! Anyhow Dave, did you finally get settled down there? I see
!you're finally getting to your emails again!
!
!-Linc. (the Troll - I guess?)
Linc ---
For my sake, don't use Troll as a nickname. The Troll I know is this
hot little blonde girl from college... ;-) Sorry, wandering mind again...
--- David A Woyciesjes
--- C & IS Support Specialist
--- Yale University Press
--- mailto:david.woyciesjes@yale.edu
--- (203) 432-0953
--- ICQ # - 905818
On November 10, Eric Chomko wrote:
> Wow, you left beautiful Laurel, Maryland for St. Petersburg, FL?! Watch out for
> Rte. 19 down there, it's as bad as Rte. 1 up here.
Uh-huh. ;)
Yeah, Route 19 is fun. There are lots of cool pawn shops on 19,
though, which often have old HP calculators (another passion of mine)
and sometimes neat old computers!
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL
On November 9, Douglas Quebbeman wrote:
> In addition to being a Hoosier, I'm a Paver, but
> that's a State of Mind.
A Paver? Wassat?
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL
I recently purchased a used HP 7475a plotter and I need an instruction manual. Can you help? If so, you can reach me at 812-207-6502. My mailing address is
Paul E. Smith
1109 E. Main Street
New Albany, IN 47150
Thanks in advance for your help.
Regards,
Paul E. Smith
On November 9, Chris Kennedy wrote:
> > What would be the American English translation of "dummies" in this
> > context?
>
> Pacifier. Makes perfect sense if you think about it for a second :-)
Ahh, yes it does! :-)
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL
On Nov 9, 9:46, Bill Pechter wrote:
> ---- On Fri, 09 Nov 2001, Geoff Reed (geoffr(a)zipcon.net) wrote:
> > Nope, WFW3.11, Win95 and Win98 were designed as "small office
> / home
> > operating systems" and were never given support for LPR
> protocol as you
> > weren't expected to see that in a SOHO / Workgroup or Home
> setting.
> There are lpr drivers available as shareware or commercial
> products for Win3.x, Win95 and higher.
>
> Most of the third party add on printer servers come with an lpr
> capability for Win9x and there's a shareware one on Simtel for
> Windows 3.x with a winsock.
>
> Lan Workplace also had one from Novell.
You can also do it from any version of PCNFS.
--
Pete Peter Turnbull
Network Manager
University of York
The way I remember is that the Fujitsu Eagle is the 2351 and the Super eagle
is the 2361. Fujitsu did make 8" drives but the were not called Eagles around
the Northwest. The 23XX (2316, 2333 etc.)series were nice 8 inch drives. I
have also had some 14 inch Fujitsus but I cannot remember the series numbers
but they predated the Eagles.
Paxton
Astoria, OR
On November 9, LFessen106(a)aol.com wrote:
> First I have seen of this conversation, but like you said - YOUR comments need an answer... I am quite sure that hell will be full of people who agreed that there was no God while they were alive. Unfortunaltely it'll be too late then for them to change their mind. Now you may disagree with me, but I have one question to ask you and you can keep the reply to yourself..... Do you really want to take that chance?
It could also be argued that there's something wrong with the idea of
believing in God purely to keep oneself out of hell
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL
On November 10, jkunz(a)unixag-kl.fh-kl.de wrote:
> > It looks like one of the HDD's (both are SMD) has a 3 phase PSU -
> What drive type? Fujitsu Eagle (14" and 8") where quite common. I have
> seen several of them, but never with 3 phase PSU.
Huh? 14" and 8" Eagles? Every Eagle I've ever seen has been a 10"
platter drive. Are there Eagles other than the M2351 and M2361?
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire
St. Petersburg, FL
Rumor has it that Douglas Quebbeman may have mentioned these words:
>Worked for a publishing company, and one of the VP's played
>the pipes. He'd go up on the roof of the building at lunch
>at least once a week to play.
>
>While returning from an early lunch, I was approaching the
>building, enjoying his jamming, when an older women exiting
>the building heard the sound, looked up, then looked at me
>and said "My, I do *love* the sound of the saxophone"...
<snicker>
Probably the "oddest" thing I've ever experienced is when I went to Germany
back in '91 -- I was stationed in Oerbke <sp?> north of Hannover about 50
clicks, in the "british" sector of what was divvied up Deutschland at the
time. I was in a German gasthaus (bar/pub) in Fallingbostel drinking beer
(German, of course) & playing cards with my buddy. The cards were given to
us by the Brits (nice folks!) but were made in Spain. In comes a Scot in
full kilt & uniform with bagpipes, and he played for around an hour -- the
last thing he played before he left was "Yankee Doodle" for the visiting
Americans... :-)
Was most definitely the *most* multiculturally diverse moment in my life...
Roger "Merch" Merchberger