If every vampire who said he was at the crucifixion was actually there, it would have been like Woodstock.

Spike ,'Same Time, Same Place'


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

Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!


Sue - Jan 22, 2012 9:07:03 am PST #19272 of 25501
hip deep in pie

The UK Season 2 Blurays of Sherlock are regionfree. That should be fine in a Region 1 player, shouldn't it?


§ ita § - Jan 22, 2012 10:35:10 am PST #19273 of 25501
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Do many UK sets come region free nowadays, or is it a Blu Ray thing?


Sue - Jan 22, 2012 12:06:17 pm PST #19274 of 25501
hip deep in pie

The DVDs for Sherlock all seem to be Region 2, but the Blu-Rays are Region Free. Browsing the new Blu-rays at Amazon UK, a little under half seem to be region free.


tommyrot - Jan 22, 2012 12:49:53 pm PST #19275 of 25501
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Aren't movie release dates more consistant around the world these days, making the whole separate region thing less necessary?


Zenkitty - Jan 22, 2012 5:16:20 pm PST #19276 of 25501
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

The DVDs for Sherlock all seem to be Region 2, but the Blu-Rays are Region Free.

So any Blu-ray player would play them? Theoretically.


Typo Boy - Jan 22, 2012 9:20:04 pm PST #19277 of 25501
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

I've got a program that generates a word file with two columns,not a table, but columns. Only when I do a cntrl-a in word to select everything and then try to change the number columns to 1 (to get rid of the columns, so I just have one column) word gives me the message "must enter a number between 1 and 45". Word does see to let me get rid of the columns as long as I do one page at a time. And the result is still in the form of a six inch column rather than a normal document. So how do I actually get rid of the columns in a multi-page document, ideally not one page at a time. (Word 97).


Typo Boy - Jan 22, 2012 9:30:54 pm PST #19278 of 25501
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

Figured it out. There a little blank bit at the top not in columns. If I make sure to omit that and just select the rest of the document, which is all divided into two columns, then I can get rid of the columns. It is just including more than one format that prevents making changes.


Calli - Jan 23, 2012 1:03:01 am PST #19279 of 25501
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

The Sherlock S 1 and 2 box set is apparently region-locked, and has some play back issues on some US machines. Anyway, I like to travel, and if I see something that looks fun while I'm in Europe or whatever, it'll be nice not to worry about region issues.


tommyrot - Jan 23, 2012 3:42:58 pm PST #19280 of 25501
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Stupid user tricks 6: IT idiocy loves company

You'd think we'd run out of them, but technology simply hasn't advanced enough to take boneheaded users out of the daily equation that is the IT admin's life.

Whether it's clueless users, evil admins, or just completely bad luck, Mr. Murphy has the IT department pinned in his sights -- and there's no escaping the heartache, headaches, hassles, and hilarity of cluelessness run amok.

A fun read.

eta: There are also links to more stories. I can't stop reading them.


§ ita § - Jan 23, 2012 6:31:40 pm PST #19281 of 25501
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Jesus, those stories are appalling. Ignorance and pride makes people do some weird things.

I worked for an IT company with no one IT knowledgeable in management. They had a core team of 4 people who were guaranteed to work there no matter what. Everyone else there (including me) was disposable. None of the 4 people could do more than work Word. And they were offering networking, imaging, document management, custom development, and help desk for HP and IBM. There was only ever one guy there at a time, pretty much, who knew as much as I did. And I started there 2 years out of university, so I didn't know shit when I showed up.

JESUS. It was a constant battle with management, because they kept selling things that we couldn't deliver. They loved ideas--they were really easily seduced by charisma, big goals, and the promise of prestige. So I kept getting sold for things I couldn't do, and if I told them I couldn't do them, it was my fault, even if they never checked before.

I had a million paper certifications. I'm a good test taker, and they needed the certs to sell and service certain products. I got certified on hardware I'd never even seen more than a photograph of.

They sold a "solution" to a big telephony company, some vision of a customer management system based on a modular...something. Because one of the managers had sat next to a guy at a movie festival, and he talked a good game. So they went into business together. With a guy with nothing but sales experience and an idea that modular customer service applications were the next big thing.

They put me in charge of requirements gathering, which I could do, but had no oversight of scope or power to set boundaries or expectations. Requirements kept shifting, and they refused to pay for decent developers. I ended up with coders who kept telling me stuff couldn't be done, maybe because I wasn't a Java coder, and that was the platform someone who wasn't me had decided on.

I kept prototyping in PHP and handing it to the developers and saying that it must be possible, since I could frame the logic myself, and they kept pushing back. It gave me a really weird sense of limitations, and even 10 years later I'm still surprised by developers who shrug and say "Okay. We can do that." when I want to push back. The idea that solutions I can't envision are possible, when it used to be that only a subset of what I could pseudo code ever turned into anything....

The project with the unnamed telephony company never came to fruition, and I have no idea if they got any money from them for months of work and expenses that no one would listen to me when I said it was going nowhere with our resources...

When I announced I was leaving, my employees asked me what they were supposed to do now, and 1/2 of my management went into a blackmailing snit and withheld thousands of dollars of salary because she was so mad at me for leaving (despite her one word reaction to my resignation being "Good.") She threatened to have me deported unless I gave her thousands of dollars for something she'd made up that I owed her.

A few months after I left, they disbanded the company and left Michigan too.

Apparently they hadn't realised they could leave somewhere they hated until I did it. And, coincidentally, they had no senior IT knowledge anymore, and weren't willing to pay for it.

Oh, well.

And, really, that had nothing to do with the articles I read, but for some reason I couldn't stop typing.

TL/DR and away!