I'm intrigued by the top hit:
<font size="-1">You want to play while she's in pain? ... Working Girl: United States: Registered nurse, yoga teacher, mother, passionate but somewhat inept vegetable ...</font> |
Not enough to click it at work, though.
I'm intrigued by the top hit:
<font size="-1">You want to play while she's in pain? ... Working Girl: United States: Registered nurse, yoga teacher, mother, passionate but somewhat inept vegetable ...</font> |
Not enough to click it at work, though.
Maybe it's a trojan o.O
Shut Down.app running in the background all the time.
@Quinnum said:
@rbowes said:From Capital One, of course! At least, that's what their contextual ads seem to detect!I'm not sure if this still happens, since I submitted it to error'd a couple weeks ago and I haven't had any indication that they're going to use it, so rather than wasting it I present it here.
I love those. It's just like when you put in some search results and you end up with an ad to 'buy <search term> here'.
In fact, here's one, just at hand! :-P
I think http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/01/24/ebay_african_slaves/ wins
@foxyshadis said:
Go to doom9 forums, and look up the posts of a guy named CruNcher. Every one of them is a single sentence, sometimes comprising hundreds of words in an impenatrable wall of text. The closest he gets to punctuation is smileys. Many are useful and informative, but no one can read all that.
Randomly selected post by CruNcher
If that's an impenetrable, unpunctuated wall of text, what's this? http://forum.phalanx-shadowmoon.eu/viewtopic.php?id=470
I agree with those that say deleted items are for, ehh, deleted items. Half my office use the deleted folder for keeping old stuff - assuming that 'delete' means 'get it off my screen but keep it just in case, no matter how many gigabytes of server space I'm occupying'. Personally I find it quite satisfying to delete everything permanently - once in a while I'll have a 'd'oh, I deleted it' moment but having 5,000 e-mails in one giant folder would be quite depressing. My solution at work: move everyone to an IMAP server. (No, this wasn't the only reason I did it, but it was a pleasant side effect). Outlook crosses through deleted items, forcing you to purge (which users actually do, because the line is so annyoing). If you want to archive something, you have to actually move it to another folder yourself (or set up a rule). No calls relating to deleted items for months.
As an aside, I did some work for a small company that was having great trouble with Exchange Server. Once a year, their internal mail server would fail completely and their uninformed solution was to reinstall Exchange. It seems they'd bought a stock Dell server with Small Business Server, installed on the default 12GB C: drive (including Exchange mail stores). Every January, people would get back from Christmas holiday and start e-mailing each other their holiday photos...