Two things about that:
1. Try RDP'ing (remote desktop) into the VM and make it full screen
2. apparently Win 8 prefers something greater than 800x600. That's what my Win 8 VM defaulted to apparently and I never tried making it larger.
Never did solve the no start button thing.
Please, for the love of CowBoy Neal, MOD PARENT UP
One voice of reason in a sea of insanity that is "discussion"...
Any chance you can come and be my manager?
At the risk of being "that guy" this is a forwarded email that's been circulating via forward buttons for 10+ years now...who knows if it's true... sounds true...
This seems somehow revisionist history to me. Bush didn't "put anyone in charge" of the FCC: Powell was nominated and had to be voted upon to get into that position. And if you remember the senate was 50/50 (something like that) back then and pretty much every vote for judges and the like was filibustered in the senate. If the the opposing party didn't want Powell he would not have had that job. Also, phone calls are more expensive today than in 1997? Really?
Also, dial-up internet had taken off before 1996. Even in my tiny little town I was using a dial-up in ISP in 1992/93 with "spry mosiac" (windows 3.1!) and...well i forgot the name of the dial up software we had...point is ISPs were taking off and Win95 including a browser (along with netscape's success) brought the idea of the web to the masses and contributed to internet popularity in the 90s. Actually AOL was still around and quite popular in 2000. Took years for them to finally collapse in subscriber numbers. Not any where near "suddenly".
The ISPs, from what evidence I've observed first hand, started going out of business thanks to readily available DSL/Cable/microwave/fiber connections for roughly the same price as dial-up. In rural areas that still don't have DSL as an option dial-up is still in use (there's still a dial-up ISP in my tiny town and I know multiple people still using dialup living "in the sticks").
* Medical coding/transcriptionist. I know this is a very common work-from-home job, though it requires a fair amount of relatively expensive training. It pays roughly as well as a junior level sysadmin job in many areas, I've noticed. You can work from home, usually at odd hours (doctors need their notes transcribed at all hours of the day), with a fair amount of flexibility for things like "the kids need dinner". You'd have to be able to type fairly quickly, know the coding of medications, and things like that. I'm not sure about the costs or time requirements associated with the training, however. Anywhere with a regional hospital nearby is going to need quite a few people to do this (a 100-workstation private practice I'm familiar with had 6+ doing this).
I work for a relatively small hospital in a relatively rural area and we just got through outsourcing/cutting out our transcriptionists: some of them are still working for the hospital but now employed by an off-shore company while the doctors are apparently going to be using "Dragon Medical" speech dictation software. Point is this option's future my have a shelf life.
I agree with the JavaScript/HTML approach. I would also point out the some what language similarities between JS and the likes of C++/Java.
I was also going to mention there's a HTML developer-oriented editor already included with office that few actually know is even there, called Microsoft Script Editor. Default located at:
"C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\OFFICE11\MSE7.EXE"
It's actually pretty good even if it does seem to default to VBScript for some reason. It's kind of like Visual basic (drag buttons/elements around then put in the event-based coding). Just has the HTML coding instead. Even create HTAs (does anybody remember HTAs? Doubt it!)
I've been mostly skimming this thread but I don't think anybody has pointed to Amahi: seems like at least software-wise it would cover all the requirements for media storage and add/removal of HDDs. I should mention my favorite forum merely recommends Amahi as a FOSS alternate to WHS but that I have not actually used Amahi.
Also, I thought XFS was supposed to be a good/possibly best file system for large files?
Damned FrontPage
Work continues in this area. -- DEC's SPR-Answering-Automaton