Sunday, December 30, 2007
Months Have Past...
Months have past and I have not posted a darn thing and there is so much to say. I hope to get to posting quickly and regularly after the start of the new year.
Thanks for being patient...
Monday, April 2, 2007
Windows Vista and Office 2007
- Macromedia Dreamweaver MX - Some functions don't work properly - Solution: It is time for me to upgrade
- Adobe Acrobat 6 - Does not work properly in Vista - Solution: Adobe 7 and 8 work fine time to upgrade.
Those are the ONLY applications that I use that have issues. I really can't complain if I am using software that is 3 versions old if it is not supported in a new OS. There are, however, a number of current applications that my clients use that are not supported in Vista, these are mostly smaller software companies who waited too long to develop for Vista...Shame on them for being so far behind. Shame on MS and Retailers for not making XP systems readily avalible, maybe these companies will learn in the future before the next OS release to be more prepared.
The long and the short of it.... So far, I really like the operating system, there are some really cool things, a neat new look and some fun tools. Is switching to Vista going to increase your productivity, probably not... but it will give you a new outlook on your computer, just like XP did when it came out with the new look in 2002. I look forward to some of the software companies getting on the stick and making the products that my clients use function in Vista.
- Cool new look
- Tough to find formatting and tools menus but once you find them, easy to use
- Lots of cool new productivity functions
- BAD BAD - New file formats for .doc etc files that are not backwards compatible without a conversion tool. Need to save files that you will be emailing or sharing in old format so everyone with office 2003 back can read them.
Get your prices down Microsoft, your products, though good, are WAY too expensive when there are other MAC and Open source options for people to utilize out there.
Monday, March 19, 2007
You'll never look at flying the same way!
(Taken from Fox News - 3/19/07) A British Airways passenger travelling first class has described how he woke up on a long-haul flight to find that cabin crew had placed a corpse in his row.
The body of a woman in her seventies, who died after the plane left Delhi for Heathrow, was carried by cabin staff from economy to first class, where there was more space. Her body was propped up in a seat, using pillows. The woman’s daughter accompanied the corpse, and spent the rest of the journey wailing in grief.
Paul Trinder, who awoke to see the body at the end of his row, last week described the journey as “deeply disturbing”, and complained that the airline dismissed his concerns by telling him to “get over it”.
“It was a complete mess — they seemed to have no proper plans in place to deal with the situation,” said Trinder, 54, a businessman from Brackley, Northamptonshire.
The woman died during a nine-hour flight on a Boeing 747. Trinder was catching up on sleep when he was woken by a commotion and opened his eyes to see staff manueuvering the body into a seat. “I didn’t have a clue what was going on. The stewards just plonked the body down without saying a thing. I remember looking at this frail, sparrow-like woman and thinking she was very ill,” said Trinder. “She kept slipping under the seatbelt and moving about with the motion of the plane. When I asked what was going on I was shocked to hear she was dead.”
The woman’s daughter and son-in-law arrived soon after and began grieving. Trinder said: “It was terrifying. I put my earplugs in but couldn’t get away from the fact that there was a woman wailing at the top of her voice just yards away. It was a really intense, primal sound. “I felt helpless. Grief is a very personal thing; it’s not as if there was anything I could do or say.”
After the plane landed, those in first class remained on board for an hour before police and a coroner gave the all-clear. “The police even started interviewing me as a potential witness, although I had no idea what had happened to the woman. I just kept thinking to myself: ‘I’ve paid more than £3,000 for this’,” Trinder said.
When contacted by BA about the complaint, Trinder says he was told he would not be compensated and should “get over” the incident. BA said the dead woman was taken into first class because the rest of the plane was full.
A spokesman said: “When a customer passes away on board it is always difficult and we apologize for any distress caused.” He said there were about 10 deaths each year out of 36 million passengers.
Other carriers use different procedures. Singapore Airlines has introduced “corpse cupboards” on its Airbus 340-500 aircraft. Cabin crews use the locker if there is no empty row of seats to place a corpse.
RAID - It's not bug spray!
How can this be a lifesaver for someone like me? Since both drives act as one...They are both getting the same data written on both drives. Well after 3 server drive failures and a current upgrade that I am working on now, it makes the times that you have to do disaster recovery few and far between. In a RAID 1 array, which I use lots, if one drive fails, the server (or computer) keeps running withought skipping a beat just with one drive functioning, this gives you time to replace the failed drive with a new one and keep moving along. No need to replace the operating system etc. When you have to upgrade, it is usually as easy as imaging the old drive(s) on to the new one and off you go. (This is what I am doing now and I am in the hurry up and wait stage - waiting for Data to copy over.) Just thought I would share another day in the life of Graham with a boring Techie Post!
Have a great one!