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* Posts by Uwe Dippel

167 posts • joined Tuesday 23rd January 2007 06:30 GMT

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Uwe Dippel
Trollface

Let's face the music

Having used this piece of pretty much crap, yes, it is quite unusable and most of all Aunty Tilly will suffer heavily from it, maybe up to a heart attack. Because that new paradigm of continuously switching interfaces get's on everyone's nerves who is not yet insane.

But let's face it, it will be "cool" to the majority of dumbos who'll run after any most fashionable craze; even if they need therapy (or at least a batch of evening classes to master this abdominal nonsense). And yes, I didn't give up easily. And yes, I've been in IT for 30+ years.

Let's face it, I have given up on expecting users, I mean, the average user, to be sane. From thence it will make it, like The Tin Lizzy, which made it despite of its availability being limited to black colour.

So what we see here is an unseen combination of two interfaces: One can't touch, one can barely use because it is pimpled with overdimensional icons that you need to 'thumb' to reach. The best is the Settings. For those who have the .iso installed. Fantastic. I do it on my 24" screen, and I could be almost blind and yet see what I am setting. And scrolling like hell for other settings.

And yet, I know that I preach to the converted; the numbo-dumbos left and right will "love" what cannot, cannot at all, be loved.

What I'll do, is taking some GNOME 3.x around, and show it off as W8. And not mentioning the term "Linux", but adding a fake W8 background, and I'll be met with "Wow!!" (with a 'W' for 'Windows').

Branding, my dear compatriotes in the country of El Reg, is all. Branded s*** is "Wow" if only it is branded.

Uwe Dippel
FAIL

My observation

As regular lurker-around in the major IT-mall in Malaysia (no ads here!) I did watch a strikingly large number of Caucasian tourists rushing in grabbing explicitly a Galaxy Tab at the height of Apple's temporary success at preventing the sale in the home countries of these people. Back then I also mentioned casually to my partner that visibly these good people took the opportunity to lay their greedy fingers onto a piece of hardware, if for nothing else, then to impress the people back home. I myself was tempted to buy one, just for 'punishing' Apple. But then, it turned out I just wasn't childish enough.

Apple, you failed this one.

Uwe Dippel
Thumb Up

Birdie?

i think she could make it to my new birdie since El Reg abandoned the Asus Bird using her EEeeePeeeCeeee on the beaches.

Uwe Dippel
FAIL

... and if I am the only one here ...

I hate and don't use Gnome3.

But when I click that screenshot of the new Mint, I know all too well, that this cluttered mess-up is not going to take over my desktop.

What about KDE? Here it does what I want it to do.

Uwe Dippel
Pint

Good Bye, Palmisano - Hello Italian Lady II

Quite fast ascend for ladies with Italian-sounding names in these days. They don't hold for long, though, usually.

Uwe Dippel
Trollface

Open Source GUI Designers - @Andy

Yes, Andy B.

There are Open Source GUI designers. Gnome 1.x was actually pretty good, if not great for its time. Then metacity came along, and we all were told to do what metacity wanted us to. Because it was done by experts. Some of those found out that Gnome 2.x was tweakable; much too much for their taste. And since the future is tablets for all, we all need to use the greatest interface for fondleslabs, the very moment when finally Linux will conquer the desktop - with Gnome 3.

Oooops, and KDE is actually done by German engineers. And it is done to a great engineering height, no irony here. But in order to make it usuable, one has to start configuring it from scratch.

Uwe Dippel
FAIL

Then you think wrongly

Take it from me: when you rebuild anything patented and don't make any business use of it, like vacuum your own carpet, you are fine.

Uwe Dippel
FAIL

Never!

I would have wished for Matt to think beyond the edge of the plate that Microsoft has so cunningly provided for him to spout his laurels.

Yes, I have installed the latest Developer Edition, and it is quite nice - on Metro. But when I use it on my ...top, it is plain {four_letter.word}. Why would I have to accommodate some big, ugly, icons that my blind great-grandmother could click on - and subsequently scroll left-left-left respectively right-right-right - when any proper, easy mouse click will select one icon out of 100 on a single screen whenever I happen to have a mouse at my disposition?

The message is clear: nobody, and especially not the usual MS-using layperson, will want to learn two totally different interfaces. And even less would I want to give training courses; "one for with and one for without". iOS is much better already in this aspect, or check the latest KDE-plasma for netbooks. The latter is somewhat usable with a mouse, and likewise with a touchscreen.

*That* is what Microsoft would have to come up with (or what Steve B. ought to have ordered his developers to come up with). Everyone knows that a unified desktop UI is necessary, and MS looks like being the last to have it. Probably they will have to steal from someone else, as always before. As long as they believe in a switchable Metro, they believe in Father Christmas.

Uwe Dippel
Pint

Then go and buy one ....!

As one of the proud owners of the nanonote, I'd be happy to try the MilkyMist just as well ... .

Had a lot of fun with my nanonote and still have - partially. There is one major drawback, and - AFAICS - a blind spot on those who 'need' to sell 3000: If I had to have those numbers, I'd have known that the thingy needs to connect to a network, and cannot be just a piggy-back to another PC.

Uwe Dippel
Unhappy

I'll buy one ...

... if it runs Linux (Debian)

And I will stay here asking each and every time a fondleslab is being introduced.

Uwe Dippel
Holmes

Virtualisation is one thing ...

... usability another. You mix both. With a mouse one can relatively easily use an interface written for mouse use, and one can relatively easily access and click a zillion of buttons, links, drag, scroll and stuff. In short: very detailed structures are accessible. Try this with a finger! A mouse can access hundred different locations per one vertical line because its pointer arrow is very small. With a finger, and its diameter of easily half an inch, how many different locations can you distinguish vertically on a 10-inch screen? Not more than a dozen.

There is consequently no point to just run any application, if one needs an external mouse/keyboard as interface. So the interface paradigm of the tablet-based application needs to be fundamentally different. Look at the people left and right of you, when they 'thumb' through all those lists and screens, up and down and left and right. No user wants to learn two different interfaces for the same application.

Long story, short ending: no chance to run, like, MS-Office on a tablet, even if it runs.

It might even backfire, because the users will yell and scream if they can load the app, but not handle it.

Uwe Dippel
Linux

But ... Which one runs Linux (Debian)??

My usual question here, all the time. I want one that allows me to install Debian (Ubuntu).

Please, spare me the usual answers of 'Android runs a Linux kernel' and 'you could try in a chroot'.

Uwe Dippel
Thumb Down

Now,

what desktop did you switch your users to? Don't tell me an unmaintained Gnome

Uwe Dippel
Pint

... but, does it run Linux??

Serious. I checked for the Acer Iconia and the Asus Transformer; but nothing.

I'll buy the first one that runs, let's say, Debian.

Uwe Dippel
FAIL

Once a convert, always a convert ...

I can't believe the gist of this story. The Microsofties that I met, and the Microsofties that we have in our organisation, will defend the Beast From Redmond until their death.

When things go wrong in the colourful world of MS, and a new OS needs to be bought, these are the people who were happily shelling out the license fees for W2K, once their expenditure for ME was found to be wasted. They are even grateful and fork out the money with pleasure, thankful that Microsoft is willing to share The Most Advanced Operating System in this world with them. No kidding. And when I point out how Exchange is a dog to administrate, and that e-mail is no rocket science, and what they actually ought to do, is - almost nothing, because a mail server is supposed to 'just work', they'll tell me how thankful they are not to have to touch that dreadful *nix-command-line [I cite].

And this rambling could go on and on. No, I don't believe the message. I rather read the postings as trying to appeal to the Big Brother not to hit one with 50 strokes of the cane, but rather with 10 only. "Be kind to me, pleeeezzze, and make my boss and my users happy. I luv u, I luv u, I luv u!"

"Nobody has ever been fired for buying Microsoft" still holds water. Unfortunately. I can kind of understand the mindset of my colleagues sitting on MS products. You suffer like hell, but you have a secure job. No need to learn anything new. Qualification comes from a boot-camp.

It is overall not too convenient, but also not too bad. The bit of maso is hidden in most of us, and if you can bring it out, it feeds the family.

</sarcasm>

Uwe Dippel
Thumb Up

I really love Unity - at least on my 10" netbook!

... though I might hate it on my 24" monitor. I'll see after the upgrade.

It is really the best and most real-estate-efficient surfaces I have ever seen on traditional desktops.

I particularly like:

- the menu appearing as overlay on the titlebar at mouse-over

- the auto-hide launcher panel that allows me to start applications and switch between them, on the left (and not top or bottom!)

- the global menu that allows me to switch between desktop, launcher and menu (and grays out what is not accessible)

- The Desktop in the background, and that all items are still configurable (Gnome 3 anyone??)

- Yes, I also love the hanging scrollbars. With some hand-eye coordination it saves extra real-estate.

It clearly shows the intention: moving to touch-screen times. Expect even the top panel to go away and make it come up like the 'activities' in KDE or just some screen edge, respectively a touch button. I for one don't need it all the time. I know my login-name, keyboard layout, etc. without the display.

Uwe Dippel
FAIL

And where do you go tomorrow?

Shortsighted that is. Where does Arch get their updates for Gnome 2 from? It is code in maintenance state, and some time it will be unsupported.

Uwe Dippel

Unity is a necessary one ...

... because there is Gnome 3. Something had to be done.

Uwe Dippel

I said this before ...

Oh hell! It is just another way to reinvent OSX! No, it is not bad at all, I have to concede, even on large(r) screens. I for have considered it was high time to do away with those lousy panels and buttons, and had my KDE set somewhat likewise for the last year. Good from that angle.

I don't miss 'minimize'. What's that good for if one can just shove the windows into a drawer to the right?

What makes me puke is that I can't seem to get the 'just full screen' thingy. Always the obtrusive, obstructive and do-no-good-to-me upper ex-panel. I am so used to screen edges to switch between desktops, and I want full desktops, and I don't need any border.

Though maybe I need to find out, how to get the whole crap away, out of sight, and use some (mouse or cursor) action to bring me back to the overview of the applications.

I don't think this will be a big hit with traditional Linux users; though I think, it might be somewhat tempting to touch-screen, small-size display users.

Uwe Dippel
WTF?

Not what I personally want - Do you want it??

Thanks to ElReg and the link. Downloaded and burned it. And started it.

Oh hell! It is just another way to reinvent OSX! No, it is not bad at all, I have to concede, even on large(r) screens. I for have considered it was high time to do away with those lousy panels and buttons, and had my KDE set somewhat likewise for the last year. Good from that angle.

I don't miss 'minimize'. What's that good for if one can just shove the windows into a drawer to the right?

What makes me puke is that I can't seem to get the 'just full screen' thingy. Always the obtrusive, obstructive and do-no-good-to-me upper ex-panel. I am so used to screen edges to switch between desktops, and I want full desktops, and I don't need any border.

Though maybe I need to find out, how to get the whole crap away, out of sight, and use some (mouse or cursor) action to bring me back to the overview of the applications.

I don't think this will be a big hit with traditional Linux users; though I think, it might be somewhat tempting to touch-screen, small-size display users.

Uwe Dippel
Thumb Down

As a long-term Unity user, I need to agree

It doesn't work on netbook, actually.

I have lots of trouble with it. The described 'keep in launcher' is all fine, it is only three steps. But it is a known fact, that if you install anything else, and you put it in the classical menu, you can't run it, because it won't how in Searches, and if you manage to run it, it will just *not* show that option to keep it in the launcher. That's a fact, and also a bug report.

If this isn't solved by release, Ubuntu is a goner.

Uwe Dippel
Thumb Up

One more to go

While I think that the unity experience is an overall s***ty one for me so far, I need to add that Unity has enormous potential. Try it, at least, with an open mind, and tell me, why it shouldn't work on any size of screen (Android anyone?), and with keyboard (only), mouse, graphic tablet or just touchscreen. That's what its potential is. It might be light-years ahead in being agnostic to the method of it being accessed. Though I am currently a KDE-user, and love a number of things on KDE, I don't seem the b*****d Germans getting it. I filed some RFEs to operate the desktop without the traditional right-click-left-click s**t, and was promptly shot down. It doesn't even operate properly with a graphic tablet.

I might add that I'm a German myself, and would have wished KDE more success, and more potential.

Uwe Dippel
Thumb Up

Science?

Boffins?

I'd love to join them. No, not for Mars, but for their smoking sessions.

Uwe Dippel

Absolutely: It MUST be a netbook! For me ...

Totally correct, in the beginning, it was 'sexy', 7 inch, SSD, Linux. All what is needed for on-the-road activities. The manufacturers could not produce enough, even. But then, The Behemoth from Redmond came in, once again, when seeing their market eroding, and told the manufacturers as well as users, what actually *should* happen according to Steve B.: It HAD to be Microsoft. Now, netbooks don't support the concept of fat installs and RAM use; so the manufacturers had to gradually, actually fast because of being pushed by Microsoft, move to a 'tiny notebook' (tiny in all meanings) instead.

ElReg!comments!Pierre got it totally right. Microsoft will shoot down whatever seems to threaten their evil ways. From OS2 to netbooks. And, alas, the general public falls for all the nonsense emanating from the mouth of Redmond.

No, my notebook(s) are not what I use for my daily work. Though I do use them daily, for hours. Have one in my bag, wherever I go, reading mails, writing, surfing, Sudoku, etc. And the other one goes with me through all my lectures, with a graphics tablet. Because the crap PCs that are provided in the lecturer halls too often simply don't work, at least not properly. And then the cloud helps me, syncing all my actual documents on any client that I use.

Yep, here's one more whom you'll have to pry the netbook from my cold dead fingers. Though you might be disappointed: No, it doesn't run Windows.

Uwe Dippel

What is the problem, please?

I mean, I could hate Oracle as much as you (or I myself) wanted. But still they decide 'how much'.

I hate them, and I think for good reasons, once the Free part is removed from MySQL. It actually is, so I hate them. And still, they can decide their prices for MySQL support as long as they so desire.

Uwe Dippel

Hi, Steve!

Is that you, Jim?

Uwe Dippel

Well done, Libre Office!

No, Paul, 'Free' is totally misleading. It is not necessarily coming without cost, Free Of Charge. But it does come as software 'libre', that means it fulfills the requirements of liberty for software. James Huges 1, what do you suggest instead?

Uwe Dippel

Not so, here!

I have been running all possible campaigns for Firefox - Get It Now! - and whatnot. Since some 3.6.something, all my Firefoxen pretty predictably crashed when the Internet connection went down. I gave it a number of shots (==updates through apt-get) of Ubuntu's packages, but it didn't want to stop (crashing). Merely out of frustration, and to write a proper bug report, proving that the problem was with Firefox (only), I installed Chrome. Miraculously, all stability problems were gone.

As of the last months, I am a Chrome convert. Somehow sad, though.

Uwe Dippel
Paris Hilton

@Si 1

Then, please, why would you put Paris?

Because she would - look that good? Or because she'd join Pamela in ... ?

I really miss your personal inclination here!

Paris, because she looks better on Photoshop. Sure.

Uwe Dippel
FAIL

Exactly what I want ...

ViewSonic said the tablet will appeal to folk who "may not wish to be tied to a specific operating system".

This, dear folks at ViewSonic, will exclude me from buying your overpriced piece of hardware.

With the Atom, I know battery time is short, I know it'll heat my hands unnecessarily, and I won't want W7. And all this is what I call 'tied to a specific operating system'.

Rip out the Atom, put in an Arm, of course, leave out the W7, drop the price, and I'll go for it.

Your current version does one thing; only: see the icon

Uwe Dippel

Let's just wrap up some history

This going to take a tad longer, but there is a reason for this.

Anyone old enough to remember the eighties, when suddenly a new device made it into the households? The 'white box'es? White, why? Because for some reason, IBM had decided to build a computer of small size and tiny performance essentially from - already then - off-the-shelf parts. Microsoft was given the task to write something that allowed a user to handle this crude family of advanced calculators. Since the assembly of the off-the-shelf parts was essentially unencumbered by patents or copyrights, any - and that was the start of computer industries in Taiwan - company had the legal right to assemble similar boxes. Suddenly the PC was born. And nobody expected to have those boxen running any of the existent operating systems, nor software (Unix, RSX, VMS), neither applications. They would not natively connect to teletypes, VT100 terminals, Token-Ring.

Twenty years further, Asus blew a similar opportunity: The original EeePC. That was a ground-breaking, essentially new setup: all benchmarks, power, speed, mega- and gigabytes had been disregarded, and a box created that would just basically connect to a network and allow the user to do his daily browsing and e-mailing (and a bit of basic text editing) work on an astonishingly small and light and cheap box. Acer jumped in, with the famous Aspire One, here to be noted mostly: the L110, based on a flash drive, of 8 GB, no rotating platters. Both blew it together. Steve Jobs would have created the demand for that type of machines, but Asus and Acer modded their own boxen down to a low-cost PC; without full functionality. And everyone who fell for it, tried Windows, Microsoft Office, found insufficient space just for the basic install. And Crysis would not even start loading.

No wonder, that the 'white' PCs were huge successes; while the netbooks failed.

Back to the present. IPad is a successful product. Despite it not running actually anything. Not even OSX. All apps come from some proprietary store. But almost everyone is happy. Despite of the castrated nature of the device.

IMHO, the success of an iPad-killer does not do much depend on the power, speed, RAM, blabla; than on the type of product as which it will be sold. An iPad imitation? A revolutionary productive tablet? A PC with touch screen (only)?

It looks as if someone who re-creates something like the 'white' PCs has the best chances: Make it a revolutionary new hardware. A hardware doing what the user / owner wants it to do. E-book reader? Fine.Running Debian? Fine. Let the user decide what (s)he wants to do with it. Ubuntu Maverick must support it. Sell it with a profit, and allow everyone to put onto it what they like. Video-editing? Go ahead! An unconventional W7 machine? Install it! Make it open in so far as everyone can customise it to what he/she wants it to be. And not only the wallpaper.

The success of any of those 'killers' will depend on this. NOT to be a 'second class' member of the iPad family; a pale copy of a successful product. But, a new, revolutionary, tablet without keyboard. To do with it, whatever you want to do with it. It is yours. Take possession of it. It will do what you want it to do. Not like the applish 'we-know-best-what-is-good-for-you'.

Most of all: make it a NEW product. Invite world and dog to use it.

Uwe Dippel
IT Angle

crepe?

no, crap.

I don't want no wafer-thin mints!

I want 'crunchy frog'; pleeeeze!

Uwe Dippel

@Mikel

A long, if not winding, story. But a story only. If you knew Larry, you'd know that he hates Microsoft more than anything else (oh, maybe IBM). His interest would and could never be to get Windows 7 on smartphones. Hilarious.

He wants to simply own the world. Okay, let's be realistic, all and anything on the American continent would just about do for him. For the moment.

Uwe Dippel

@stizzleswick et al

As an 'ex' (patent officer), I can only take offense. It was rank and file staff that continuously tried to stem the flood of nonsense coming down from the managers, and mostly the politicians; who were (and probably are) fscking keen on software patents. (I spare you the complex chain of arguments, why. Though you can start thinking yourself. But also *you* as a voter have to shoulder your share, since you were one - I guess - to vote those in.)

Uwe Dippel
Pint

The Evil Beast?

Looks pretty much at first sight.

Though it does pretty well what looks right from their angle. SUN's was another one, and they messed it up.

Until here, almost no word about the OpenSolaris community. With my hat as a sociologist, it is also interesting, how badly the community was set up, and governed. It will be a nice thesis to wade through all the discussions in the OpenSolaris forum(s) from 2006 until the demise, and analyse the ever again arising discussions on the topic of 'community' and 'licensing'.

Uwe Dippel
Coat

In the end, I guess,

iPhone users are more faithful. Though to one thing only.

Mine's the one with the pocket welded shut.

Uwe Dippel
FAIL

Simple answer:

I bought my last hard drive from WD, because of its 'green'ness.

Anyone else with a green drive, and I did buy my last drive from WD. Over.

Either they repent, or I will add my tiny, tiny, tiny, little, small, piece of 2 sen to get them into bankruptcy. Serious. And not because I'm a Linux user, or OpenBSD user. Because I would do likewise the other way round.

No, doesn't have to be 'Linux'. If they offer a .tar.gz and .exe that produce a nice little FreeDOS drive to run the diagnostics, I'll be fine just as well. Vendor-neutrality is what is on the cards; at least for me.

Uwe Dippel
WTF?

What else to expect!

Though your plight is self-inflicted. There is always Yahoo, Gmail, and a bunch of others.

But if you can't be helped, you can't.

Uwe Dippel
Paris Hilton

Lies, Lies, all Lies!!

That's what I would have called these stories only a few weeks ago.

Then, in half an hour of idleness, I simply and only, tried. Chrome.

Since then it's been up here. It renders faster, never crashed on me (recently, Firefox started to crash twice daily).

True, I miss the great add-ons of Firefox. No-Script, Downloadhelper, you just name them. Text search is horrible in Chrome. And it consumes giant amounts of RAM. But since I have 4 GB, it is just enough for Chrome to keep me more happy with Chrome.

IE8, though, is still lousy. At least here.

Paris, because there are always better alternatives

Uwe Dippel
Flame

Come on, (fan-)boys!

Seems you drool around on all tech sites these days to stonewall criticism of the second coming, our lord from Cupertino.

NOW I know why the thing is so costly: as someone living in the tropics, on a local tropical salary, we simply can't afford the thing. And for good reason so, since temperature tends to rise well above the decreed level.

Sure, AC and alex39, consumer protection is one thing. But when you drive it into the corner that you project, we all will spend our money, maybe even on credit, go and buy stuff that fails left and right, and once it does, we may return it. That - to me - is a horrifying scenario. At least I have better things to do with my time, than buying stuff 'on test' and if they fail what they promised in the ad, my only remedy is, to drive back (on my own expenditure and time), to reclaim my money.

I already hate the current avalanche of beta-software that works, or just doesn't. But at least it's free (in the sense of 'no cost involved'). But I would love to sue anyone who brings half-brewed shit to the market, and graciously refunds my money, when it actually turns out to be that: shit.

Uwe Dippel

Reading ...

Seriously, guys, now I have to get it off my breast:

For the third time now, I read

"And the best malfunctioning machines are..."

No idea why, though.

Uwe Dippel
Welcome

Good-Bye, Mr. S.

Though I had my run-ins with them - I am NOT a windows shop - I will shed a tiny little tear; we kind of started up together and until today I had to consider them the only Windows support shop that I trusted and could recommend. As much as one can trust anything related to a non-trustworthy enterprise.

Sunbelt also had their tiny little runs-ins with Redmond.

GFI is totally crap, though.

Good bye, Stu!

Uwe Dippel
Thumb Up

Yep. But 'no' on KDE

I fully understand the passage about KDE and 4.0. Though it shows that you haven't actually grasped the 'serious, solid, German engineering' concept. And you're not to be blamed. It is kind ahead of its time; and it is implemented in a lousy, quite unstable, partially inconsistent and absolutely not 'serious, solid, German engineering' quality.

It does offer the traditional, overflowing, one-dimensional, easy-accessible and desktop-cluttering panel as well, that you're used to. Though maybe the future is different? What about a 2-dimensional or even 3-dimensional interface?

That is a serious paradigm shift. Maybe it will take you another 10 years, to see this in retro-perspective.

As a hint: I for one have no more panels; no, no auto-hide. No panel, not at the top and neither at the bottom of the screen. It was an experiment on myself. My head hurt. But after some months, I'm most happy to have dumped the cluttered crutches that used to help me operating my system for the last 15 years, called panels. To me, it's history, and happily forgotten.

Uwe Dippel
Coat

Shows the level?

Disney is possible, but for the educated, it is a Shakespearean character, a spirit of the air.

Also, for the pr0nographically challenged, it is an actor, with one X following the name. Maybe lack of under-belt activity; this single X instead of triple beauty?

Gimme the coat without any holy book in the pockets. It's mine.

Uwe Dippel
FAIL

Quite happy - they deserved it badly

Not too many years back, Adaptec was the dreaded monopolist, and they knew how to exploit the situation. They thought they knew, that is.

Lousy support, no way to get firmware info, and one firmware update concealing one hardware flaw after another. (If you have no better waste of time, follow the discussion on the OpenBSD lists, including notorious Theo. It is enlightening about Adaptec's business model. The icon says it.)

Uwe Dippel
Coat

So, it's

The Bulgarian Bullet-Proof Enhancement from now on?

On my way out with a 36-A under my coat.

Uwe Dippel
Stop

She let me down

Actually, I was on her side from the beginning. Incredible! ain't it? Our Brazilian friends much less tolerant than the carnival do Brasil promises; with millions being half naked.

Even if she lifted her almost non-existing dress as someone reported here, by all means, we are adult people, aren't we?

She's just 20, and looks pretty okay on those pictures, at least to me. Where she let me down, so to say, is with this polishing work of hers. What a sick world we have, haven't we, when a 20-year-old good-looking bird doesn't have the confidence to make it into the public without some uplifting work.

Maybe she's not quite sane after all.?

Uwe Dippel
WTF?

@Tom 64

Are you sure? So what's so great typing on a screen? or what is it that fascinates you in a tablet?

Serious. I wouldn't know why I would want to interact with the screen of my ageing netbook. Finally touching the naked women that so far I can only see there?

Uwe Dippel
FAIL

Wrap up the old bugs first

Filed a bad bug on Thunderbird's IMAP implementation some years ago. I'd rather have one of those 60 fixing it before thinking about new stuff.

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