• First Thoughts on AWS and ThanksAJ.com is Back!

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  • Rooms In ALL Windows Phone Versions Are Going Away

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    scottalanmillerS

    Feature attrition. You heard it here first, folks.

  • Calendar entries are weird

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    DashrenderD

    I used the MS tools of the time to move to Exchange 2007, then migrated to Exchange 2010.

    I was guessing that too, that Exchange auto generated this for one reason or another.

  • Google BigQuery

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    scottalanmillerS

    Kinda like a hosted Hadoop cluster.

  • RPM and YUM Error On Updates

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    scottalanmillerS

    Pretty simple one to solve. Just needed to rebuild the database.

    rpm -vv --rebuilddb
  • Caps Lock

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    JaredBuschJ

    I so hate that key. I love where it is on my MacBook Pro with the Japanese keyboard.

    image.jpg

  • Linux file system hierarchy

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    tonyshowoffT

    @scottalanmiller Some are aware, but those who like the complex spelling tend to come from the point of view that memorising many spellings makes them intelligent, so a less complex spelling system would take that away from them. The astonishing part is that there is an obsession with spelling bees at all, the idea memorising a list of things makes on intelligent is just bafflingly bizarre.

    Then there are those who claim that complex spelling means that it creates English's vast vocabulary, and I've seen this even in conferences related to the English language. This takes almost no effort to figure out how logically moronic this is, the idea the spelling of a word influences whether or not the word exists.

    In college I went all the way to the Anglo-Saxon Studies program, primarily because the history of English was fascinating to me, because it's so unusual and complex compared to other Germanic languages. Hungarian, on the other hand, is barely any different than it was 1,000 years ago, and Hungarian needs some reforms, but compared to English, it's pretty easy, though spoken Hungarian is vastly more complex than spoken English. English is pretty easy to learn to speak, but really complex to learn to read/write. I've noticed a lot of people take pride in thinking "English is the most complex language" when it's absolutely not, it's pretty simple, though not as simple as Afrikaans or something, it's the spelling that slows people down.

    My daughters learned to read and write almost all Hungarian words by the age of 5, however even now my youngest at 7 still has a lot of difficulty with spelling more complex English words.

    Additionally, I hate how illogical-spelling -defenders say "the meaning is in the spelling" or "you can figure out the etymology from how it's spelled," this is 100% useless for children learning to read/write, and many times it's not even true.

    I mean "island" is that related to insula? Nope, it's from "iland" and the "s" was added arbitrarily to make it "look more Latin." A lot of this crazy shit goes back to the creator of the first dictionary who had a photographic memory and thought anyone else who didn't was "a moron." He intentionally screwed up spellings. Additionally, Dutch speaking printers who didn't speak English would arbitrarily add letters to words like "ghost" and "though".

    Why defend something so screwed up? Holy cow.

  • Disk2vhd and VirtualBox woes

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    @scottalanmiller Ah ha...finally I figured it out...I couldn't connect to a virtual switch because I hadn't created one yet.

    I found this tutorial on Hyper-V, http://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/2087-hyper-v-virtualization-setup-use-windows-10-a.html

    Part Three explains how to create a virtual switch.

    Part Five explains that Vista (and earlier) VMs have to be created as a legacy Windows VM. Which means having to "add hardware" in the VM settings and choose Legacy Network Adapter.

    And finally I was also able to enable quest services via Integration Services under the Management tab.

  • Adobe showing no love for Linux any more!

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    scottalanmillerS

    I think that you can keep using Google Chrome, even when Adobe abandons a platform.

  • Converting from VMDK to VHD(X)

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    scottalanmillerS

    I think that that is becoming less and less true. Quirky environments are becoming less and less the norm. The need to install locally is rapidly going away. There are still things that get installed locally but the variety and commonality is dropping at a prodigious pace and the isolation of programs is getting to be quite good.

  • Firewalls for single PC's

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    DashrenderD

    @scottalanmiller said:

    What issue did you have with XP? I've never heard of an issue with the XP firewall.

    The only issues I ever recall hearing about where that some where unhappy that XP didn't block outbound by default. And even today it's easy to setup. But then again I don't want normal users to do that to themselves anyhow.

  • VMUG Virtual Event - Coming to a Screen Near You

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    M

    @scottalanmiller said:

    Youtube Video

    LMBO!! Really Scott! lol!

  • Office 365: Password Policy

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    tonyshowoffT

    @JaredBusch said:

    I prefer a 12 month or non-expiring password but at least 16 characters long. Complexity can go fly a kite. Those only cause users to write things down.

    Finally! For a long time I thought I was the only person who enforced this policy. Even as a part of GPO on our domains I set it as minimum of 12 (due to the entropy at the time), but basically turned down the complexity. Even some of the more non-technical users have extremely complex passwords now that they don't need to write down, because I encourage four random words with maybe a number or two between them.

    And hey, if you wanna get inventive with the spelling, go ahead, if it's easier for you to remember, helps against broad dictionary attack as well. More experienced people will try cracking passwords with multiple words and even numbers, especially these days, but obviously even some crap like (3fOe38!45b is not only easy to crack, but also hard to remember, and I'm still baffled as to why this is encouraged. I'm sure you're aware of this, but I'm just saying it for people who may not realise that complex to remember does not mean complex to guess.

  • Clean Up Webroot Console

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    thanksajdotcomT

    I'd also like to remove the free consoles for Android...my phone uses the paid one.
    upload-abfefa89-7a13-4e18-a08b-fd49eca1b8f2

  • Ubiquiti Edgemax L2TP VPN Setup From CLI

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    JaredBuschJ

    Can someone go back and drop in a tab or 4 spaces in front of the lines to get the auto code detection to format those.

    On a related note, there must be a plugin for code inserts because I noticed some nice inline code formatting over on the nodebb forum.

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    JaredBuschJ

    Unfortunately, the phone is a Lumia 920 and not on the list.

  • 1 Votes
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    scottalanmillerS

    @coliver said:

    Nope, I wasn't thinking about it like that, thanks for pointing that out.

    If it was purely hosting on its own, then your staffing concerns would certainly be correct.

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    scottalanmillerS

    @ryanov said:

    Part of this is not correct. RHEL releases as often as not do not directly correspond to a specific Fedora release. I stumbled upon this myself when I tried to use Fedora packages in RHEL for some things (using packages for the same release of Fedora that the RHEL release was based on). Neither RHEL6 nor 7 was based on a single Fedora release:

    https://access.redhat.com/articles/3078

    True, they are starting to base it less closely now that Fedora has some additional testing that RHEL doesn't want to role in. SystemD is part of what caused this to change in RHEL 6. It's basically the same, still. Even if they based off of Fedora initially, it eventually skews as Fedora stops getting updates many, many years before RHEL does.

  • So you need a simple SMTP relay test? You can do it with P0werShell!

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    M

    Port parameter wasn't introduced until PowerShell 3.0, so you'll need to make sure you're on at a minimum of that before this will work. PowerShell 4.0 is the current version and 5.0 is coming out SOON. So if you're still on 2.0, upgrade now!