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	<title>Comments on: Things Programmers Think (and Sometimes Say)</title>
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	<link>http://johnesimpson.com/blog/2009/11/things-programmers-think-and-sometimes-say/</link>
	<description>Ridiculous Pursuits, Solemn Matters</description>
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		<title>By: Froog</title>
		<link>http://johnesimpson.com/blog/2009/11/things-programmers-think-and-sometimes-say/comment-page-1/#comment-10993</link>
		<dc:creator>Froog</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Nov 2009 23:50:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://johnesimpson.com/blog/?p=6040#comment-10993</guid>
		<description>I saw a very funny TV interview with Linus Torvalds once where he gave the succint judgement on MS-DOS: &lt;i&gt;&quot;Basically, it&#039;s a SHIT operating system.&quot;&lt;/i&gt;

Of course, now you&#039;ve sent me scurrying off to Google McGuire and Sloan, you wicked man.&lt;div class=&quot;comment-remix-meta&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;#&quot; class=&quot;replyto&quot; onclick=&quot;replyto(&#039;10993&#039;,&#039;Froog&#039;); return false;&quot;&gt;Reply&lt;/a&gt;  - &lt;a href=&quot;#&quot; class=&quot;quote&quot; onclick=&quot;quote(&#039;10993&#039;,&#039;Froog&#039;,&#039;I saw a very funny TV interview with Linus Torvalds once where he gave the succint judgement on MS-DOS: &lt;i&gt;\&quot;Basically, it\&#039;s a SHIT operating system.\&quot;&lt;\/i&gt;\r\n\r\nOf course, now you\&#039;ve sent me scurrying off to Google McGuire and Sloan, you wicked man.&#039;); return false;&quot;&gt;Quote&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I saw a very funny TV interview with Linus Torvalds once where he gave the succint judgement on MS-DOS: <i>&#8220;Basically, it&#8217;s a SHIT operating system.&#8221;</i></p>
<p>Of course, now you&#8217;ve sent me scurrying off to Google McGuire and Sloan, you wicked man.
<div class="comment-remix-meta"><a href="#" class="replyto" onclick="replyto('10993','Froog'); return false;">Reply</a>  &#8211; <a href="#" class="quote" onclick="quote('10993','Froog','I saw a very funny TV interview with Linus Torvalds once where he gave the succint judgement on MS-DOS: &lt;i&gt;\&quot;Basically, it\'s a SHIT operating system.\&quot;&lt;\/i&gt;\r\n\r\nOf course, now you\'ve sent me scurrying off to Google McGuire and Sloan, you wicked man.'); return false;">Quote</a></div>
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		<title>By: John</title>
		<link>http://johnesimpson.com/blog/2009/11/things-programmers-think-and-sometimes-say/comment-page-1/#comment-10978</link>
		<dc:creator>John</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Nov 2009 17:03:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://johnesimpson.com/blog/?p=6040#comment-10978</guid>
		<description>&lt;strong&gt;Froog:&lt;/strong&gt; Thanks!

You&#039;re right in one respect. On the way into work this morning, I thought to myself how much I hated just having &lt;em&gt;fixed the problem&lt;/em&gt; without really, fully understanding the problem in the first place.

I mean, obviously I knew the symptom. But I couldn&#039;t figure out why it had presented itself. The solution thus feels like the easy way out.

(For the record, there seemed to be an extraordinary number of complaints about this upgrade cycle, although the ones who installed the new version from scratch seemed happy enough.)

But you know what? Because I do computers (etc.) on the day job, I&#039;m really not crazy about doing them at home. There, to the extent possible, I want the computer and operating system to be as invisible as possible. I don&#039;t want them to nag me with distractions -- I can find plenty of &lt;em&gt;those&lt;/em&gt; on my own -- and that, in fact, was one of my principal reasons for moving to Linux/Ubuntu in the first place. (Windows has to be one of the most querulous damned operating systems ever developed, constantly demanding attention and requesting permission to correct itself for problems which shouldn&#039;t have existed in the first place.)

So in this case, anyhow, although it bugs me not to &lt;em&gt;know&lt;/em&gt;, it doesn&#039;t bug me enough to follow through. (I just thank God I could get to my data.)

I always thought it a lucky thing that Barry McGuire (and P.F. Sloan, who wrote it) probably couldn&#039;t feel proud about &quot;The Eve of Destruction&quot; until &lt;em&gt;after&lt;/em&gt; it had been recorded.&lt;div class=&quot;comment-remix-meta&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;#&quot; class=&quot;replyto&quot; onclick=&quot;replyto(&#039;10978&#039;,&#039;John&#039;); return false;&quot;&gt;Reply&lt;/a&gt;  - &lt;a href=&quot;#&quot; class=&quot;quote&quot; onclick=&quot;quote(&#039;10978&#039;,&#039;John&#039;,&#039;&lt;strong&gt;Froog:&lt;\/strong&gt; Thanks!\r\n\r\nYou\&#039;re right in one respect. On the way into work this morning, I thought to myself how much I hated just having &lt;em&gt;fixed the problem&lt;\/em&gt; without really, fully understanding the problem in the first place.\r\n\r\nI mean, obviously I knew the symptom. But I couldn\&#039;t figure out why it had presented itself. The solution thus feels like the easy way out.\r\n\r\n(For the record, there seemed to be an extraordinary number of complaints about this upgrade cycle, although the ones who installed the new version from scratch seemed happy enough.)\r\n\r\nBut you know what? Because I do computers (etc.) on the day job, I\&#039;m really not crazy about doing them at home. There, to the extent possible, I want the computer and operating system to be as invisible as possible. I don\&#039;t want them to nag me with distractions -- I can find plenty of &lt;em&gt;those&lt;\/em&gt; on my own -- and that, in fact, was one of my principal reasons for moving to Linux\/Ubuntu in the first place. (Windows has to be one of the most querulous damned operating systems ever developed, constantly demanding attention and requesting permission to correct itself for problems which shouldn\&#039;t have existed in the first place.)\r\n\r\nSo in this case, anyhow, although it bugs me not to &lt;em&gt;know&lt;\/em&gt;, it doesn\&#039;t bug me enough to follow through. (I just thank God I could get to my data.)\r\n\r\nI always thought it a lucky thing that Barry McGuire (and P.F. Sloan, who wrote it) probably couldn\&#039;t feel proud about \&quot;The Eve of Destruction\&quot; until &lt;em&gt;after&lt;\/em&gt; it had been recorded.&#039;); return false;&quot;&gt;Quote&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Froog:</strong> Thanks!</p>
<p>You&#8217;re right in one respect. On the way into work this morning, I thought to myself how much I hated just having <em>fixed the problem</em> without really, fully understanding the problem in the first place.</p>
<p>I mean, obviously I knew the symptom. But I couldn&#8217;t figure out why it had presented itself. The solution thus feels like the easy way out.</p>
<p>(For the record, there seemed to be an extraordinary number of complaints about this upgrade cycle, although the ones who installed the new version from scratch seemed happy enough.)</p>
<p>But you know what? Because I do computers (etc.) on the day job, I&#8217;m really not crazy about doing them at home. There, to the extent possible, I want the computer and operating system to be as invisible as possible. I don&#8217;t want them to nag me with distractions &#8212; I can find plenty of <em>those</em> on my own &#8212; and that, in fact, was one of my principal reasons for moving to Linux/Ubuntu in the first place. (Windows has to be one of the most querulous damned operating systems ever developed, constantly demanding attention and requesting permission to correct itself for problems which shouldn&#8217;t have existed in the first place.)</p>
<p>So in this case, anyhow, although it bugs me not to <em>know</em>, it doesn&#8217;t bug me enough to follow through. (I just thank God I could get to my data.)</p>
<p>I always thought it a lucky thing that Barry McGuire (and P.F. Sloan, who wrote it) probably couldn&#8217;t feel proud about &#8220;The Eve of Destruction&#8221; until <em>after</em> it had been recorded.
<div class="comment-remix-meta"><a href="#" class="replyto" onclick="replyto('10978','John'); return false;">Reply</a>  &#8211; <a href="#" class="quote" onclick="quote('10978','John','&lt;strong&gt;Froog:&lt;\/strong&gt; Thanks!\r\n\r\nYou\'re right in one respect. On the way into work this morning, I thought to myself how much I hated just having &lt;em&gt;fixed the problem&lt;\/em&gt; without really, fully understanding the problem in the first place.\r\n\r\nI mean, obviously I knew the symptom. But I couldn\'t figure out why it had presented itself. The solution thus feels like the easy way out.\r\n\r\n(For the record, there seemed to be an extraordinary number of complaints about this upgrade cycle, although the ones who installed the new version from scratch seemed happy enough.)\r\n\r\nBut you know what? Because I do computers (etc.) on the day job, I\'m really not crazy about doing them at home. There, to the extent possible, I want the computer and operating system to be as invisible as possible. I don\'t want them to nag me with distractions -- I can find plenty of &lt;em&gt;those&lt;\/em&gt; on my own -- and that, in fact, was one of my principal reasons for moving to Linux\/Ubuntu in the first place. (Windows has to be one of the most querulous damned operating systems ever developed, constantly demanding attention and requesting permission to correct itself for problems which shouldn\'t have existed in the first place.)\r\n\r\nSo in this case, anyhow, although it bugs me not to &lt;em&gt;know&lt;\/em&gt;, it doesn\'t bug me enough to follow through. (I just thank God I could get to my data.)\r\n\r\nI always thought it a lucky thing that Barry McGuire (and P.F. Sloan, who wrote it) probably couldn\'t feel proud about \&quot;The Eve of Destruction\&quot; until &lt;em&gt;after&lt;\/em&gt; it had been recorded.'); return false;">Quote</a></div>
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		<title>By: Froog</title>
		<link>http://johnesimpson.com/blog/2009/11/things-programmers-think-and-sometimes-say/comment-page-1/#comment-10975</link>
		<dc:creator>Froog</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Nov 2009 15:00:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://johnesimpson.com/blog/?p=6040#comment-10975</guid>
		<description>Congratulations!  I&#039;m glad you&#039;re back - or very nearly so - to full functionality.

However, given your admitted obsessive tendencies (and I suffer something of the same vice myself in this regard), I wonder if you&#039;re going to be content with having found a way to make the thing work.  Will you not now be endlessly enquiring into why the thing didn&#039;t work as it was supposed to?

It sounds as if this should have been something that afflicted everyone attempting this upgrade, or at least a sizable proportion of them.

That is my curse anyway, I&#039;m afraid.  I&#039;m never content just to fix a problem (to defeat the &#039;gumption test&#039; as Pirsig called it); I &lt;i&gt;need&lt;/i&gt; to understand how the problem came about.

BTW, it&#039;s a classic bar bet kind of thing, but I think you&#039;ll find (probably know already) that pride goeth &lt;i&gt;not&lt;/i&gt; (directly) before a fall, but before destruction.  It is the (barely distinguishable) sin of an haughty spirit that trips you up.

I hope there&#039;s going to be no falling over or destruction in your life.  Give this Ubuntu beast a good thrashing and show it who&#039;s boss.&lt;div class=&quot;comment-remix-meta&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;#&quot; class=&quot;replyto&quot; onclick=&quot;replyto(&#039;10975&#039;,&#039;Froog&#039;); return false;&quot;&gt;Reply&lt;/a&gt;  - &lt;a href=&quot;#&quot; class=&quot;quote&quot; onclick=&quot;quote(&#039;10975&#039;,&#039;Froog&#039;,&#039;Congratulations!  I\&#039;m glad you\&#039;re back - or very nearly so - to full functionality.\r\n\r\nHowever, given your admitted obsessive tendencies (and I suffer something of the same vice myself in this regard), I wonder if you\&#039;re going to be content with having found a way to make the thing work.  Will you not now be endlessly enquiring into why the thing didn\&#039;t work as it was supposed to?\r\n\r\nIt sounds as if this should have been something that afflicted everyone attempting this upgrade, or at least a sizable proportion of them.\r\n\r\nThat is my curse anyway, I\&#039;m afraid.  I\&#039;m never content just to fix a problem (to defeat the \&#039;gumption test\&#039; as Pirsig called it); I &lt;i&gt;need&lt;\/i&gt; to understand how the problem came about.\r\n\r\nBTW, it\&#039;s a classic bar bet kind of thing, but I think you\&#039;ll find (probably know already) that pride goeth &lt;i&gt;not&lt;\/i&gt; (directly) before a fall, but before destruction.  It is the (barely distinguishable) sin of an haughty spirit that trips you up.\r\n\r\nI hope there\&#039;s going to be no falling over or destruction in your life.  Give this Ubuntu beast a good thrashing and show it who\&#039;s boss.&#039;); return false;&quot;&gt;Quote&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Congratulations!  I&#8217;m glad you&#8217;re back &#8211; or very nearly so &#8211; to full functionality.</p>
<p>However, given your admitted obsessive tendencies (and I suffer something of the same vice myself in this regard), I wonder if you&#8217;re going to be content with having found a way to make the thing work.  Will you not now be endlessly enquiring into why the thing didn&#8217;t work as it was supposed to?</p>
<p>It sounds as if this should have been something that afflicted everyone attempting this upgrade, or at least a sizable proportion of them.</p>
<p>That is my curse anyway, I&#8217;m afraid.  I&#8217;m never content just to fix a problem (to defeat the &#8216;gumption test&#8217; as Pirsig called it); I <i>need</i> to understand how the problem came about.</p>
<p>BTW, it&#8217;s a classic bar bet kind of thing, but I think you&#8217;ll find (probably know already) that pride goeth <i>not</i> (directly) before a fall, but before destruction.  It is the (barely distinguishable) sin of an haughty spirit that trips you up.</p>
<p>I hope there&#8217;s going to be no falling over or destruction in your life.  Give this Ubuntu beast a good thrashing and show it who&#8217;s boss.
<div class="comment-remix-meta"><a href="#" class="replyto" onclick="replyto('10975','Froog'); return false;">Reply</a>  &#8211; <a href="#" class="quote" onclick="quote('10975','Froog','Congratulations!  I\'m glad you\'re back - or very nearly so - to full functionality.\r\n\r\nHowever, given your admitted obsessive tendencies (and I suffer something of the same vice myself in this regard), I wonder if you\'re going to be content with having found a way to make the thing work.  Will you not now be endlessly enquiring into why the thing didn\'t work as it was supposed to?\r\n\r\nIt sounds as if this should have been something that afflicted everyone attempting this upgrade, or at least a sizable proportion of them.\r\n\r\nThat is my curse anyway, I\'m afraid.  I\'m never content just to fix a problem (to defeat the \'gumption test\' as Pirsig called it); I &lt;i&gt;need&lt;\/i&gt; to understand how the problem came about.\r\n\r\nBTW, it\'s a classic bar bet kind of thing, but I think you\'ll find (probably know already) that pride goeth &lt;i&gt;not&lt;\/i&gt; (directly) before a fall, but before destruction.  It is the (barely distinguishable) sin of an haughty spirit that trips you up.\r\n\r\nI hope there\'s going to be no falling over or destruction in your life.  Give this Ubuntu beast a good thrashing and show it who\'s boss.'); return false;">Quote</a></div>
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		<title>By: John</title>
		<link>http://johnesimpson.com/blog/2009/11/things-programmers-think-and-sometimes-say/comment-page-1/#comment-10954</link>
		<dc:creator>John</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 15 Nov 2009 20:09:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://johnesimpson.com/blog/?p=6040#comment-10954</guid>
		<description>&lt;strong&gt;Darc&lt;/strong&gt;: Well, you asked... (Others may wish to skip!)

Ubuntu is installed on a small partition of my hard drive. Since I could &quot;see&quot; that partition okay from Windows, I copied over to the latter my &lt;code&gt;home&lt;/code&gt; directory from the former. (This includes all documents and customized program settings, like Firefox bookmarks, email account info, and so on. Oh, and I also copied it to an external hard drive just in case the Windows copy for some reason wasn&#039;t readable.)

And then I did a full install of the new version of Ubuntu (9.10, &quot;Jaunty Jackalope&quot;): not an upgrade, but a completely new installation. I installed it to the same partition previously used by Ubuntu, including a full reformatting of that partition. (The latter was the only part really making me nervous. I alternated probably about 10 times between clicking on Back and Next buttons, reassuring myself that I&#039;d be reformatting ONLY that partition. Which I really wanted to get right, for obvious reasons. :))

The full install failed once, because I&#039;d accepted a default option which didn&#039;t make sense for my own setup. It took on the second try. 

Thereafter, it&#039;s been a matter of transferring all the stuff from the &lt;code&gt;home&lt;/code&gt; backups back to the new location, changing my wallpaper back to &quot;normal,&quot; recreating shortcuts (called &quot;launchers&quot; here), and so on.

So far, so good, with one possible exception: I don&#039;t think I backed up my word-processing &lt;code&gt;Templates&lt;/code&gt; folder. Which will be annoying to have to recreate, but in the grand scheme of things feels trivial.

Really looking forward to &lt;em&gt;writing&lt;/em&gt; again, y&#039;know?

Thanks again (to you and others) for your good wishes. They helped fuel my determination to beat this thing.&lt;div class=&quot;comment-remix-meta&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;#&quot; class=&quot;replyto&quot; onclick=&quot;replyto(&#039;10954&#039;,&#039;John&#039;); return false;&quot;&gt;Reply&lt;/a&gt;  - &lt;a href=&quot;#&quot; class=&quot;quote&quot; onclick=&quot;quote(&#039;10954&#039;,&#039;John&#039;,&#039;&lt;strong&gt;Darc&lt;\/strong&gt;: Well, you asked... (Others may wish to skip!)\r\n\r\nUbuntu is installed on a small partition of my hard drive. Since I could \&quot;see\&quot; that partition okay from Windows, I copied over to the latter my &lt;code&gt;home&lt;\/code&gt; directory from the former. (This includes all documents and customized program settings, like Firefox bookmarks, email account info, and so on. Oh, and I also copied it to an external hard drive just in case the Windows copy for some reason wasn\&#039;t readable.)\r\n\r\nAnd then I did a full install of the new version of Ubuntu (9.10, \&quot;Jaunty Jackalope\&quot;): not an upgrade, but a completely new installation. I installed it to the same partition previously used by Ubuntu, including a full reformatting of that partition. (The latter was the only part really making me nervous. I alternated probably about 10 times between clicking on Back and Next buttons, reassuring myself that I\&#039;d be reformatting ONLY that partition. Which I really wanted to get right, for obvious reasons. :))\r\n\r\nThe full install failed once, because I\&#039;d accepted a default option which didn\&#039;t make sense for my own setup. It took on the second try. \r\n\r\nThereafter, it\&#039;s been a matter of transferring all the stuff from the &lt;code&gt;home&lt;\/code&gt; backups back to the new location, changing my wallpaper back to \&quot;normal,\&quot; recreating shortcuts (called \&quot;launchers\&quot; here), and so on.\r\n\r\nSo far, so good, with one possible exception: I don\&#039;t think I backed up my word-processing &lt;code&gt;Templates&lt;\/code&gt; folder. Which will be annoying to have to recreate, but in the grand scheme of things feels trivial.\r\n\r\nReally looking forward to &lt;em&gt;writing&lt;\/em&gt; again, y\&#039;know?\r\n\r\nThanks again (to you and others) for your good wishes. They helped fuel my determination to beat this thing.&#039;); return false;&quot;&gt;Quote&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Darc</strong>: Well, you asked&#8230; (Others may wish to skip!)</p>
<p>Ubuntu is installed on a small partition of my hard drive. Since I could &#8220;see&#8221; that partition okay from Windows, I copied over to the latter my <code>home</code> directory from the former. (This includes all documents and customized program settings, like Firefox bookmarks, email account info, and so on. Oh, and I also copied it to an external hard drive just in case the Windows copy for some reason wasn&#8217;t readable.)</p>
<p>And then I did a full install of the new version of Ubuntu (9.10, &#8220;Jaunty Jackalope&#8221;): not an upgrade, but a completely new installation. I installed it to the same partition previously used by Ubuntu, including a full reformatting of that partition. (The latter was the only part really making me nervous. I alternated probably about 10 times between clicking on Back and Next buttons, reassuring myself that I&#8217;d be reformatting ONLY that partition. Which I really wanted to get right, for obvious reasons. :))</p>
<p>The full install failed once, because I&#8217;d accepted a default option which didn&#8217;t make sense for my own setup. It took on the second try. </p>
<p>Thereafter, it&#8217;s been a matter of transferring all the stuff from the <code>home</code> backups back to the new location, changing my wallpaper back to &#8220;normal,&#8221; recreating shortcuts (called &#8220;launchers&#8221; here), and so on.</p>
<p>So far, so good, with one possible exception: I don&#8217;t think I backed up my word-processing <code>Templates</code> folder. Which will be annoying to have to recreate, but in the grand scheme of things feels trivial.</p>
<p>Really looking forward to <em>writing</em> again, y&#8217;know?</p>
<p>Thanks again (to you and others) for your good wishes. They helped fuel my determination to beat this thing.
<div class="comment-remix-meta"><a href="#" class="replyto" onclick="replyto('10954','John'); return false;">Reply</a>  &#8211; <a href="#" class="quote" onclick="quote('10954','John','&lt;strong&gt;Darc&lt;\/strong&gt;: Well, you asked... (Others may wish to skip!)\r\n\r\nUbuntu is installed on a small partition of my hard drive. Since I could \&quot;see\&quot; that partition okay from Windows, I copied over to the latter my &lt;code&gt;home&lt;\/code&gt; directory from the former. (This includes all documents and customized program settings, like Firefox bookmarks, email account info, and so on. Oh, and I also copied it to an external hard drive just in case the Windows copy for some reason wasn\'t readable.)\r\n\r\nAnd then I did a full install of the new version of Ubuntu (9.10, \&quot;Jaunty Jackalope\&quot;): not an upgrade, but a completely new installation. I installed it to the same partition previously used by Ubuntu, including a full reformatting of that partition. (The latter was the only part really making me nervous. I alternated probably about 10 times between clicking on Back and Next buttons, reassuring myself that I\'d be reformatting ONLY that partition. Which I really wanted to get right, for obvious reasons. :))\r\n\r\nThe full install failed once, because I\'d accepted a default option which didn\'t make sense for my own setup. It took on the second try. \r\n\r\nThereafter, it\'s been a matter of transferring all the stuff from the &lt;code&gt;home&lt;\/code&gt; backups back to the new location, changing my wallpaper back to \&quot;normal,\&quot; recreating shortcuts (called \&quot;launchers\&quot; here), and so on.\r\n\r\nSo far, so good, with one possible exception: I don\'t think I backed up my word-processing &lt;code&gt;Templates&lt;\/code&gt; folder. Which will be annoying to have to recreate, but in the grand scheme of things feels trivial.\r\n\r\nReally looking forward to &lt;em&gt;writing&lt;\/em&gt; again, y\'know?\r\n\r\nThanks again (to you and others) for your good wishes. They helped fuel my determination to beat this thing.'); return false;">Quote</a></div>
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		<title>By: DarcKnyt</title>
		<link>http://johnesimpson.com/blog/2009/11/things-programmers-think-and-sometimes-say/comment-page-1/#comment-10952</link>
		<dc:creator>DarcKnyt</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 15 Nov 2009 19:39:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://johnesimpson.com/blog/?p=6040#comment-10952</guid>
		<description>Excellent!  Tell us what you did, and have it for posterity and for those of us threatened and intimidated by those weird OSs like Linux.  ;)

Glad you&#039;re getting there.&lt;div class=&quot;comment-remix-meta&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;#&quot; class=&quot;replyto&quot; onclick=&quot;replyto(&#039;10952&#039;,&#039;DarcKnyt&#039;); return false;&quot;&gt;Reply&lt;/a&gt;  - &lt;a href=&quot;#&quot; class=&quot;quote&quot; onclick=&quot;quote(&#039;10952&#039;,&#039;DarcKnyt&#039;,&#039;Excellent!  Tell us what you did, and have it for posterity and for those of us threatened and intimidated by those weird OSs like Linux.  ;)\r\n\r\nGlad you\&#039;re getting there.&#039;); return false;&quot;&gt;Quote&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Excellent!  Tell us what you did, and have it for posterity and for those of us threatened and intimidated by those weird OSs like Linux.  ;)</p>
<p>Glad you&#8217;re getting there.
<div class="comment-remix-meta"><a href="#" class="replyto" onclick="replyto('10952','DarcKnyt'); return false;">Reply</a>  &#8211; <a href="#" class="quote" onclick="quote('10952','DarcKnyt','Excellent!  Tell us what you did, and have it for posterity and for those of us threatened and intimidated by those weird OSs like Linux.  ;)\r\n\r\nGlad you\'re getting there.'); return false;">Quote</a></div>
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