-----Original Message----- From: Dustin Decker
-----Original Message----- From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Brian Densmore Sent: Wednesday, January 05, 2005 1:38 PM To: brad; Subject: RE: OT: generator for ice storm
Please don't feed the trolls.
So at what point, exactly, did my insightful information about the possibility of obtaining a generator on the cheap qualify me as a troll?
At this point:
"/me ignites the fireplace and returns to his book.".
You have to read Brad's email where he asks if you've lost power. Obviously, if you had no power you couldn't send an email. Therefore, implying that you lost power by the above statement could be taken as a troll. ;) Although the above statement could also just mean you like to have a fire going in the fireplace. But taken the context of the subject matter, it is more likely to be read the other way.
I guess I need to be less subtle on my list humor. No offense was intended.
Brian Densmore
On Thu, 6 Jan 2005 09:11:51 -0600, Brian Densmore [email protected] wrote:
You have to read Brad's email where he asks if you've lost power. Obviously, if you had no power you couldn't send an email.
Not as obvious as it might seem. I could lose power, but so long as there's someone with an open WAP my laptop can reach, I can send email. If it weren't for Websense blocking 'web based email', I'd be able to send email from work when the home has no power.
On Saturday 08 January 2005 10:32 pm, Monty J. Harder wrote:
If it weren't for Websense blocking 'web based email', I'd be able to send email from work when the home has no power.
How does it manage to do that?
I've allways run my email server on https for various reasons, including that I wanted it to be a little harder for my employer to snoope my connection.