I wish it had event categories. The multiple calendar system is really annoying, particularly if I want to share with someone else. Share one calendar and give them the whole picture? Nope. You've got to share 'em all.
I wish it had event categories. The multiple calendar system is really annoying, particularly if I want to share with someone else. Share one calendar and give them the whole picture? Nope. You've got to share 'em all.
VOTE: Outlook 2010
Interesting idea, but will they dry out completely between showers? Otherwise, they're just going to get ever more saturated. Placed as they are, you've limited exposed surface area, so evaporation will be limited for each cork.
Agreed. We buy TP in bulk because it's convenient, not because it's necessarily the cheapest option.
@Trellis23 - the school here tries to discourage paper and pen editing and commenting. Many professors annotate drafts of dissertations electronically, rather than printing them out. PDFs prevent incompatibility issues, but they don't allow editing of text.
I find whole grain pasta to be more filling. It takes longer for me to get hungry after a meal of whole grain pasta, than a comparable meal of "regular" pasta. That's why I like it.
I asked IT about Outlook Anywhere several months ago. It's not going anywhere anytime soon. :(
Yep. Also Eudora and Pegasus.
Outlook 2010 searches quite nicely, in my experience. I'm not particularly concerned about rendering HTML in email. It shouldn't be there anyway, in my opinion. But I'm an old fogey.
You can set up IMAP on Exchange, but it is not required. Our Exchange server at work has IMAP disabled. You can get your email through Outlook when connected to the local net work, Outlook Web Access when you're off site, or through activesync on a phone/tablet.
I work at a private academic institution. Trying to save money for students, OpenOffice was once recommended. But it caused so many cross-program problems with Microsoft Office that it is now actively discouraged.
Because they're getting ready to party like it's 1999?
Thumbs up for Directory Opus. It's got a few glitches with Windows 7 that take some tweaking to address, but I couldn't imagine doing my job without it.
"The Real Sync" will let you set sync folders for any folder on your device's SD card with any folder on Dropbox. Download, upload or synchronize - it'll do it. I mainly use it for keeping collections of PDF research articles on my computer and my tablet.
I got xbox live primarily for Netflix. Then RROD. Now I'm using a Boxee Box (Christmas gift) and the xbox sits idle because I'm not willing to pay the price for a new one.
With apologies to Emory Leeson, "they're boxy but they're good" isn't a selling point for computer interfaces.
"Shaved" is the past- and perfect-tense form of the verb "shave." "Shaven" is a past-participle. Along with a few other odd English words, it has pretty much been ignored as a verb and now functions primarily as an adjective. Melt, cleave and prove are in the same boat.
I'm not sure about "least manly," but I definitely find them "least effective." I don't know if it's the angles of my features or the design of the devices, but I've always felt like I needed another shave at noon when I used an electric razor.
I've tried CM7, but hated the dialer. Sense has me spoiled. Dialer One could make CM more appealing.
I like context-sensitive options. But, as interesting an idea as this is, I'm not sure it really solves a pressing problem. The instances where I want to remove a program are not so frequent that I'd want to add it to the context menu all the time. And, given the infrequency of this situation, I don't the five clicks…