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Shirley you meant to write
Nagy Vilmos wrote: I for one preferred a gin. beer
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A gallon of unleaded for less £1?, 4* surely?
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Nope. When I first started riding motorcycles, fuel was 39p a gallon - and I could fill my tank and get drunk for under a fiver. Mostly because I could get drunk on very little alcohol - I hadn't built up the tolerance I developed in later years!
Hang on - I see what you mean. 4* - probably was in those days, yes. I remember buying 4* in preference to unleaded because it made the engine a little more powerful (and in those days every 1/2 mph counted!)
I assumed you meant "four times" as a rough conversion of litres / gallons
Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952)
Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)
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Yup I meant 4 star, just trying to be hipster on the keyboard!...
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IIRC beer was around 70p/pint when I first started going to the pub aged 18 in honestlyofficeritwasmybirthdayjustlastmonthIwasborn18yearsagohonest. I would go to the pub with £2 and often get laruped. This was not, as some may think, after two pints but more often 4-5. It was a buggerement that the guy I worked for also drank in the same pub and thought it funny to see how badly my head hurt the next day.
I would never condone operating a cement mixer with a hangover.
[edit]
This[^] is the b'tard! I'd recognise him anywhere!
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Never tried to operate a cement mixed hungover, I had difficulty focussing on the loo I had my head down, mostly.
Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952)
Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)
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It was not funny. Nor was hitting ladders with a hod on each shoulder when I could barely stand up.
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Hod on each shoulder ? No way
We can’t stop here, this is bat country - Hunter S Thompson RIP
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You doubt me? 10 bricks a hod, one on each shoulder, ladder at the right angle that you can climb without using your hands. I believe this behaviour is now shunned under elf n safety.
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Jesus, in my short building career I really struggled carrying one of them, it wasn't the weight so much but the hod rubbing on my collar bone and the shaft chafing the inside of my arm, I was obviously carrying it wrongly. Kudos to you carrying two.
We can’t stop here, this is bat country - Hunter S Thompson RIP
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I never said it didn't hurt!
I was at college at the time and I laboured in the holidays and sometimes at weekends. The guy paid me based on how much work he did. He could lay bricks as fast as I could get them to him, so my day was 8 hours of mixing muck and carrying bricks. Fittest I have ever been!
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Ditto ( I was at college ) and I'd not long broken my collarbone so all in all not a very wise choice of jobs - good fun though "proper work" not messing about with bits and bytes.
We can’t stop here, this is bat country - Hunter S Thompson RIP
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Ah yes I drank lots of HSB during my apprenticeship - firm but fair.
We can’t stop here, this is bat country - Hunter S Thompson RIP
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Rage wrote: Maybe the main loss of most modern PCs : the RS232 connector.
I have mixed feelings about RS232. It was often a PITA to work with but it also was more accessible than, say, USB or ethernet if for no other reason than its simplicity in interfacing to a UART.
What I definitely do not miss is looking up the local access number to Compuserve when I went traveling. Modems! *shiver*
Marc
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That does sound cool!
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As geeks, we're more interested in hearing about your clientelle.
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Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote: As geeks, we're more interested in hearing about your clientelle.
Whoa! Geeks are NOT supposed to be interested in those sort of things (otherwise known as g-i-r-l-s). Now where did I leave my pocket protector???
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: Geeks are NOT supposed to be interested in those sort of things
Geeks are always interested in those things. Whether we have the time for them, or they have the time for us, is a whole different matter entirely.
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Marc Clifton wrote: Geeks are NOT supposed to be interested in those sort of things
Oh yes we are - why do you think Seven of Nine exists?
Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952)
Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)
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OriginalGriff wrote: hy do you think Seven of Nine exists?
Ah, good point!
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: And that is why there are times this job of software development is truly fun and amazing (and very very geeky), when you put various pieces of technology together to solve problems, and it can be done nowadays from 3000 miles away!
Agreed. It's also the same feeling when a movie comes together considering hundreds of people put their hands in the pot to make one film.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: It's also the same feeling when a movie comes together considering hundreds of people put their hands in the pot to make one film.
Now if we could only get the gov't to do something so that I would have that same feeling.
But yes, I also get that feeling when I listen to a symphony (within certain qualifications!) -- I think it was Carl Sagan who made some commentary about how amazing it is to be able to get a group of human beings together and work together to play a symphony, and that it gave him a lot of hope for humanity.
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: Now if we could only get the gov't to do something so that I would have that same feeling.
You have a better chance of Pamela Anderson knocking on your door in the next 30 seconds.
Marc Clifton wrote: I think it was Carl Sagan who made some commentary about how amazing it is to be able to get a group of human beings together and work together to play a symphony, and that it gave him a lot of hope for humanity.
It's possible... with communication. Music is a form of pre-written communication so it's like nobody has to talk to pull off musical communication. One of the more interesting perplexities of life. It's like birds flocking in an order. They can't speak, but they just know. If they could, some birds would start going on about how some bird BF dumped a bird GF, etc. while they're trying to fly.
Jeremy Falcon
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We have an application that writes xml files when certain things happen.
We have an ESB that picks these files up, converts them to JMS and sticks them in a queue.
We have a Windows service written in VB.net that reads the messages from the queue, writes them into a SQL DB table, then processes the messages into other table(s).
All fairly simple stuff, but the powers that be have decided they want to remove the ESB, the woman who wrote the Windows service has just started maternity leave, no-one else in the team has any knowledge of what it does, nor the time to look at it.
So I volunteered.
I have never written, read, or looked at VB before, I have done plenty of C#, and even worked on a Windows service 6 or so years ago.
So I had a look at the existing code, quickly worked out which bit needed replacing and had a good idea what it needed replacing with. Hacked together something that looked like it should work in under half an hour, then tried to install the service on my Windows 7 box to test.
2 hours of googling, registry hacking, and swearing later I managed to install it. Started it up, dropped a file into the directory, and an error because it was in use by another process. To be fair, I had read a warning about such problems using FileSystemWatcher when I first started so began searching for a solution.
I found loads, some looked nice, some looked nasty, some just looked stupid.
But nearly all of them were in C#.
How do you VBers cope?
I'm sure that if you know C# and VB then it is simple enough to convert one to the other.
And if you do know both C# and VB, why the bloody hell not just do it in C# in the first place?
Anyway, it works now, taken me nearly 3 hours. Apparently when they had a meeting to decide what to do about the problem they thought it might take a few weeks so no-one wants the solution yet.
Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.
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