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Maybe I'm thinking of the VStudio download. I cannot remember now. But I just clicked a button and it said, "This will be 11GB" and I said, "I trust and obey, overlord-master-Microsoft..."
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That's still on the high side. According to the MSDN download page, the largest ISO amongst the different editions of VS2015 is under 7.5GB.
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Who'd of thought you need to keep your OS and tools updated?
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+5 for sarcastic answer/question.
I never knew I'd have to sharpen my knives or put oil in my car either.
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That's nothing. Look here.[^]. At the end of the video you even get to see how to deal with such an invasion.
The language is JavaScript. that of Mordor, which I will not utter here
This is Javascript. If you put big wheels and a racing stripe on a golf cart, it's still a f***ing golf cart.
"I don't know, extraterrestrial?"
"You mean like from space?"
"No, from Canada."
If software development were a circus, we would all be the clowns.
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Got a new ASUS for my daughter. It comes preloaded with win 10 home. Of course - no CD as per buying a laptop with Windows preinstalled.
Change the login password (user account). Wrote it down - confirmed it and all.
Reboot - input same password 6 times - "The password in incorrect. Try again."
Now what?
The verdict is still out on which is preferable:
a) setting up windows 10
or
b) sticking a nail gun to your forehead and letting her rip
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Or google for password recovery procedure and W10 ISO image is available on Microsoft site.
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I have my list of qualms about Windows 10 too, but I seriously doubt that the problem is Windows 10 in this case.
At the risk of sounding like an apathetic person, I think that you may likely have the same problem with Windows 7 / Linux Mint / Whatever OS needing a password to login.
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Mladen Janković wrote: Or google for password recovery procedure and W10 ISO image is available on Microsoft site.
Hard to do when you can't login, then replace IE's default search engine to Google so you can google, then download Chrome so you can find the address bar, then burn an ISO on a machine that doesn't have a DVD, not to mention one that can write to a DVD.
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: ...then burn an ISO on a machine that doesn't have a DVD, not to mention one that can write to a DVD.
Burn it to USB, use Rufus - Create bootable USB drives the easy way[^]>
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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You don't need Chrome nor to change IE/Edge's default search engine to get W10 installation image and it's easy to find address bar. If you don't have DVD drive, you can use USB flash drive.
Having another machine, to prepare for recovery process is expected, but I guess you deserve that when you're careless enough to screw password change process.
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Yes, but apart from that, it's a piece of cake.
Me, I'm still waiting for lenovo to send me a boot disc so that I can undo the wreckage that fastboot (which makes winio the Fastest Windows Ever!)(to kill machines stone dead) caused.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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23741 wrote: a) setting up windows 10 That costs a lot of time and solves one problem, maybe.
23741 wrote: b) sticking a nail gun to your forehead and letting her rip If your aim is good, it'll solve ALL of your* problems within a few seconds.
I'll leave the choice up to you
* Others might experience a small inconvenience though.
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The only thing I could imagine is that the input method was changed accidentally (somehow Alt+Shift was pressed?). But this could be true only if you have multiple languages installed.
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I seriously doubt it was caused by a bug.
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It is my thought as well.
But I imagined that the only situation where the user presses the correct keys and the password entered is wrong could be when the input method is changed since that could essentially change the language.
I was going to say that the password being entered was probably wrong, but I figured Windows was already doing an exceedingly good job of it.
modified 28-Aug-16 20:45pm.
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I've seen that happen a few times, where the input method switched from English US (the more-or-less default layout for keyboards) to English UK, which has a lot of the non-alphanumeric chars in different places.
Of course, if moronic security "experts" didn't insist that you use non-alphanumeric chars in passwords, that wouldn't be a problem.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Oh I guess I know: your password contains at least one non-US-English character, ähm? See the Insider News just a few days ago: Outlook Globalization[^].
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Bingo. The password had non alphanumeric characters including a dollar sign.
If Microsoft spent 1 percent of the time doing QA on their software that they do on the spy machine - maybe things would be different.
All the older MS devs that have left MS are laughing their asses off at what MS has become.
Got Win 7 Pro installed - I lobotomized a few things to reduce the chatter on the wire and she's purring.
Windows 10 reminds me of the movie Deliverance - "This river took a bad turn". And we all know what happens to Ned Beatty in the end..
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