Who was the real power? The Captain? or Tenille?

Xander ,'Showtime'


Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."

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le nubian - Jul 07, 2011 3:06:01 pm PDT #17150 of 25501
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

I have att phone service (at home) and they have an iphone app (!) that alerts me when there are voicemail messages.

thrilling!

So I get notified once every 3 months that I have a message waiting and that message is usually from Att telling me there is a new feature on my acct that I don't need.


Vortex - Jul 07, 2011 3:29:02 pm PDT #17151 of 25501
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

I have to remember to not give out my home number, because I can let that voicemail go unchecked for weeks. Silly blinky light.

me too. That light will blink for weeks at a time.


Liese S. - Jul 07, 2011 5:50:41 pm PDT #17152 of 25501
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Yeah, the SO never checks his voicemail. Which irritates me to no end. He just calls the person back and says, hey, I saw your call, but I didn't get your message, and then the person has to say it all over again. And then if there were actions required, the SO has to hang up and do whatever and then call back.

So I never leave him messages.


Jon B. - Jul 09, 2011 4:43:05 am PDT #17153 of 25501
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

Anyone not on dropbox who'd like to be? I've found it a great way to share big files for free. I'm pimping it because I need even more than the initial 2GB they give you and I get extra space with each referral. So here's my referral link: [link]


Liese S. - Jul 09, 2011 6:10:00 am PDT #17154 of 25501
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Just be aware that dropbox recently changed its terms of service in a way that people are concerned about with regards to copyright issues. It's a loose phrasing, they request rights to your materials "as deemed necessary for the service" which was regarded as boilerplate for "so that we can present your content" but which seems broader than they needed for that purpose.

Between that and the privacy lapse (which I still never heard about from dropbox itself, only from third party sources) I am leaving them, myself.

I think it's still possible to use them effectively, and I found the service very convenient when I used it. But since the items I am storing there are not only subject to my copyright, but deeply sensitive (images of children, etc.) I am choosing not to. If you do, I suggest encrypting your data inside of dropbox. It is slightly riskier in terms of corruption, i.e. you'll have to do user management, but much safer since your data is exposed to dropbox staff all the time, and may be to the public if they goof again. [link]

eta: Okay, looks like I'm a day behind and after they clarified and clarified the clarification, they actually modified the terms again. [link]


Jon B. - Jul 09, 2011 6:47:02 am PDT #17155 of 25501
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

So, basically, we can ignore your post? ;)

Seriously, it seems like a good idea to encrypt sensitive materials stored on any cloud, regardless of its terms of service.


Liese S. - Jul 09, 2011 8:47:57 am PDT #17156 of 25501
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Yeah, completely! Give Jon extra space! Encrypt your data!


le nubian - Jul 09, 2011 9:08:17 am PDT #17157 of 25501
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

Jon,

I got something that might make your day.

[link]

You can access your online files, from several services, with one link. I have two dropbox accts (!!) and google docs, and box.net connected.


Jon B. - Jul 09, 2011 9:22:30 am PDT #17158 of 25501
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

That looks cool, but it's not relevant to my immediate need, which is to transfer a single multi-gigabyte file. Thanks, though.


§ ita § - Jul 12, 2011 7:04:48 pm PDT #17159 of 25501
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

This might sound like a weirdly specific request, and with the prevalence of gmail, I don't even know if anyone can help--I'm looking for an email client (yeah, I said client) that deletes spam from the server.

Back in the day when I ran old Eudora, I was set. The spam filter was pretty good, and it would delete anything deemed spam off the server so I could actually use mail clients from my phone and webmail clients directly off the hosted accounts and not have to sift through hundreds of spam messages a day.

Spam didn't used to be so bad, but since a couple of the recent database breaches I've seen an insane uptick (Genie bra and Aluma wallet, I don't care how good you are, I will just never buy you), and the server side stuff my vendor provides seems to only work to randomly bounce back my sister's email and not work on actual spam.

tl/dr: free email client w/ spam filter that DELETES from server y/y?

Or, alternatively, what happens in Thunderbird when you set the Junk Mail setting to Automatically Delete Junk Mail Older Than 0 Days? Is there a setting that makes it immediate?