darkmobius
darkmobius
darkmobius

Shhh, I don't want people to know what I do at the weekends. :p

Completely agreed, I use it on all my computers: work, laptop, netbook. And most of my work colleagues also now use it since I introduced it to them.

I'm bright and breezy, no ill will at all. :)

lighten up

What about Kripke's million person study that found people that average 6/7 hours have lower death rate than those that average 8?

I've also given up on RTM. I paid for the pro version and I found it a struggle to use daily with multiple devices (e.g. with my android phone). I've since converted to Google Tasks + Astrid. And I couldn't be happier. There are a few niggles but both Astrid and Google Tasks seem to be in continuous

If anyone is revisionist it's the person making up what I said. :) Sarcasm is hardly an explicit denial or statement of anything. If you actually read without your apple tinted spectacles I haven't stated anything either way nor agreed nor disagreed. Go on read everything I've posted, have I actually at any point made

Ummm how have I "changed history"? Anyway aren't Apple the ones who "xeroxed" Xerox? Pure genius.

@Bonnor: Because Apple invented everything. ;)

@jcwx86: Same here except I use the one time password Yubikey as my second factor. I do use trust specific PCs (my own) so the two factor isn't a pain as it only applies when logging in from an unknown computer.

I wouldn't want a foreign government to have any say whatsoever in my ID.

@Platypus Man: But this is about separating out people who consider themselves "lucky" or "unlucky" so by definition it's everything to do with "luck". Even if it's simply how we perceive luck. It wasn't separated out by people who consider themselves positive or negative. I think it's quite possible to be positive

@oskiee: agreed, this is about considering yourself to be a lucky or unlucky person, and if you think you are lucky you are actually more aware of opportunities. People who see themselves as unlucky don't expect opportunities and so miss them and each perpetuates that perception. We're not talking about statistical

I recognize those fiery staircases. We had quite a few false alarms in the engineering department at Durham. :)

Ok, thanks. Very useful, although personally I like to keep a variety of services in case one goes down (as Dropbox did not so long ago). But I think I'll look into multiple dropbox accounts as well.

@derilium: Not sure what you're suggesting, have a different drop box account for each Windows user account? In any case to really take compare to multiple services, what's your solution to multiple dropbox account instances running at the same time? (I want something set up and running without intervention not

@letsdropthehammer: I don't think you should solely rely on others for backing up. You should take responsibility for backing up your personal data personally. The idea that permanent data lost couldn't happen to a giant mega corp like Google isn't actually far fetched and to be honest why risk it when it's so little

@mikey.robbo: It's an insurance policy, you hope it won't happen and it may even be unlikely in the lifetime you use a specific hard drive for but it's all down to how important it is versus the risk.

#corrections "which is note technically a backup service" should be "not"