Comment Re:I thought it was designed that way. (Score 1) 191
Really? - Something goes on with BES and the RIM service - coz when theres a RIM outage, BES based BBs can't get mail.
Really? - Something goes on with BES and the RIM service - coz when theres a RIM outage, BES based BBs can't get mail.
So the issue is with POP3, and not ActiveSync? Ahhh, that makes more sense then.
I've read all the comments on this thread (at time of posting) and this is the FIRST commenter that actually understands what the problem actually is.
For BB10 devices:
[BB10] <---> [Your-Exchange-Server-via-ActiveSync]
For nonBB10 devices with BES or BIS:
[BBxx] <---> [RIMs Email Proxies] <---> [Your Email Provider]
So, yes, if BB10s are sending email creds to RIM, then that's huge fuckup.
My guess is, someone forgot to comment out that lump of code when they switched to ActiveSync support.
-Jar
You sir, made me spew my morning tea. Well done
I'm pretty sure, that outside of the US, Joe Public doesn't even know WWVB exists, which is a shame as a single standard global time signal (back in the day) would have been kinda cool.
Here in the UK we have something similar (even runs on the same frequency):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_from_NPL
It's referred to as the 'Rugby clock'.
-Jar
You have no idea what you are talking about.
Technet has not been about the help pages for years - Technet was about providing legal software with keys for evaluation for as long as you kept your Technet sub going.
As other posters have said, 90-180 days is not enough to learn/evaluate platforms. I for one would not have learnt anything useful for Exchange 2010 if I had it running in sandbox lab with no real email flowing through it - I use it as my home email server, for 5 accounts. I migrated my previous Exchange 2003 installation into it, an arduous task that took weeks to complete correctly and I learnt SO much in the process - that's not something a dry lab environment could have provided. (and for those that say I'm falling foul of the T&Cs, I'm not - I don't class my home environment as a 'Production system'.)
Losing Technet for me is a big loss - my alternatives are MSDN (too expensive for non-contractor who likes to dabble/upskill), or the MS Partner programme (also fairly expensive and maybe not available to individuals). I might just say f*ck it, and migrate over to non MS software over the next few years, turning my back on 20+ years as an MS whore.
I think MS have lost the plot recently, and seem to be doing their best to alienate all their current userbase and developerbase.
-Jar
I can third this.
My MAIN Machine (I use many, but the one that I sit in front of most), is a P4 3Ghz running XP SP3.
I code in
It does me. Every time it gets a bit slow I'll whine for a bit about getting an i5 or whatever, and then I just defrag the thing, and carry on...
I think support or no support, XP isn't going anywhere yet for a LOT of non-power users.
OK, as a HEAVY Quake 1 and Quake 2 player and modder back in the day, I can say that with those engines at least, what you are describing is what you get when the FOV value is set too high. By default in id games, it's 90. A LOT of serious gamers up that to 120 or higher (so they can see more). As a result the fish-eye effect is enhanced and objects are stretched at the edge of the screen, and compressed in the centre.
In almost ALL games, FOV is user definable. A little bit of research at the time would have solved your issue completely.
-Jar
Except of course, you can't run two versions of IE on the same system* and FF is generally frowned upon in most Corporates.
*Without resorting to App-V or other Application Virtualisation wrappers.
-Jar
You do if you pay for it. Trust me on this, I've got 18+ years of blue chip financial IT experience to back this up.
(My CV )
The proper support that Corporate IT get with MS is exactly the reason why Linux and Open Source/Free Office apps will never become de-facto on workplace desktops.
These days, all Corporate IT departments care about when choosing software from a new vendor, is how good the support is. If the support model isn't up to scratch then the tender will often go to an inferior solution that has better support (I've seen this way too many times...).
-Jar
... when they could have 97% of the functionality with free software...
Hmm... Lets say a medium/large business has a major problem with a financial add-on for Excel - it's causing Excel to crash or simply output rubbish numbers. They can pay for MS support, who will investigate within a specified time frame depending on the severity of the problem, and if it IS a problem with Excel MS will roll a special hotfix just to fix it and give it to the affected company. If other businesses encounter the same problem, this hotfix will be available for them also.
You DO NOT get that level of app support with free software, so the assumption that businesses will switch away from paid-for formally supported software is ridiculous.
-Jar
That said though, a LOT of large corporates are several versions behind as they support critical systems and can't be upgraded that easily. So it _also_ pays to learn the differences between versions. For SQL this isn't that much of a problem, but there are MASSIVE differences between Exchange versions
-Jar
Good luck doing anything remotely bandwidth intensive or latency sensitive over the flaky as fuck USB-Ethernet on the B.
Flaky as what-now? I regularly stream 1080p blu-ray rips onto my Pi under RaspBMC and have never yet seen a problem...
-Jar
Absolute Rubbish.
The early PS3's YLOD failure issues are also all down to the same thing as the XBox360s RROD - cracks and whiskers in Pb-Free solder.
-Jar
I use an Oyster card on London public transport all the time, and I have NEVER had it trigger until I was physically wiping the big yellow sensor with my oyster card. Yes, there may have been problems when it first rolled out, but these days it's totally bedded in and a working technology.
Plus you save shedloads paying via Oyster, so it's silly not to.
-Jar
Life is a healthy respect for mother nature laced with greed.