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So the Docker saga continues. Turns out Hyper-V totally ed my video drivers or something, so NetFlix and "streaming" became a contradiction in terms.
Disabled Hyper-V (a much less painful process than enabling it) and uninstalled Docker. Yet, WTF, there is still 20GB of docker crap left in the ProgramData folder.
And it can't be deleted -- the typical "Administrator access is required" but my user account is an administrator BS in Windows. Find a post on the Docker forum that basically says "yeah, deleting ProgramData\Docker is really hard, we could do a better job of it, you should use docker rmi before uninstalling Docker." Or something like that. Great, if there's a command I can run manually, why can't the uninstaller run it?
So more Googling, trying to take ownership of the file (fail) and I find this post that basically says:
- Boot into Safe mode. (Figuring out how to do that in W10 was yet another Google and 5 screens of restart options.)
- After reboot, do a "robocopy" of ProgramData\Docker to somewhere else. In other words, wave magic wand.
- After the robocopy finishes, you can remove the directory with
rd /S /Q (include subfolders, and don't prompt for every freaking folder.)
What do you know, that worked. I've now reclaimed the 20GB that Docker for Windows failed to install.
Message to Microsoft: There are some things that the Linux world does so much better than you, you'll never catch up, so stop trying.
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You should Google Sergei Strelec, he has a bootable ISO with 32 & 64 bit versions of Windows 8 & 10. Once booted from USB or DVD you can safely what you want on your HDD.
Note Sergei may be a bit dodgy and downloads with Chrome don't need the desktop software.
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So I had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash One Fine Saturday. 24/04/2004
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Has Anyone Seen Mike Hunt wrote: You should Google Sergei Strelec,
Hmmm, that certainly raises some red flags for me.
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Marc Clifton wrote: Hmmm, that certainly raises some red flags for me.
Yeah, but I didn't catch anything from the site and the bootable windows is a great replacement for Hiren's Boot CD that won't work on any near new hardware.
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So I had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash One Fine Saturday. 24/04/2004
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Marc Clifton wrote: Message to Microsoft: There are some things that the Linux world does so much better than you, you'll never catch up, so stop trying. Don't they already do everything to drive us into the arms of Linux? They want only helpless and uncritical Muggles as users.
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats.
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It could have been so much simpeler; boot from your Ubuntu-partition, go to the folder and delete
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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Sounds to me like a docker service is still running and has a handle on the file directory you are trying to delete. stop the service and you should be able to delete the files.
Just a thought. I could be wrong. This has happened to me with other products, and a background service that didn't get deleted when I uninstalled was the issue.
Edit: lol. I read the "entire" post this time, and it seems you fixed the issue.
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Marc Clifton wrote: After reboot, do a "robocopy" of ProgramData\Docker to somewhere else. In other words, wave magic wand. Robocopy is useful for deleting "difficult" directory structures. These include any with paths longer than 260 characters, since neither Windows Explorer nor the command prompt support the NTFS "long" path name construct (prefix names with \\?\ and you get up to 32,767 characters in a path).
C:\> md C:\Tmp
C:\> robocopy C:\Tmp C:\funky_ass_folder_I_cant_get_rid_of /MIR
C:\> rd C:\funky_ass_folder_I_cant_get_rid_of
C:\> rd C:\Tmp The /MIR option tells robocopy to 'mirror' the source folder to the destination, which deletes any files and folders which don't exist in the source. In this case it empties the destination folder. The magic part is that robocopy does support and use internally NTFS long path names.
Software Zen: delete this;
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As the northern latitudes plunge ever further into darkness, the black dog draws near. Oh joy! It's S.A.D. time again!
For the last few years, I've been taking vitamin D supplements through the winter and find them a big help (I now just get mildly dispirited and somewhat grouchy whereas I used to be plunged into absolute despair) but I'm a tad more skeptical about some of the other remedies on offer.
Has anyone had any experience with light boxes, daylight alarm clocks and the like?
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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Two rather interesting articles, thank you.
I shall begin work on my electronic trousers quite shortly. Don't be surprised if you hear a very load yelp at some point - I'm not very good at hardware problems!
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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I'm in the UK, no point in asking me, its SAD here all the time.
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PeejayAdams wrote: Has anyone had any experience with light boxes, daylight alarm clocks and the like?
Yes, I got some full spectrum florescent lights a few years ago that worked like a charm (yes, they worked like a light, but I mean with my SAD issues.)
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Somehow, I'm inclined to suspect that more general ambient lighting solutions are going to be more effective than half-hour blasts from a light box.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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Chocolate fixes everything. It is the duct-tape of medicine.
There are two kinds of people in the world: those who can extrapolate from incomplete data.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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I use a light timer as my primary alarm clock. The light has a couple of compact fluorescents in it. They switch on a little more abruptly than I'd like, but at least they don't come on at full brightness, taking a few minutes to ramp up to full as they warm up. I skipped the the daylight alarm clocks because all the ones I could find had pretty feeble lighting, and I found that on some mornings, I need something a bit brighter than they could possibly get to get me alert. Its positioned so I can roll over and stare directly into the light for those mornings when I'm especially groggy. I got one of the fancy digital timers so I can program it for different hours on different days -- that way it never wakes me up on the weekends. For a lot of years, I set an audible alarm clock to go off 5 minutes before the lights did, that way, the abrupt switching on of the light didn't shock me because I'd already be awake.
At one time, I tried the lightbox thing, and while it helped, it was inconvenient for me since I would be stuck where it was located, and it didn't help me wake up, which is the part I find the hardest.
One of the other engineers I used to work with had light wings that attached to the sides of her monitor. I've considered something like those.
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I've been tempted by the daylight alarm approach (I don't think I'd mind it not being particularly bright), though I do wonder if it would get me overly used to waking up when it gets light, which could be a pain in the summer. That said, I tend to wake up a few times in the night anyway - so maybe not such a big problem.
Your colleague's wings sound rather distracting, to be honest, but maybe the article that Lopitir posted suggests that a lamp below the desk (assuming that a little flesh can be bared) might be a way to go.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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There's room darkening shades and curtains you can get to keep the dawn light out during summer.
Like I said, the light wasn't what I was using to wake up, only what I was using to stay awake and become alert enough to function -- the audible alarm is what woke me up. If I slept through the audible alarm, then the abrupt turning on of the light timer would shock me awake. Not the most pleasant way to wake up, but obviously, I needed a bit more prodding that morning. I found that if the light ramped up slowly like dawn does, and there was no audible alarm clock to wake me up first, then the light didn't wake me up. This way, I could get up at the same time every morning whether dawn was two hours before, or an hour after, when I needed to get up.
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every day right after I wake up, before everything else, 10 minutes intense physical exercise. Same thing in the evening. Computer nerds don't use their muscles enough. That's about it.
modified 20-Oct-19 21:02pm.
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Wow I'm over 60 and I've never heard of SAD, it must be one of those new fangled disorders that have only acquired a name in the last decade and I've been living on the equator for that time, no seasons.
However I worked in London for a couple of years, get up in the dark, get home in the dark and have lunch in the insipid sunshine they have in winter, didn't make me depressed though.
I have sympathy for anyone suffering depression but I don't understand it.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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In the immortal words of Mr. Marley: "Them who know it, feel it."
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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A few years ago I one day came home from work, sunk down in my recliner and loudly cursed the darkness. Tben I decided to lit a candle... I went out to buy two of these floor standing "mother and child" lamps, with a 300 watt halogen bulb in in a ceiling directed reflector (the ceiling definitely should be white!) and 50 watt halogen line on a flexible arm. With a total of 700 watts of halogen light, there wasn't much darkness left to curse
My mood changed completely from one day to the other: Coming in from the dusk outside into the bright light, it was like going into a summer! Later, I added a lot more light in my kitchen, in the entrance and bathroom. I have ceiling mounted halogen reflector bulb light to light up my bookshelves and cupboards. Now the dark season doesn't bother me at all.
I do have friends who feel blinded by all my light, so when I have guests, I often reduce the light (all those halogen lights are adjustable). Some people want the "cozyness" of the darkness and shade when they move indoors, in particular those from southern countries. In my everyday life, I crank the light all the way up as soon as I come home.
700 W of halogen light in a living room (plus the extra for the bookshelves and cupboards) draws some electricity. Compared to other countries, we have cheap electric power: All costs and fees typically adds up to 10 US cents per kWh. Keeping my living room lit is worth 7 cents/hour! Also,
here at 63 degrees north (the polar circle is at 66 degrees), at winter time you need heating for your house as well as light, and those 700 W ends up as heat. (Sure enough: Most of the heat is directly underneath the ceiling, but with bedrooms on 2nd floor the heat dissipation certainly comes to use.
And then we should think of what we get in return for that dark winter! I've got a T-shirt with the text "North Norway summer - the greatest day of the year".
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I think 700W of light would drive me batty, but I must admit that I probably do underlight my house - I'll certainly try a slightly less radical upgrade.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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Google (US) for "light visor for seasonal affective disorder" brings up a few different products. Portable vs. a fixed light location.
There is a great "Northern Exposure" episode where the local doctor hands out light visors to fend off SAD.
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