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A Grinch?
If you have an important point to make, don't try to be subtle or clever. Use a pile driver. Hit the point once. Then come back and hit it again. Then hit it a third time - a tremendous whack.
--Winston Churchill
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Same here
Never can be bothered to set up and definitely not spend money on it so...
Tom
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All decorations were taken down and carefully packed away on New Years day.
This space for rent
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I'm plan ahead and my wife is rush through.
Which usually means that when I have a plan it's already rushed through.
Which in turn means I'm sitting in an "orderly" house where noone can find anything, and I'm just bugger all about everything.
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I'm the kind of person who makes little 'cardboard carriers' to wrap the lights around and prevent tangles ...
"State acheived after eating too many chocolate-covered coconut bars - bountiful"
Chris C-B
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Kitchen roll tubes: make a cut about 2 ~ 5 cm long at one end, and use it to hold one end of the stringy stuff. Wind it on, then Sellotape the other end in place.
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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It's not just me then!
"State acheived after eating too many chocolate-covered coconut bars - bountiful"
Chris C-B
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I was thinking of keeping it till Jan end to get a bit more of that Christmas feel ? why rush it ? (this should not be interpreted as laziness)
Caveat Emptor.
"Progress doesn't come from early risers – progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things." Lazarus Long
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Plan ahead, always. Surprisingly enough, my wife is the same way.
Christmas stuff usually gets taken down within the first 2 weeks of January. Christmas tree pickup (special garbage collection) is the entire month of January.
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I am neither, I procrastinate forever. Then I rush and break stuff.
... such stuff as dreams are made on
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OriginalGriff wrote: So ... which type are you? "Plan ahead" or "Rush through"?
I'm a "plan to rush" kind of person.
Latest Article - Code Review - What You Can Learn From a Single Line of Code
Learning to code with python is like learning to swim with those little arm floaties. It gives you undeserved confidence and will eventually drown you. - DangerBunny
Artificial intelligence is the only remedy for natural stupidity. - CDP1802
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I'm from Minnesota and largely a plan a-header with a plan b or c at the ready.
I found My dear wife of 32 years on a Southerm California beach and finds planning to make the way straighter an affront to all that is cool. She's 56 and a fox still with 30 somethings hitting on her so yeah. I roll with it.
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Huh, maybe we married the same woman...
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I jst took the whole (small and artificial) christmas tree and stuffed it into its box until next year. Lights, ornaments and 3D printed Death Star tip still on it.
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats.
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First point - I plan ahead by nature - it is, to put it mildly, very under-appreciated by nearly everyone (except my IT Director). For example, what's wrong with allowing more than twenty minutes for a twenty minute trip?
If I had such decorations, I'd think ahead when the time came to install them, planning fully for the reversion to their stored state . . . and just leave them in their boxes.
But - and how many of you are victims of this:
If Mrs. Wife wants something put away and I don't do it until the time is right, she may well do it for me. Then, when I ask her where it is, she will tell me with absolute certainty, the wrong place at least a few times. By accident or design? I don't have the b@lls to ask.
Ravings en masse^ |
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"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you are seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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W∴ Balboos wrote: By accident or design? I don't have the b@lls to ask.
"State acheived after eating too many chocolate-covered coconut bars - bountiful"
Chris C-B
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W∴ Balboos wrote: ... when I ask her where it is, she will tell me ...
All I get is "well I don't know what you've done with it".
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Plan ahead.
In my house, Mrs. Wife comments on how there aren't enough lights here or too much tinsel there while I put up the tree.
I also take down the tree, carefully putting ornaments back in their original boxes, each string of lights and tinsel in its own bag.
There's a system to it, carefully arrived at after 30+ years of the holidays.
Software Zen: delete this;
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Were it up to me, they wouldn't be up at all. What goes up most come down, why do that when the end result is not having anything up anyway?
I do the minimum -- get the tree out of the garage, set it up, wait for her to position each needle precisely, then get dizzy by putting on the lights. After that, it's up to her.
At some point, I get dizzy by removing the lights, box the stupid tree, and haul it right back out to the garage.
"If you put it up, leave it up!" I say.
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I look around to see if someone else has worked out a solution and just use theirs.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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... so that's how CodeProject got started!
I'm retired. There's a nap for that...
- Harvey
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I'm the wrap and roll type
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I bought a Macbook Pro to replace my beloved Macbook Air. I loved that Air, but it was getting a little long in the tooth. I had huge expectations that the Pro would be bigger, badder, faster, and just plain better.
It's not. It's absolute crap if you want to use Bootcamp / win10.
It's USB C only, meaning connecting it to an external display only works reliably if you reboot before you plug in. The trackpad constantly thinks left click is right click. The screen brightness constantly osculates as it tries to auto-adjust and I get about 3-4hrs max on battery when using Visual Studio.
I use *exactly* the same setup on the Air and had insane battery life and no problems whatsoever with displays or the trackpad.
So I disable auto-brightness, I bring a mouse with me if I can, plus a charger. Plus all the dongles, of course. And I shut down everything when I need to switch displays (ie each time I switch from home office to Office office).
It does, however, work brilliantly when in macOS. You get the lovely double-click pressure on the trackpad, USB-C hot swaps nicely. Font sizes just work on HiDPI screens.
So I decided maybe I should just stay in macOS and use Parallels. All the marketing material says Parallels works fast. It's super easy to install. You can even use VS, ISS and SQL on a low-end laptop with 2 cores and barely enough RAM to remember its own name.
I dutifully downloaded Parallels. Within minutes I had my Bootcamp partition running in a window. A really, really tiny window. Making that window full screen gives you a big black window with a tiny Windows window in the middle. Must be a driver issue. Maybe that explains why I have no network, either.
I install the Parallel tools and reboot. Tiny window still there. Still no network connectivity. I try every option I can find. I try every network option. Every display option. I google and bing and duckduck and disable the folder sharing and tweak this and that and basically do all the simple, obvious things that the interwebz says you must to with Parallels. Still not really functioning properly. I go into coherence mode (Parallels, not me. I was not coherent at this point) so at least I can run and view apps.
My goal was to see how Visual Studio would behave. I had a stopwatch ready and had a coffee. I was assuming I'd need razor sharp reflexes to spot the change in app performance given what I'd read. I fire up Visual Studio. I load up our solution. And wait. And wait. And it loads. I open some files...slowly. And ... try ... and edit ... some code...
This isn't boding well. Maybe it's a mouse driver UI thingy. Raw compilation will let it shine.
So I hit the rebuild button.
And wait.
wait..
wait....
and wait......
A full build in Bootcamp takes about 45s. The build process in Parallels was slow enough that I actually stopped it halfway through and gave up.
My conclusions is: No, parallels will not let you run Visual Studio in a usable manner.
The corollary is, of course, that Bootcamp won't let you run Windows 10 reliably on the a Macbook Pro, either.
This stuff shouldn't be this painful. There are tens of thousands of people using these devices in a vaguely similar way and yet these big, blinding, out-of-the-box issues are there, and the companies involved have the resources to deal with it.
But they don't.
If anyone else had experience with Bootcamp on a Macbook Pro or Parallels and VS I'd love to hear about it. I am truly hoping it's just me, that I've done something bone-headed or forgot to set "run_fast=true" in a config file or something.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Chris Maunder wrote: I've done something bone-headed
Chris Maunder wrote: I bought a Macbook Pro
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