PMs
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- Killer Wolf
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PMs
Does anyone have probs w/ PMs not sending? i've got one sat in my outbox from last night >:-( noticed in previous corred w/ Griff that sometimes it would take a few hours to go through but i've not had one sit around for this long.
- Cmdr James
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- Commander McLane
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Yes, and don't panic. I have one to Amen Brick sitting in my outbox since December 30th, 2008. So one night is nothing.
Oh, and there are another 20 or so in my outbox since I started to invite "lost" forum members to Personalities.oxp. They will be delivered, eventually, if those members decide to log in again. If not, they will slowly rot in my outbox (question to the digital geeks: can bits and bytes decompose? and do they develop a smell after some time? ).
Oh, and there are another 20 or so in my outbox since I started to invite "lost" forum members to Personalities.oxp. They will be delivered, eventually, if those members decide to log in again. If not, they will slowly rot in my outbox (question to the digital geeks: can bits and bytes decompose? and do they develop a smell after some time? ).
- Killer Wolf
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- Eric Walch
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My two oldest are to Sabre (July 2008) and Murgh (October 2008).Commander McLane wrote:Yes, and don't panic. I have one to Amen Brick sitting in my outbox since December 30th, 2008. So one night is nothing.
Some members are currently not looking at their post that often.
And when I want to send a second post to a member that has still one in my outbox, I sometimes just edit that older message.
UPS-Courier & DeepSpacePirates & others at the box and some older versions
- Commander McLane
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- JensAyton
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Oh, yes. Bit rot is a widely recognised problem.Commander McLane wrote:question to the digital geeks: can bits and bytes decompose? and do they develop a smell after some time?
E-mail: [email protected]
- DaddyHoggy
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A potential solution? 1000yrs in my opinion is slightly OTT (as it the price)Ahruman wrote:Oh, yes. Bit rot is a widely recognised problem.Commander McLane wrote:question to the digital geeks: can bits and bytes decompose? and do they develop a smell after some time?
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/ ... _000_years
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
- Commander McLane
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I'm slightly disappointed. The article didn't mention anything about the smell.Ahruman wrote:Oh, yes. Bit rot is a widely recognised problem.Commander McLane wrote:question to the digital geeks: can bits and bytes decompose? and do they develop a smell after some time?
The upside is that I have learned a new word: DLL hell.
- Commander McLane
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Probably not. I would rather attribute it to the fact that I am a computer user, not expert.Kaks wrote:New term? Ah, the beauty of non-windows computers!Commander McLane wrote:The upside is that I have learned a new word: DLL hell.
- JensAyton
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That’s a thousand years under proper archival conditions, which is broadly comparable to really cheap office paper. :-)DaddyHoggy wrote:A potential solution? 1000yrs in my opinion is slightly OTT (as it the price)Ahruman wrote:Oh, yes. Bit rot is a widely recognised problem.Commander McLane wrote:question to the digital geeks: can bits and bytes decompose? and do they develop a smell after some time? :shock:
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/ ... _000_years
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- DaddyHoggy
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True - but you'd require a lot of tree's to make the equivalent worth of paper for the equivalent of 4.7GB of text (So far I've only ever had two of my first ever CD-Rs fail to read 2 from 20 after 9 years - not bad for just being chucked in a box of boxes in normal cyclic room temperature conditions)Ahruman wrote:That’s a thousand years under proper archival conditions, which is broadly comparable to really cheap office paper.DaddyHoggy wrote:A potential solution? 1000yrs in my opinion is slightly OTT (as it the price)Ahruman wrote:Oh, yes. Bit rot is a widely recognised problem.
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/ ... _000_years
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
- Killer Wolf
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oddly, i've had a bunch of laserdiscs fail on me. they were (IIRC) all warner bros ones. when you play them, you get sparkles all over the picture despite the surface of the disc being clean. i did hear something yonks ago about a fungus/algae/mould or something that could grow on the metal film of the disc pressing if it wasn't properly treated/clean before being sealed inside the vinyl discs.