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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#31 | |
Kicking up my heels!
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: The Silver State
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Quote:
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#32 | |
Chowder Head
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Yes
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This is just the dumbest ass thing: I did some cleanup work on my Outlook address book, including adding address, phone, fax, etc. I exported the database to a .CSV file and deleted all contacts in my Outlook Address Book (archiving the original file before deleting of course!), did all the work in Excel, re-saved to .CSV, and imported back in to Outlook. It was a great way to make wholesale updates.
However, after I did this, fax numbers kept showing up as email addresses when I was entering addresses in an email. After some digging on the internets, I found this: Quote:
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#33 |
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Join Date: Feb 2005
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Not necessarily silly but with the general death of fax machines certainly so generally obsolete that they should add a option toggle to control it.
Having fax numbers recognized as the equivalent routing possibility to email addresses was quite useful to me back in my administrative assistant days. But what I wonder is, this shouldn't be new is it? If you had fax numbers in there before they should have been behaving the same way. |
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#34 |
Chowder Head
Join Date: Jan 2005
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While Fax is a dying technology, it is far from dead (heck: I had to work with someone recently who was still using DOS). It is silly to have the information in a numeric telephonic field automatically default to an email format without benefit of being able to switch that automatic conversion off. If it were on an option to turn that auto-conversion ON, that would be fine. But not being able to use the field for its intended and labeled purpose is absurd.
I only recently discovered this as I had previously had very few fax numbers entered and had probably never noticed it.
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#35 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: East Bay Area, CA
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Any specific tricks that I should relay to my dad removing a virus/spyware from his laptop? It's Windows Scan. I have this info, but just want to make sure there aren't any special bits that might hide.
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#36 |
I Floop the Pig
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Wow, I thought I'd written a response to your post.
If it has been identified as, the info in the link you gave should have done the trick. Did it work? Now my question. I don't really expect anyone to know the answer to this, it's rather esoteric, but I'm hoping for one of those moments of, 'Oh fvck, while writing it out I realized the key thing I've been missing.' Because this is driving me nuts. I'm using a python library (_winreg) to read values from the windows registry on Windows 2008 R2. It's a very straight forward thing to do. Basically, open a connection to the registry [e.g. reg=Connect(HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE)], then open a connection to a specific key [e.g. key=(reg,'SOFTWARE\\Emulex)] So, here's what's driving me bonkers. I am trying to reference a key that's under the HKLM\SOFTWARE key. as in my example above. It won't let me. It says it doesn't exist. But when I look at regedit, it's there. Here's the crazy part. If I look at regedit, I see the following: HKLM -SOFTWARE --ATI Technologies --Classes --Clients --Emulex --Microsoft --ODBC --Policies --RegisteredApplications --Tarma Installer --Wow6432Node But, if, using the python library I connect to HKLM\\SOFTWARE, list all of the keys that are under it, all I get is: 'Microsoft' 'ODBC' 'Python' 'Classes' 'Clients' 'Policies' WTF? Why can I only see those 6?! Where the fvck are the other 10?? Also pissing me off is the fact that this works just fine on 6 other systems, including another Windows 2008 R2 system. And, of course, the one person here that I know could help me is out for Tet until Monday. Grrrrr.
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#37 | |
I Floop the Pig
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Quote:
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'He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.' -TJ |
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#38 | |
Prepping...
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Here, there, everywhere
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go to start > run > msconfig > start up and make sure that the virus isn't in the menu to run when the machine starts up. Reboot the computer and run malwarebytes. If you have trouble installing it check the start up files. And use task manager to close the virus windows if they pop up. |
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#39 |
Chowder Head
Join Date: Jan 2005
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Sorry, but this is about as much of your question that I read before I realized that I had nothing to offer:
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#40 |
I Floop the Pig
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Like I said, unlikely anyone could have offered much. Even someone who IS familiar with Python and Windows registry might not have been able to do much without seeing the system in front of them.
Although the clue was right there in what I posted. "Wow6432node". Under that was exactly the abbreviated list that the function was returning to me. That's when it dawned on me...Windows 2008 R2 is a 64 bit operating system, and I didn't remember downloading the 64 bit Python package. Which means I must have installed the 32 bit version, so it could only read the 32 bit portions of the registry. Which I'm sure clears everything right up for you.
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