Nov. 23rd, 2009

alexpgp: (Default)
From the Vembu blog:
Create a wave of your own and make it public by adding public@a.gwave.com as wave participant. There’s a small ‘trick’ needed with this one. When you Click on the + beside the Manage Contacts link and type public.a.gwave.com as a contact, you’ll get an unfriendly  “User does not have a Google Wave account” message. Just ignore it, and hit the enter key. The contact gets added and is called ‘Public’ in your contacts list. Now you can create a new wave and add ‘Public’ to the conversation.
Bloody intuitive.

I don't think anything like ignore it and hit Enter would've occurred to me on my own.

Small hand motions, small, small... that's how we learn to Wave!

Cheers...
alexpgp: (Default)
I got my hands on a Windows 7 notebook that's pretty compact (Acer 1410) and decided to do what I stopped doing a few machines ago, and that's to partition the 160 GB drive and keep Windows and program files on one partition, and data (documents, media, etc.) on another.

Having accomplished that feat, it occurred to me that there was no easy way to cause the directory tree created for my username to actually reside on the other (non-system) disk. Most of the solutions I saw online were overly complex and piled high with "don't blame me if you screw up your setup" warnings. Finally, after reading about a half-dozen articles, I essayed a solution:

First, as user "fred" I opened a cmd box by right-clicking on the cmd icon in the Start menu and selecting "Run as Administrator." I then activated the Administrator's account and created a password - farblegarg - for the Administrator by invoking
C:\Users> net user administrator /active:yes
C:\Users> net user administrator farblegarg
Then I copied the entire directory tree associated with fred to the D: drive
C:\Users> robocopy fred d:\fred /mir /xj
The two additional parameters specify that the directory structure is to be mirrored (/mir) and that junction points not be followed (/xj).

The next step is to delete the fred directory from C:\Users and then invoke
C:\Users> mklink fred d:\fred
What this does is create a so-called junction in the directory that points to the files on the D: drive.

Basically, what that means is that as far as Windows is concerned, when fred logs in, all of his files will appear to reside on the system drive (C:), but will actually be stored on the data drive (D:).

...and if all I've said, Brigid, doesn't mean anything to you, then forget it and we'll make it just this: We'll always have Pismo Beach!

Oops! I must be having a movie flashback, channeling Bogie and Bugs!

Cheers...

P.S. This post has been brought to you by the letter B, which has been avoiding being said, to no avail.

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