I said I wouldn't and he replied, "Good, take these drinks over to table seven."
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The new forum needs a little bit of humor to release the tension of the changeover, so I've started part 2 of the old thread so that we don't have to keep scrollong to the end of the old thread.
If it gets too long before the "go to the latest reply" issue is resolved, I can lock this thread and link to a part 3 thread.
What do you think?
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About a million years ago (in computer clock tick time) someone where I worked had an early IBM computer with two 5.25 floppy drives... this was before hard drives, so the program was on drive A and data on drive B
He came to me (I had an Apple IIe at home, so was the work place computer expert) saying his computer had "eaten" his data floppy
After checking, and getting a flashlight to look closer, I determined that he had shoved his floppy (OMG, I can't believe I just wrote that!) into the very small space between the upper and lower drives
Once I got needle nose pliers to grasp the front edge of the floppy and pull it out, I pointed out the difference between a real receptacle and the space between the two drives
He was happy, and I filed the experience away with a shrug and a shake of my head
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A friend of mine had a similar story.
He was teaching an intro to computers class on the same IBM PC configuration (2 floppy drives! No waiting!)
It was the first class, and he told the students to remove the 5.25" disk from the sleeve and insert it into the drive. All but one student had no problems with this, so he went over to see why the student kept complaining that the disk wouldn't go into the drive.
It turned out that when he told them to take the disk out of the sleeve, the student had literally removed the plastic protective jacket covering the magnetic disk and was trying to insert this (very floppy!) round of magnetic disk into the drive.
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Hehehe
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I've been teaching since 1989, and I've seen my share of crazy things in a classroom. Once of my favorites was while teaching an early InDesign class. I had 18 students, and true-to-form, the one who needed the most help sat in the far corner in the back row. I saw her pick up her mouse and shake it vigorously in the air a few times. Thinking the the trackball under the mouse was dirty (this pre-dated optical mice), I made my way over to her while continuing to talk. When I finally arrived, she was again shaking her mouse in the air. Looking at her screen, I realized that she had inadvertently loaded the InDesign cursor by clicking the out port and was trying to physically shake it off. I think of her every single time I teach an Intro to InDesign class.
I'll add that I also thought about her when I got my first iPad shuffle. You could shake it in the air to randomize the playlist. Maybe she was just way ahead of her time.
~Barb
Tag: Feature Request š
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July 12, 2012.
I was giving a course on InDesign in one of the top 10 floors of one of the highest skyscrapers in La DĆ©fense, Paris (France), facing my two trainees and a large bay window facing west.
At the end of the morning, looking up, I saw something unusual behind the bay window: a huge four-engine plane coming straight at us. Soon joined by two jet fighters, then two more, then two more...
I thought my last hour was coming.
The trainees later told me that I was pale and liquefied along the wall behind me, and that's when they turned around and laughed: "Don't worry, they'll go over it, it's the same every year it's the Air Force that rehearses for the July 14th parade." (Day of the French national holiday)
It was on that day that I learned that the July 14 parade in Paris always came from the west and left from the east and south.
As a result, I took an exceptional 15-minute break.
š
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On a completely different subject...
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Variation on a theme:
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Oh thanks for resuscitating the thread, Peru Bob. Now my favorite of the day:
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The "Unwelcome Mat?" credit: twitter.com/RaminNasibov/status/1176496008924160000 Great designer's blog.
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Claude Shannon (1916-2001) Professor in Communications, Science and Mathematics MIT, was responsible for coining the term "bit" as in 0 or 1, and still used in all computing- eg. bits per second.
Now the unusual 'bit'- He created his "ultimate machine"- A small wooden box with a single switch on the outside. Flick the switch and an ominous buzzing starts inside. The lid lifts and a hand reaches out, turns off the switch, and returns to the box. The lid snaps shut and the noise ceases.
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Didn't the "hand in a box" go on to star in the Addams Family TV show?
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Do you suppose they sell these in bulk?
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In theory, this shouldn't be a big problem. The current is lazy and goes the way of the lowest resistance. And gold has a very high conductance, better than copper. I would like to have golden wires in my houseā¦ :-D. And then you will blow the fusesā¦ faster you can plug.
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I won't exactly say short attention span, but when we watch TV together my wife likes to lay sideways on the couch so she can put her feet in my lap for some rubbing... and I can't count how many times she has fallen asleep and missed the end of the movie or TV show
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My wife loves to read in bed. I always find her with the book held up and eyes shut fast-asleep.
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Anybody need a ride?
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Boss Hoss picture while I was at Sturgis... not mine, I was on a Harley
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