had enough and swaggered off stage. Complete w4nker, really,
given
> the price of the tickets.

His stand up comedy is a big pile of turd and he looks like a hampster, but
it was wierd seeing *Lister* in the pub all the same.  He may be a tosser
but Red Dwarf was great.

will.

(who'd like to meet Buffy AND Willow a dark alley all at the same time...)





RE: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Robert Thompson

> From: Ian Brayshaw 
> (who'd like to meet either Buffy or Willow in a dark alley...)


The man has a death wish...


---
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Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Ian Brayshaw

will <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote something that looked like the following:

>Apparently it is Craig 'Red Dwarf' Charles's regular and he was
>there a few weeks ago when we were there. Not as pretty as Buffy or
>Willow about as close as you can get (sort of).

I saw Craig Charles at the Melbourne Comedy Festival a couple of years ago 
and it was a waste of time and money. He walked out on stage, said he was 
p1ssed, drank beer in front of the audience for an hour, occasionally 
screamed juvenile jokes centred around his "manhood", then suddenly declared 
that he'd had enough and swaggered off stage. Complete w4nker, really, given 
the price of the tickets.


Ian
(who'd like to meet either Buffy or Willow in a dark alley...)


_
Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com.




Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Martin Ling

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 03:42:43PM -0500, will wrote:
> 
> rm -f zig
> 
> ?

No!

for GREAT_JUSTICE in $WAY_TO_DESTRUCTION; do mv zig $WHAT_YOU_DOING; done


Martin



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Philip Newton

will wrote:
> rm -f zig

mv zig/* CATS/ , surely?

Cheers,
Philip
-- 
Philip Newton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
All opinions are my own, not my employer's.
If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread will

- Original Message - 
From: will <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2001 4:47 PM
Subject: Re: pc components


>Not as pretty as Buffy or Willow about as close as you can get (sort of).

In terms of celebrity status I mean.  Quick, someone pass me a shovel.





Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread will

- Original Message -
From: Dean S Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2001 10:51 AM
Subject: Re: pc components


> >>If your in London then forget mail order and go to TCR on a
> Saturday,
> >>you get to take home what you pay for and with the drop in spending
> >>lately its getting easier to haggle the price down.
>
> >Are you refering to the 'computer fair' or just TCR in general?
> Both to a degree. From the shops I've been in recently it seems that
> they are more willing to drop the price a bit than see you go to one
> of the fairs. For once the consumers the winner.

I got a 30Gig 7200 RPM (Samsung I think) disk for £95 at the fairs.  Works
like a dream.

The Geek meet afterwards in a nearby watering hole is good fun too.
Apparently it is Craig 'Red Dwarf' Charles's regular and he was there a few
weeks ago when we were there.  Not as pretty as Buffy or Willow about as
close as you can get (sort of).




Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Dean S Wilson

-Original Message-

From: Jonathan Peterson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


>At 14:48 17/05/01 +0100, Dean wrote:

>>If your in London then forget mail order and go to TCR on a
Saturday,
>>you get to take home what you pay for and with the drop in spending
>>lately its getting easier to haggle the price down.

>Are you refering to the 'computer fair' or just TCR in general?
Both to a degree. From the shops I've been in recently it seems that
they are more willing to drop the price a bit than see you go to one
of the fairs. For once the consumers the winner.

The fairs do a more mixed selection of stuff than the shops do, where
you go depends on what your looking for.

>Also, if any London person is unaware of it, the shop CEX (Computer
>EXchange) on TCR (just north of Goddge St Stn) sells excellent 2nd
hand
>hardware, are very knowledgeable, will accept returns with no hassle,
and
>have never let me down etc etc etc.

And they do a nice selection of cheep DVD's.


Dean
--
Profanity is the one language all programmers understand.
   ---  Anon





Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread will

- Original Message - 
From: Martin Ling <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2001 9:25 AM
Subject: Re: pc components


> On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 02:41:06PM +0100, Dominic Mitchell wrote:
> > 
> > > > find / -name "*your_base*" -exec chown us:us {} \;
> > > 
> > > If I had a penny for every variation on this sig I'd seen, I'd... er,
> > > well, I might have a cheap Mars bar. But still.
> > 
> > *mumble* xargs(1) *mumble*
> 
> find / -user you -name base -print | xargs chown us:us
> 
> is one of the more popular ones.
> 
> I haven't seen a really good one for SOMEBODY SET UP US THE BOMB yet.
> 
> apt-get install the-bomb doesn't qualify.

rm -f zig

?

:-)




Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Chris Ball

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 03:32:03PM +0100, Simon Cozens wrote:
>> apt-get install the-bomb doesn't qualify.
> dpkg --configure ?

*laughs out loud in the middle of easyEverything* Nice one. :-)

~C.


-- 
Chris Ball.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] || http://printf.net/
finger: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I must not edit articles with vi.
I must not editarticles with thvi. I must not editarticles with vi.
I must not editarticles with thvi. jI must not editarticles with vi:wq:wq1




Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Jonathan Peterson

At 14:48 17/05/01 +0100, you wrote:

>If your in London then forget mail order and go to TCR on a Saturday,
>you get to take home what you pay for and with the drop in spending
>lately its getting easier to haggle the price down.

Are you refering to the 'computer fair' or just TCR in general?

Also, if any London person is unaware of it, the shop CEX (Computer 
EXchange) on TCR (just north of Goddge St Stn) sells excellent 2nd hand 
hardware, are very knowledgeable, will accept returns with no hassle, and 
have never let me down etc etc etc.

And they sell 2nd hand software too, esp. MS development stuff.



-- 
Jonathan Peterson
Technical Manager, Unified Ltd, 020 7383 6092
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Simon Cozens

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 03:25:22PM +0100, Martin Ling wrote:
> I haven't seen a really good one for SOMEBODY SET UP US THE BOMB yet.
> apt-get install the-bomb doesn't qualify.

dpkg --configure ?

-- 
"I don't think so," said Rene Descartes.  Just then, he vanished.



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Martin Ling

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 02:41:06PM +0100, Dominic Mitchell wrote:
> 
> > > find / -name "*your_base*" -exec chown us:us {} \;
> > 
> > If I had a penny for every variation on this sig I'd seen, I'd... er,
> > well, I might have a cheap Mars bar. But still.
> 
> *mumble* xargs(1) *mumble*

find / -user you -name base -print | xargs chown us:us

is one of the more popular ones.

I haven't seen a really good one for SOMEBODY SET UP US THE BOMB yet.

apt-get install the-bomb doesn't qualify.


Martin



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread AEF



On Thu, 17 May 2001, Alex Gough wrote:

> Simply have a habit of sending me things in a really big brown paper bag,

 Simply sent my HDD in a big brown box.

 Which was in a really big brown paper bag.

 Tony




Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Alex Gough

On Thu, 17 May 2001, Simon Cozens wrote:
> On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 11:03:35AM +0100, AEF wrote:
> >  When I last ordered a HDD from Dabs, they mailed me a couple of days
> > later to say that it wasn't in stock (there website said it was).
> 
> My motherboard from Dabs has spent two days "awaiting credit card clearance"
> and two days "awaiting despatch". It *is* in stock, it's just taking them
> four days - and counting - to get around to shipping it.
> 
> Simply aren't much better. Took them three weeks to get stuff in stock.

Simply have a habit of sending me things in a really big brown paper bag,
and while I quite like the Santaesque overtones, I'd prefer to see things
nicely wrapped so I don't receive more (albeit smaller) items than I'd
ordered.

Dabs are fine, but their shop lies.





Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Greg McCarroll

* Dean S Wilson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> -Original Message-
> From: Simon Cozens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
> 
> >My motherboard from Dabs has spent two days "awaiting credit card
> clearance"
> >and two days "awaiting despatch". It *is* in stock, it's just taking
> them
> >four days - and counting - to get around to shipping it.
> 
> 
> If your in London then forget mail order and go to TCR on a Saturday,
> you get to take home what you pay for and with the drop in spending
> lately its getting easier to haggle the price down.
> 
> And afterwards you can come to one of the almost weekly geek meets in
> a nearby pub.

I quote like the dabs site and will probably end up using them, unless
i find some nice shiny hardware shops in new yourk this weekend.

-- 
Greg McCarroll  http://www.mccarroll.uklinux.net



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Dominic Mitchell

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 02:36:58PM +0100, Martin Ling wrote:
> On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 11:01:11AM +0100, Chris Ball wrote:
> > 
> > find / -name "*your_base*" -exec chown us:us {} \;
> 
> If I had a penny for every variation on this sig I'd seen, I'd... er,
> well, I might have a cheap Mars bar. But still.

*mumble* xargs(1) *mumble*

-Dom



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Martin Ling

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 11:01:11AM +0100, Chris Ball wrote:
> 
> find / -name "*your_base*" -exec chown us:us {} \;

If I had a penny for every variation on this sig I'd seen, I'd... er,
well, I might have a cheap Mars bar. But still.


Martin



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Barbie

> Thinking of big hard drives...
>
> http://www.dabs.com/products/compare.asp?action=selected&prodtype=14
>
> Nice feature.

Bugger I bought a 41.1Gb IBM Deskstar the other month from Dabs and now
they've drop their price by £25.

Barbie





Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Dean S Wilson

-Original Message-
From: Simon Cozens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


>My motherboard from Dabs has spent two days "awaiting credit card
clearance"
>and two days "awaiting despatch". It *is* in stock, it's just taking
them
>four days - and counting - to get around to shipping it.


If your in London then forget mail order and go to TCR on a Saturday,
you get to take home what you pay for and with the drop in spending
lately its getting easier to haggle the price down.

And afterwards you can come to one of the almost weekly geek meets in
a nearby pub.

Dean
--
Profanity is the one language all programmers understand.
   ---  Anon






Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Simon Cozens

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 11:03:35AM +0100, AEF wrote:
>  When I last ordered a HDD from Dabs, they mailed me a couple of days
> later to say that it wasn't in stock (there website said it was).

My motherboard from Dabs has spent two days "awaiting credit card clearance"
and two days "awaiting despatch". It *is* in stock, it's just taking them
four days - and counting - to get around to shipping it.

Simply aren't much better. Took them three weeks to get stuff in stock.

-- 
>but I'm one guy working weekends - what the hell is MS's excuse?
"We don't care, we don't have to, we're the phone company."
- Ben Jemmet, Paul Tomblin.



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Robert Shiels

From: "Roger Burton West" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> On or about Thu, May 17, 2001 at 10:57:23AM +0100, Greg McCarroll typed:
> >
> >Does anyone have a recommendation for an online provider of PC
components,
> >i'm looking for a couple of big hard drives (50Gb+).
>
> I've had success with DABS - just make sure the thing's in stock before
> ordering.

I ordered something from dabs recently, it was in stock before the order,
and mysteriously not in stock afterwards. I cancelled the order. I'd
probably check online, and phone them just to make sure they really have it.

/Robert




Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread AEF



On Thu, 17 May 2001, AEF wrote:

> later to say that it wasn't in stock (there website said it was). However,
^

 Ugh! I can't believe I did that...

 Tony




Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Paul Sharpe

Greg McCarroll wrote:
> 
> Does anyone have a recommendation for an online provider of PC components,
> i'm looking for a couple of big hard drives (50Gb+).
> 
> --
> Greg McCarroll  http://www.mccarroll.uklinux.net

www.scan.co.uk

paul

--
Paul Sharpe   Tel: +44 (20) 7407 5557
Miraclefish Ltd.  Fax: +44 (20) 7378 8711
Studio 12 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
37 Tanner Street  http://www.miraclefish.com/
London SE1 3LF
UNITED KINGDOM



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread AEF



On Thu, 17 May 2001, Roger Burton West wrote:

> On or about Thu, May 17, 2001 at 10:57:23AM +0100, Greg McCarroll typed:
> >
> >Does anyone have a recommendation for an online provider of PC components,
> >i'm looking for a couple of big hard drives (50Gb+).
> 
> I've had success with DABS - just make sure the thing's in stock before
> ordering.

 When I last ordered a HDD from Dabs, they mailed me a couple of days
later to say that it wasn't in stock (there website said it was). However,
ordering the same thing from http://www.simply.co.uk/ worked.

 I need to buy a new ATAPI CDROM drive today (my old one won't read CDRs).
Is there anything choose between different models, or do I just get any
old one?

 Tony




Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Paul Mison

On 17/05/2001 at 10:57 +0100, Greg McCarroll wrote:
>Does anyone have a recommendation for an online provider of PC components,
>i'm looking for a couple of big hard drives (50Gb+).

Simply? Dabs? Although the former spam you a bit, and have atrocious
site design, and the latter have a ridiculously involved online buying
procedure- 'specify address', 'specify alternate address', 'specify
payment options'...

http://www.simply.co.uk/
http://www.dabs.com/

You could also try *warehouse, but I've not used them recently.

http://www.computerwarehouse.co.uk/

Thinking of big hard drives...

http://www.dabs.com/products/compare.asp?action=selected&prodtype=14

Nice feature.

--
:: paul
:: 'it's time to take a swim in Lake You'





Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Chris Ball

On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 10:57:23AM +0100, Greg McCarroll wrote:
> Does anyone have a recommendation for an online provider of PC components,
> i'm looking for a couple of big hard drives (50Gb+).

Dabs.com is fine. Scan.co.uk has great deals, but if you get some kind of
after-sales it seems you're one of the lucky few. I've got multiple orders
from both with no probs, but heard many Stories Of Badness about both, too.

~C.
 
-- 
Chris Ball.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] || http://printf.net/
finger: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
find / -name "*your_base*" -exec chown us:us {} \;



Re: pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Roger Burton West

On or about Thu, May 17, 2001 at 10:57:23AM +0100, Greg McCarroll typed:
>
>Does anyone have a recommendation for an online provider of PC components,
>i'm looking for a couple of big hard drives (50Gb+).

I've had success with DABS - just make sure the thing's in stock before
ordering.

Roger



pc components

2001-05-17 Thread Greg McCarroll


Does anyone have a recommendation for an online provider of PC components,
i'm looking for a couple of big hard drives (50Gb+).

-- 
Greg McCarroll  http://www.mccarroll.uklinux.net