I actually don't mind the hy-vee commercials. The Gus Johnson caseys ads make me want to do harmful things to myself. Those make me never want order caseys pizza again.
Like getting a Hawkeye tattoo?
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I actually don't mind the hy-vee commercials. The Gus Johnson caseys ads make me want to do harmful things to myself. Those make me never want order caseys pizza again.
At the vaccination clinic I went to today, I didn't even feel bad about getting my shot. Lots of people younger than me and looked in good health getting their shot today. It was busy and well organized. Shout out to the county health dept.
I'm picturing the wicked witch riding her bicycle with Toto in the basket.70's this weekend. Might have to get out one of the pedal thingies for a ride.
That monitor looks familiar. We had a piece of equipment in the lab I worked at that performed a specific and commonly requested analysis. It was very accurate, but the software was on an elderly computer that had a VERY early version of Windows for the OS. We babied that puppy along for years because the cost of upgrading the software (via the company) and upgrading the computer itself were prohibitive on our break-even budget. Additionally, it could not be hooked up to our rudimentary LIMS system. For a long time they simply printed a report and I would re-enter the data on my computer. They finally figured out how to send the data to a different computer as a comma deliminated file. The workaround was that I would take a thumb drive and download that info, then bring it back to my office and manipulate it into the Excel database files that I drew on for the reports to our clients. It was SUCH a clusterf...![]()
IT replaced one of the computers that runs one of the pieces of equipment (microplate reader) that I use for lab and research and it doesn't have the software I need to run it.
My phone call with them was not pleasant.
I am surprised that no one has figured out some type of emulator that allows institutions to run old operating systems that can then work with newer operating systems connected to networks.That monitor looks familiar. We had a piece of equipment in the lab I worked at that performed a specific and commonly requested analysis. It was very accurate, but the software was on an elderly computer that had a VERY early version of Windows for the OS. We babied that puppy along for years because the cost of upgrading the software (via the company) and upgrading the computer itself were prohibitive on our break-even budget. Additionally, it could not be hooked up to our rudimentary LIMS system. For a long time they simply printed a report and I would re-enter the data on my computer. They finally figured out how to send the data to a different computer as a comma deliminated file. The workaround was that I would take a thumb drive and download that info, then bring it back to my office and manipulate it into the Excel database files that I drew on for the reports to our clients. It was SUCH a clusterf...
It's worse than that. We eventually had to take all of the equipment offline (no internet access) because most of the supporting computers ran operating systems that were no longer supported by Microsoft, and were therefore vulnerable to hacking, so all of the data was coming to me on thumb drives. We even had a colorimeter that had no computer component at all, so all of that data was hand-written. And trying to read the numbers that some of our students wrote down was an exercise in frustration!I am surprised that no one has figured out some type of emulator that allows institutions to run old operating systems that can then work with newer operating systems connected to networks.
... or they've figured out that nobody can actually afford to pay for it if they did.
We have a capillary electrophoresis and a BioRad gel imager that we got as donations from IDT that are hooked up to a desktop that's running XP.It's worse than that. We eventually had to take all of the equipment offline (no internet access) because most of the supporting computers ran operating systems that were no longer supported by Microsoft, and were therefore vulnerable to hacking, so all of the data was coming to me on thumb drives. We even had a colorimeter that had no computer component at all, so all of that data was hand-written. And trying to read the numbers that some of our students wrote down was an exercise in frustration!
I'm glad I was already retired. I would have been able to do about 75% of my job from home, but not all of it. Some of what I did, you simply HAD to be there at the facility. And the other half of that was, my BOSS would have worked exclusively from home and required ME to be at the lab 75% of the time. Yeah...it was that bad with my last boss.We have a capillary electrophoresis and a BioRad gel imager that we got as donations from IDT that are hooked up to a desktop that's running XP.
That's not on the network.
My computer was hooked up to the network and was just fine, but it was unused due to the pandemic for long enough that it got replaced at some point.
Well, maybe you should have been nicer to him.Bar Rescue is on, they just showed the episode of the bar in Council Bluffs which in the end he refused to rescue and walked out.
I'm glad I was already retired. I would have been able to do about 75% of my job from home, but not all of it. Some of what I did, you simply HAD to be there at the facility. And the other half of that was, my BOSS would have worked exclusively from home and required ME to be at the lab 75% of the time. Yeah...it was that bad with my last boss.
I was gonna say you can come fill in for me and I'll take some of that retirementI only know one guy who hates retirement and wishes he could have kept working.
And, no, it's not me.![]()
I was gonna say you can come fill in for me and I'll take some of that retirement
I'm glad I was already retired. I would have been able to do about 75% of my job from home, but not all of it. Some of what I did, you simply HAD to be there at the facility. And the other half of that was, my BOSS would have worked exclusively from home and required ME to be at the lab 75% of the time. Yeah...it was that bad with my last boss.
Just checked this out from the public library. Written in 1992 while he was still coaching. Haven't read it yet obviously.Must be a pretty big glitch in the Amazon books algorithm to have sent me this.
Sci-fi and adventure book guy has never even glanced at a romance novel in his life.
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I only know one guy who hates retirement and wishes he could have kept working.
And, no, it's not me.![]()