tisers are interested to buy display
banner ads from you.
Can you help direct me to the right team? Otherwise, if this is the correct
email, are you available for a call anytime next week?
Best Regards,
[image: PixFuture] *Sean Miller* / Account Manager / www.pixfuture.com
7191 Yonge St, Suite 81
tisers are interested to buy display
banner ads from you.
Can you help direct me to the right team? Otherwise, if this is the correct
email, are you available for a call anytime next week?
Best Regards,
[image: PixFuture] *Sean Miller* / Account Manager / www.pixfuture.com
7191 Yonge St, Suite 81
> You can't and you shouldn't. libcurl doesn't tell the application when the
> DNS
> resolution is done (or even if DNS resolution is at all performed). You can
> still attempt to detect it, but there's no promise it will work.
Ack, thanks.
For future reference, my solution was to do the legwo
> (This might be a varation of this issue:
> https://github.com/curl/curl/issues/5747 )
Yes, I think you're correct. I looked for an existing issue but did not find
this one.
> That's correct, because it isn't a regular socket. It's a socketpair.
> CURLMOPT_SOCKETFUNCTION should get told about
Hello again, libcurl experts. I'm using libcurl's threaded resolver. A trimmed
log excerpt follows:
19:39:19,837 DEBUG [libcurl_multi_wrapper] - adding easy handle
19:39:19,837 DEBUG [http_client] - on_libcurl_multi_timer(timeout_ms=0)
19:39:19,837 DEBUG [http_client] - on_timeout
19:39:19,837 DE
Public bug reported:
Ubuntu on Wayland crashes when you try to change the resolution even if your
display supports the
Version: 3.38.0-1ubuntu2
Release: 20.10 Groovy Gorilla (development branch)
What I expected to happen
1. Login to Wayland
2. Change the resolution
3. Go on with my day
What a
Public bug reported:
Ubuntu on Wayland crashes when you try to change the resolution even if your
display supports the
Version: 3.38.0-1ubuntu2
Release: 20.10 Groovy Gorilla (development branch)
What I expected to happen
1. Login to Wayland
2. Change the resolution
3. Go on with my day
What a
Public bug reported:
Ubuntu on Wayland crashes when you try to change the resolution even if your
display supports the
Version: 3.38.0-1ubuntu2
Release: 20.10 Groovy Gorilla (development branch)
What I expected to happen
1. Login to Wayland
2. Change the resolution
3. Go on with my day
What a
rn int mtd_add_tar_file_jffs2(const char *mtd, int fd, int ofs, const
char *filename);
extern void mtd_parse_jffs2data(const char *buf, const char *dir);
/* target specific functions */
Signed-off-by: Sean Miller
These two patches (both must be applied) fix this bug.
If always mounting the jffs2
Here's a link to a recent project I made for element14.com that has some
code you can leverage as well as other goodies:
https://www.element14.com/community/community/project14/visionthing/blog/2019/10/20/seeing-around-corners-beagle-bone-back-up-car-camera-part-1-introduction
Seab
--
For more
I put together a guide here:
https://www.element14.com/community/community/designcenter/single-board-computers/next-genbeaglebone/blog/2019/10/27/beagleboard-ai-brick-recovery-procedure
On Friday, November 8, 2019 at 6:59:19 PM UTC-6, Nicholas Talbot wrote:
>
> Does anyone know how to enable th
Thanks. Reverted back to 4.14 and the classification.cpp example is
working. Still fighting to get PWM and a GPIO input to work, though, with
bonescript.
On Tuesday, October 29, 2019 at 11:58:09 AM UTC-5, Jason Kridner wrote:
>
> Stick to 4.14.
>
> Provide me the output of:
> cd /var/lib/cloud
> Hi again, sorry it took me while to get back [...]
Sooner than I expected. Excellent work, thank you.
> [...] but attached here is a debug
> patch that I'd like you to apply to your code and see what debug output (and
> possibly changed behavior) you get. Please do another log and attach in a
> I think you've stepped on a libcurl bug!
Uh oh. I'll have to clean off my shoe.
> Are you doing HTTPS through a HTTP proxy by any chance? That's what the
> PROTOCONNECT state is for basically.
Yes, almost everything I do in this large private cloud goes through proxies.
> Does it seem like t
I added simple logging and a debug function to the following Boost ASIO-based
example program:
https://curl.haxx.se/libcurl/c/asiohiper.html
Summary:
1) In the WAITCONNECT state, libcurl calls multi_timer_cb(200) and registers
interest in writing.
2) The FSM transitions first to SENDPROTOCONNE
> I get lots of linking errors (missing symbols) – not when compiling curl, but
> when I try to statically link libcurl to my application. The missing symbols
> are all SSL related (I can dig them out if is of any use).
Statically linking doesn't include libcurl's own dependencies.
Find out wh
On Friday, August 5, 2016 12:49 AM, Daniel Stenberg wrote:
> Please don't top-post.
I can't remember the last time I used e-mail like this. Two decades, maybe.
It's cool. Have to do it manually, though.
>> For a large request (>64 KiB) with a timeout of 5 sec, I see libcurl
>> requesting up
uit from this what my mistake might have been, I'd immensely
appreciate that.
In the meantime, I'm going to try to pare down my code to a minimal
reproducible example...
Regards,Sean M.
On Thursday, August 4, 2016 12:24 AM, Daniel Stenberg
wrote:
On Wed, 3 Aug 2016, Sean M
I'm using libcurl-7.19.7 to post JSON to an HTTP server. I'm aware this is an
old version. I'm using the multi interface, and I based my implementation on
the example given in asiohiper.cpp. I worked around bug #62.
Problem: I observe incomplete transmission of request bodies larger than about
4
[image: blob]
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On 21 July 2013 15:02, Avi Greenbury wrote:
> Generally, I'm more concerned that the bit of the mail I want to read
> (the reply) is on-screen as I open the email than where it is.
>
I think quoting inline, as I am doing here, is the ideal... that said,
there are some pedants who feel they want
On 21 July 2013 14:07, Liam Proven wrote:
> There is an important difference between speaking honestly and being
> disrespectful.
>
No, that was disrespectful. And I had to re-read it as I thought maybe I'd
misinterpreted it, but it was... and it was uncalled for.
This is meant to be a communi
If anybody can educate me how to snip posts you're replying to on an iPad
I'd be VERY grateful!
I have tried and tried, but generally it seems to take hours to get rid of
the surplus text (and even then I normally end up leaving a bit of it).
Hence, when I reply from iPad (today I'm not - so you
Really? (Wifi drops to lowest device speed)
I've never encountered this... why and how does this happen?
Sean
On Saturday, 20 July 2013, Rob Beard wrote:
> On 20/07/13 20:52, Muñiz Piniella, Andrés wrote:
>
>> Hello all,
>> The heaviest use of internet I do is for some video streaming at home.
I think it'll all be largely irrelevant in a few years... with more and
more functionality moving from OS to browser/cloud the operating system is
becoming less and less important.
Sean
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On 10 May 2013 11:05, Laura Czajkowski wrote:
> bah I meant Alan Pope - shall stick to using Alan. More often than not
> I'll be right then :)
>
Always the best option :-)
Sean
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On 10 May 2013 10:47, Gareth France wrote:
> Sean, perhaps it's a little unfair to judge the outcome of a
> conversation you didn't witness. Perhaps it's time all this was put to bed.
> It's not getting anyone anywhere.
>
If you want to hold a grudge about something that has happened in the pas
On 10 May 2013 10:40, Gareth France wrote:
> After the way you spoke to me last time Alan, I'd rather run over my hard
> drive with my car! Rude was not the word.
>
Watch out, Alan, you'll be the next subject of his blog ;-)
That seemed a very kind gesture to me...
Sean
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On 10 May 2013 10:12, Gareth France wrote:
> I haven't found any reasons for them not to help me. The issue mostly is
> with the phone numbers, where many companies use these non-geographic
> numbers, creating a barrier between them and some of their customers. It
> really does wind me up and th
On 10 May 2013 10:12, Gareth France wrote:
> I haven't found any reasons for them not to help me. The issue mostly is
> with the phone numbers, where many companies use these non-geographic
> numbers, creating a barrier between them and some of their customers. It
> really does wind me up and th
On 10 May 2013 10:09, Gareth France wrote:
> Why don't you mount your hard drive as an external one on your desktop PC
> (as you are suggesting you will do whilst the laptop is away) and then copy
> the data directly onto the fixed hard drive on that PC... then re-install
> the Windows OS that wa
On 10 May 2013 10:01, Sean Miller wrote:
> Also, regarding 0845 a simple Google search pulls up this website
> http://www.weq4u.co.uk/ which allows you to call a landline number (0333
> 5432111) and then when it answers type in an 0845 number and it'll
> connect... so it isn
On 10 May 2013 09:51, Gareth France wrote:
> Sorry? You don't seem to understand what I'm saying. No I don't trust my
> data with a stranger, that's one of the reasons I won't send the hard drive
> off. I already have a server to back up to, it's the good internet
> connection I lack. And why wou
If you extended this to the open market as a whole, then every washing
machine should have alternative operating systems.
No, it's not something I subscribe to.
If a "manufacturer" wishes to go with Windows, then that's fine.
If Ubuntu wants to become "the OS of choice" then let's PERSUADE rathe
I have not had any great issues with Wifi on any of the laptops I've
installed on... I suspect that the "find a laptop that Ubuntu will work on"
is becoming less and less of a factor these days, as not only does wireless
hardware become more generic but the OS continues to support more and more.
I
On 6 January 2013 10:33, Rowan Berkeley wrote:
> Actually, I've tried that, but not with the disk; I've tried it with
> what I called the 'self installer'. This is the procedure Ubuntu offer as
> "the easy way" because it skips the CD stage altogether, it just downloads
> directly into your file
On 6 January 2013 10:33, Rowan Berkeley wrote:
> But I get exactly the same result: it seems to complete the installation
> process and tells you to restart, you get a screen asking whether you want
> to boot into Windows or Ubuntu, and when you try to boot into Ubuntu you
> get a lengthy error
WUBI is fine with Windows 8
I'm running it here...
Just install it from Windows.
Sean
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On 5 January 2013 22:59, kpb wrote:
> I'll do some googling and start another thread if I get nowhere.
>
Yeah, good idea.
"if I get nowhere" is a clear admission that you didn't give a damn about
Mike and his problem, but rather wanted to explore things on your own.
I, meanwhile, will merely c
On 5 January 2013 21:45, kpb wrote:
> I will use your feedback to correct the markup on the OpenOffice generated
> page by hand, just as a matter of principle.
There is no necessity to do it... I am merely illustrating how "generated
markup" is ALWAYS inferior to "written markup".
> The w3 va
On 5 January 2013 21:49, Sean Miller wrote:
> I could write an entire page of XHTML in about 2 minutes.
>
Especially if you use CSS, as you should.
These "tags" that you find so troublesome would only, generally, have one
or two attributes at most.
etc.
Sean
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On 5 January 2013 21:45, kpb wrote:
> Which brings me, in a rather roundabout way, to the point I made in my
> reply to Alan Lord. Hand coded (x)html, viewed in a browser, and checked
> with a validator, is great but takes ages. I find that banging my text into
> an editor then using the markdown
On 5 January 2013 21:14, Sean Miller wrote:
> And the generated HTML is HTML 4 at best, probably more like HTML 3
> nothing like XHTML.
>
That is the OpenOffice generated HTML to which I refer.
Still don't quite understand the stuff generated by your shell scripts.
Sean
On 5 January 2013 21:13, Sean Miller wrote:
> XML? I have not seen any XML on your sites at all...
>
And the generated HTML is HTML 4 at best, probably more like HTML 3
nothing like XHTML.
Sean
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On 5 January 2013 21:06, kpb wrote:
> The only XML errors on other pages on the site are in the bits I didn't
> use markdown or textile to generate. Which was my original point :-).
>
XML? I have not seen any XML on your sites at all...
Sean
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On 5 January 2013 20:48, Phil Dobbin wrote:
> affiliation with the project & I use Vim for absolutely everything; in
> fact, I'm writing this in Vim :-)
>
Good man.
Sean
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Here's a good example, from your page produced in Open Office...
Probability Summary
Right, so we're going to go for uppercase tags? That's fine - perfectly
fine in HTML 4.
This handout was producted *snip*
...or, perhaps lowercase. Would be nice if it made up its mind.
...or perhaps not!!
On 5 January 2013 20:33, kpb wrote:
> I was replying to Alan Lord, who was suggesting direct editing of xhtml
> markup. Do you not see the replies in threaded mode? I suggested using a
> 'light' markup with script based conversion to html and my point was that
> this reduces the silly errors you
On 5 January 2013 20:16, Sean Miller wrote:
> On 5 January 2013 19:28, kpb wrote:
>
>> Hello Sean and all
>>
>> While Markdown/textile are pretty light, my personal site isn't pretty :-)
>>
>> http://sohcahtoa.org.uk/
>>
>> (The Llam
On 5 January 2013 19:28, kpb wrote:
> Hello Sean and all
>
> While Markdown/textile are pretty light, my personal site isn't pretty :-)
>
> http://sohcahtoa.org.uk/
>
> (The Llamas are a family joke). The method currently in use is described
> here
>
> http://sohcahtoa.org.uk/pages/publish-a-web-
On 5 January 2013 18:48, kpb wrote:
> I 'design'(*) templates and then write text marked up in either 'markdown'
> or 'textile' markup formats. A couple of bash scripts convert my
> markdown/textile to html and add the resulting marked up snippet to a page
> template. I also use a simple script t
XHTML is markup... there is not really such a thing as a "WYSIWYG"...
anything you use is gong to, ultimately, give you an inferior end result to
simply writing the XHTML from scratch.
Sean
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It's moved...
http://linuxcounter.net/
Sean
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On 6 October 2012 20:09, Ronnie Tucker wrote:
> Tiz a bit harsh to judge all 65 issues on one particular article...
>
I was not doing so, I was merely saying that as the person was asking for
concise advice on Ubuntu/Linux this might not be the best place to go as
that article was completely use
On 6 October 2012 19:10, Ronnie Tucker wrote:
> Feel free to submit articles, we're always on the look out for new
> articles and columns. ANYONE can help.
>
I could, but I don't understand that "New Guy" article.
Could you elaborate on what it was meant to achieve?
Opening a terminal to be ab
On 5 October 2012 21:03, Ronnie Tucker wrote:
> Well, I obviously must recommend the amazingly awesome (and free) Full
> Circle Magazine (http://fullcirclemagazine.org**).
>
> FULL DISCLAIMER: I'm the editor.
That "New Guy" column makes the "Dummies Guide" series look to the
point... and th
On 3 October 2012 22:27, paul sutton wrote:
> try http://ubuntu-manual.org/ and you can buy very cheap from lulu.com
> :) hope this helps
>
The link from ubuntu-manual.org to the print book doesn't work - I think it
should be this...
http://www.lulu.com/shop/the-ubuntu-manual-team/getting-start
On 3 October 2012 15:53, Avi Greenbury wrote:
> Generally, a good book on the topic will be relatively user-interface
> agnostic, since that's just an interface to the interesting bits and
> pieces you'll be twiddling. Those change incredibly slowly.
>
I agree.
The "desktop" is ever-changing, t
On 29 July 2012 12:12, Alan Pope wrote:
>> Not to mention that if you get a Debian user, a KDE user on another
>> distro, a Gnome user and a Ubuntu together in one room there is
>> guaranteed to be fireworks. We have the challenge of "evangelism",
>> people not trying to help but rather convert,
On 29 July 2012 11:40, Bill B. wrote:
> Make up an Ubuntu flag, stick it on a pole with a Tux flag adjacent
I have a huge "Tux" that I won at the UKOUG Conference many many years
ago... was made by SuSE and is about the size of a 10-year-old child
:-)
> [above or below] and set up at the next Gl
On 29 July 2012 11:10, Mark Fraser wrote:
> I used to go to LUGOG when it was at West Camel or at Somerton when Andrew
> Waldrond was running them, but when he left and it went back to Glastonbury it
> was a bit too far for me to travel.
Indeed... it never really "went back to Glastonbury", thoug
We need to get LUGOG (Linux User Group of Glastonbury) going again,
haven't had a meeting for a couple of years, but the challenge is
exactly this...
On 29 July 2012 10:18, Gareth France wrote:
> I didn't really picture it as being something so formal as having speakers
> really. At Reading nothi
On 25 July 2012 10:13, Robert McWilliam wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 25, 2012, at 01:46 AM, Joe Alam wrote:
>> I was wondering if anybody on the list can recommend any hosted shell
>> accounts?
>
> Webfaction's[1] shared hosting accounts come with shell access for you
> to pretty much do whatever you want
On 25 July 2012 09:33, Alan Pope wrote:
>> I was wondering if anybody on the list can recommend any hosted shell
>> accounts?
>
>
> I have used sdf in the past.
Don't quite understand why somebody would want a hosted shell account,
especially a Linux user.
Surely shell comes "for free" as part o
On 24 March 2012 19:41, Pete Smout wrote:
> It is about personal choice but Unity is not mine! Xubuntu here I come!
>
That's how I feel too.
Do Canonical take any notes of these lists?
Sean
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On 18 March 2012 15:22, Liam Proven wrote:
> What's the game & what are the system requirements?
>
I'm actually quite intrigued as to what this game might be too...
Was going to suggest installing VMWare or something and installing DOS.
Sean
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No, I don't think that's it... no file like that.
:-(
Sean
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I think there's something I'm missing...
My wireless card seemed to work fine up until the last couple of versions
of Ubuntu, and now it seems it won't work with ANY distros (well, I've
tried PCLinuxOS, Mint, Knoppix and Sabayan to no avail).
It works okay on Windows, obviously.
It's an Realtek
On 9 March 2012 21:56, Alan Pope wrote:
> Not at 78 quid a ticket, no.
>
That was my reaction too ! Would have liked to have gone, but FAR too
expensive.
Sean
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On 22 February 2012 13:43, Kris Douglas wrote:
> Why is it that Unity requires the user to be an expert. A picture of
> the ubuntu logo means a lot to us, but to someone who goes and buys a
> cheap computer it means jack all. They wouldn't think to click there
> there is no hit that explains it's
On 15 February 2012 11:24, Simon Greenwood wrote:
> need either ndiswrapper or the firmware loading for them - I seem to
> recall that this has been taken out of Ubuntu recently.
>
That was the sort of thing I thought it would probably be... the developers
making things "cleaner" by removing stu
I have two laptops that are both Currys brands (Advent and e-Machines) and
they always used to run Ubuntu fine.
Lately, though, there's no wireless at all... doesn't detect anything at
all, so I assume it's a driver issue of some sort.
As I am not currently anywhere near a wired connection I can'
On 31 January 2012 21:43, Daniel Case wrote:
> Just thought I would show you guys this, was just watching the IT Crowd
> (hadn't got round to Season 4 until now!) when I saw this:
> http://img855.imageshack.us/img855/4205/mossu.jpg
Wasn't that organised by one of our members?
I recall a discus
You could just "pretend" to set up the printer that you're thinking of
buying (as per this guide
http://www.freesoftwaremagazine.com/articles/printing_ubuntu ) and see if
it comes up...
Sean
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This isn't strictly Ubuntu, but more a generic "Open Source" question.
I am looking for a WYSIWYG editor for my own bespoke CMS that I have
written, and have until now been using FCKEditor.
I have found this one, however, which looks very nice but it isn't
generic... it's specifically written as
On 25 December 2011 10:21, Nigel Verity wrote:
> Santa brought my daughter her first laptop for Christmas. In common with
> most 11-year olds she appears to never listen to a word I say, but almost
> her first comment after opening the box was "has it already got Linux on
> it?". There is hope fo
Personally I think Unity is fairly awful on the desktop, but - let's face
it - the future of computing is not the desktop it's mobile devices,
tablets etc. etc.
Ubuntu is positioning itself so that when the next generation of machines
come around it'll be right up there with Windows etc. - if Ubun
Would it not be better to focus on why the Ubuntu CD didn't boot?
Where does it hang? Or does it boot and not have a desktop or what?
Sean
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This might sound really patronising, but there's no chance that your
keyboard is playing up is there?
So when you type "ubuntu" you get "uuntu" or similar?
Happened to me some time ago with a website, and I was convinced I'd been
locked out... in reality, it was a duff "9" key which needed to be
On 8 August 2011 13:59, Sean Miller wrote:
> Not impressed, and I'm going to fire off an e-mail to them to tell them so.
>
I've asked them... their attitude sounds really bad, to be honest...
significantly worse than the PCWorld guy with the memory sticks that did
seem a bre
On 8 August 2011 13:38, Barry Drake wrote:
> Patrick who said they would be delighted to supply pre-installed. I
> guess they don't want to advertise so that folk come to them and then
> need support with the OS.
>
Not sure that qualifies them to be linked to, does it?
The whole concept of "pr
Do you need to, perhaps, put the shell executable in front of
/media/runInstaller ?
Perhaps you're running bash and it needs ksh etc. etc. ?
Sean
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Isn't WUBI an option?
I have a "dual boot" of this sort (no partitioning at all) and it seems to
work quite well.
Sean
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On 3 July 2011 12:32, Norman Silverstone wrote:
> I presume you mean well but I do not really understand what or why you
> are asking and I am not really sure if I care.
>
Calm down, everybody... it really is not worth it.
Sean
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On 24 June 2011 10:03, Gordon Burgess-Parker wrote:
> **
> Not so. How can the IT dept evaluate a FINANCIAL reporting application?
> Especially an internationally-recognised market leader? The IT dept is a
> SERVICE dept. If the MD says "I want such and such a software because I
> think we can be
On 24 June 2011 08:45, Gordon Burgess-Parker wrote:
> As an example - in a quoted UK IT sector company, we (the Group Finance
> Dept) decided that we wanted a reporting tool to sit on top of JD Edwards,
> our ERM software. After research we decided on Hyperion which is (or was 15
> years ago) one
By the way, the "official line" with regard to sales of Windows XP and Vista
is that both are now "past their sell by date", as XP officially "end of
retail sales" was June 30th 2008, and Vista October 22nd 2010.
Which makes me wonder why, if this PC shop wanted to "move your dad
forward", they di
On 22 June 2011 09:16, Avi Greenbury wrote:
> I thought when pressed for a definition, MS decreed that the part of the
> computer the license was tied to was the motherboard, but I've never had
> cause to find out for sure.
No, the automatic online activation may not work (due to the hardware
c
On 22 June 2011 09:14, Jon Reynolds wrote:
> Is XP no longer sold (now I think about it that may be obvious!)? What
> about all the people and businesses who are not ready/capable of
> supporting/running Win7? Are existing XP license holders not able to have
> their PCs repaired and continue usin
On 22 June 2011 08:59, Avi Greenbury wrote:
> Jon Reynolds wrote:
>
>> 1. Why on Earth did they choose to put Vista on there??
>>
> Perhaps because a new board supposedly means a new install of Windows and
> you're not supposed to be using XP licenses any more. Perhaps they're also
> tired of sup
Mr. D. Archer Y4 Beech Curriculum, Racist Incidents, Literacy, Music,
Mentor, KS2 liaison
^^ as above, from website!!
I think I commented too on the fact that having a teacher responsible for
"racist incidents" suggested that they must have some history in that school
with such is it a very et
Yikes... !!
"Recognised for ICT"? Perhaps that was due to being "pioneers" and setting
up their website at a time most others didn't have one... alas, I think it's
rather overdue for an upgrade.
Sean
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https://wiki.
I think the year.month release numbers are very useful... if somebody says
to me "I have OS-Something Version 1.5" I have absolutely NO idea whatsoever
whether that release is bleeding edge or deprecated. If I read "Ubuntu
11.04" I know that is up-to-date: on the other hand, if I have somebody
say
On 11 June 2011 13:33, J Fernyhough wrote:
> Collect dinner money, enter register data, phone parents, send out
> letters - and one of the other tasks is to post newsletters onto the
> school website. When you think about school secretaries you don't
> think about people with technological intere
On 11 June 2011 11:40, Sean Miller wrote:
> I am SORRY but if this is the state of our education system then I
> despair...
>
And this is largely irrelevant in many cases, because they are using CMS
systems.
It's their CHOICE to "attach a PDF" rather than merely type
On 11 June 2011 11:30, Paul Sutton wrote:
> Perhaps we need more people in schools to help out who can actually do
> web design and help out without charging hundreds of pounds for the job.
> nProblem is most people out of college may not have these skills, I have
> seen web design courses advert
I think schools have a lot to answer for... they're supposed to be
educational establishments, yet they seem to fundamentally misunderstand the
whole concept of the web...
PDFs are fine, for documents that need to be printed consistently (eg.
posters for school events) but ALL other information (w
We always used to do a daily backup, but Sundays we did a weekly one.
Daily backups (ie. Mon-Sat) were kept 7 days, Sunday backups were on a
4-week cycle.
And, of course, we actually backed up to somewhere else... not to the same
system, as your script appears to do.
You could make it 8-weekly o
If you don't consider you are going to have a huge turnover then merely
register as a Sole Trader.
You will have to pay additional National Insurance Contributions on a
quarterly basis (I think it's about £10/month) and will have to complete an
additional page on your Self Assessment Tax Return st
No, you're not understanding... I already have my gallery script... but they
want a SPECIFIC presentation...
As close to this one, which they like, as possible...
http://visualartistsuk.com/marcel-christ
Single image on screen, then when you mouse over it a long scrolling bar of
all the images a
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