AccessBlaster
Be careful what you wish for
- Local time
- Yesterday, 20:25
- Joined
- May 22, 2010
- Messages
- 7,793
Where I live the sidewalk and parkway are owned by the city. The parkway is usually maintained by the homeowner, watering, grasscutting etc.
Pardon my interjection. Though, I don't know of any software that can port installed software there is software designed to operate on multiple operating systems. That implies that a solution can be achieved by using this type of software. With this approach, copying data is not a problem. Of course, I don't know the full nature of your concern so my suggestion may be naive and not practical.@The_Doc_Man have you ever investigated any software that can port installed software?
If the client is committed to Win 11, then a Win 11 solution is somewhat mandatory. Nevertheless, are there clients that have a degree of flexibility and therefore don't need to use Win 11?On top of the software installation problem is the Gorilla in the room that is Win 11. I tried to use it when helping a client. What a royal PITA. Why, why, why does MS change stuff that works?
Although I now live maybe 30 miles from the sea and five miles from a river, I did live by the sea for most of my life. By the time I was buying houses I knew where it flooded and where it didn't. In fact when we moved down here, avoiding being flooded was important to me. I have to say I'd never buy a house where it could flood, even though the views for a couple of months would be better. I see on the TV whole towns destroyed by flames when the surrounding forests catches fire. I simply cannot believe that anyone would live there. Not only that, any possibility of a view is removed by the trees .And... minor street flooding has become just a little bit worse. The street is above-the-ankles deep in water as some of our drainage canals have flowed over the tops. I don't THINK my floor upholstery is wet, but it is probably very close to it. The water isn't deep enough to hurt the car engine. (I've been through a couple of dozen hurricanes so feel confident in that particular call.) On the other hand, our garage has maybe a couple of inches of water in it. We'll have to clean out and throw out a few things that are on the floor. Oh, well, could be worse.
Francine's winds were not terribly bad, but she wet us all down pretty seriously. The pumps are still working but the rain was for a while falling faster than the pumps could handle. Now they are playing catch-up. I will probably have a considerable amount of debris to remove from the yard when it clears out tomorrow - which it will do. Local radar already shows the southern edge of the cluster of rain showers has moved to the edge of the lake that is north of us. We still have some winds but the rain is moving out. The forecast is that Francine is taking the Mississippi River tour, following it up towards southern Illinois. Hope you Yankees need the rain, 'cause you're gonna get it whether you needed it or not.
Send a little water westward!Hope you Yankees need the rain, 'cause you're gonna get it whether you needed it or not.
Send a little water westward!
In Essex a year or 2 ago, we had 1/4 to 1/2 inch of snow. Schools closed, buses stopped, shops closed early, drivers warned not to go out unless urgent. I walked over to our paper shop but no papers. Delivery vans not delivering.I was out walking in the hills last week and met a couple from Utah who said it wasn't unusual to have four feet of snow over huge areas. We may see nearly that for a short time in the high fells but very localised and mainly just drifted snow.