If it weren't for tweaking systems, and breaking specified behavior at
the same time, some members of development teams would have no purpose
at all. BTW, I haven't tried putting the regular reply button back on
Thunderbird since they broke it's behavior, is it still broken? Not
important,
> On 06 July 2019 at 21:47 Doug Brewer wrote:
>
>
> Typically, when this sort of situation arises, it's because some IT
> Kludgemonkey has decided to tweak a system setting with nary a thought
> about the consequences. Essentially, it closes a pipe and the flow of
> shit has to find a new
Typically, when this sort of situation arises, it's because some IT
Kludgemonkey has decided to tweak a system setting with nary a thought
about the consequences. Essentially, it closes a pipe and the flow of
shit has to find a new path.
It should clear up in a day or so.
I mean, who could
> On Jul 6, 2019, at 12:56 PM, Ralf R Radermacher wrote:
>
> Am 06.07.19 um 18:21 schrieb Bob Pdml:
>
>> what really matters to French people apparently is not the strike itself or
>> its causes and the underlying grievances, but the creative manner in which
>> the workers strike.
>
> The
I've googled "barracuda email" and it does appear to be a thing. I've also
googled the same thing plus "scam" and there's nothing obvious that says it's a
scam, other than that they seem like a protection racket, making money by
frightening people. I haven't visited their site, but they claim
I thought he had the same name as you...
> On 6 Jul 2019, at 20:36, mike wilson wrote:
>
> Vince says I am 100% the real deal.
>
>> On 06 July 2019 at 20:04 Bob Pdml wrote:
>>
>>
>> Ask his next-door neighbour...
>>
>>> On 6 Jul 2019, at 19:50, Mark Roberts wrote:
>>>
>>> Larry Colen
Vince says I am 100% the real deal.
> On 06 July 2019 at 20:04 Bob Pdml wrote:
>
>
> Ask his next-door neighbour...
>
> > On 6 Jul 2019, at 19:50, Mark Roberts wrote:
> >
> > Larry Colen wrote:
> >
> >> Interesting scam, because you did seem to succeed in writing to PDML.
> >
> > If he's
Here's the message that keeps bombing.
> On 06 July 2019 at 16:48 "P. J. Alling" wrote:
>
>
> It's PetaPixel, two sentences in and I want to take an ax to the
> author. Read the first comment and I want to hunt down and slowly
> torture the commenter to death. What a great way to start my
And the solo message bombed again.
> On 06 July 2019 at 20:22 mike wilson wrote:
>
>
> Bizarre. I did do a copy to Bob, which may have done something to their
> algorithm. Or it may have been the extremely rude message I sent on their
> website's chatline.
>
> So I've copied LRC into
Bizarre. I did do a copy to Bob, which may have done something to their
algorithm. Or it may have been the extremely rude message I sent on their
website's chatline.
So I've copied LRC into this but my next one will fly solo and I'll see what
happens.
> On 06 July 2019 at 19:38 Larry
Ask his next-door neighbour...
> On 6 Jul 2019, at 19:50, Mark Roberts wrote:
>
> Larry Colen wrote:
>
>> Interesting scam, because you did seem to succeed in writing to PDML.
>
> If he's really who he says he is, of course... ;-)
>
>> mike wilson wrote on 7/6/19 11:35 AM:
>>> I seem to be
It's all bollocks. If you're worried that they might steal your identity then
send me your bank details, password and other identifiers, and I'll take care
of them for you.
> On 6 Jul 2019, at 19:35, mike wilson wrote:
>
> I seem to be blocked from mailing to PDML by something called
Larry Colen wrote:
>Interesting scam, because you did seem to succeed in writing to PDML.
If he's really who he says he is, of course... ;-)
>mike wilson wrote on 7/6/19 11:35 AM:
>> I seem to be blocked from mailing to PDML by something called Barracuda. I
>> can unblock myself by sending a
Interesting scam, because you did seem to succeed in writing to PDML.
mike wilson wrote on 7/6/19 11:35 AM:
I seem to be blocked from mailing to PDML by something called Barracuda. I can
unblock myself by sending a barrage of personal information, which isn't going
to happen without further
I seem to be blocked from mailing to PDML by something called Barracuda. I can
unblock myself by sending a barrage of personal information, which isn't going
to happen without further evidence. Anyone know if this is genuine or just a
phishing exercise?
> On 06 July 2019 at 17:21 Bob Pdml
Am 06.07.19 um 18:21 schrieb Bob Pdml:
what really matters to French people apparently is not the strike itself or its
causes and the underlying grievances, but the creative manner in which the
workers strike.
The most important feature is always a big heap of wood or tyres in
front of the
> [1] I apologise to those of you who, like me, used to think that Nutella was
> actually squirrel shit in a jar, harvested from pristine hazelnut forests.
A natural mistake. We all know it’s the predigested form of Soylent Green, for
infants, now right?
G
—
No matter where you go, when you
The French love to strike, as do the Italians and the Greeks. I have had
vacations in all three countries that were effected, to some relatively
small degree, by strikes.
Dan Matyola
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/danieljmatyola
On Sat, Jul 6, 2019 at 12:21 PM Bob Pdml wrote:
> I once
I once made a short presentation to a French class about an ongoing strike at
the Nutella factory [1], but I was marked down because I didn't explain what
form the strike took; what really matters to French people apparently is not
the strike itself or its causes and the underlying grievances,
Thanks! A good article, well written. And for me, I was most pleased to see
that the author dispelled the old myth that showering is the best way to relax
and think great thought and make great discoveries. Breakfast with Nutella
works as well.
stan
> On Jul 6, 2019, at 4:31 AM, Larry Colen
It's PetaPixel, two sentences in and I want to take an ax to the
author. Read the first comment and I want to hunt down and slowly
torture the commenter to death. What a great way to start my Saturday.
On 7/6/2019 4:31 AM, Larry Colen wrote:
Mathematical discovery of a solution to spherical
Thank God for small mercies:
"calculated the efficacy with 500 rays, and the resulting average satisfaction
for all examples was 99.99%. Which, of course, is great news for gear
reviewers on YouTube, as they will still be able to argue about the
0.01% of sharpness difference
Mathematical discovery of a solution to spherical aberration. Mind you
it does nothing for the other sorts of aberrations on PDML, but it's a
start.
23 matches
Mail list logo