Sharing a photo taken on the last day of our stay in Pune. This was taken at my office, with a few members from translation team, while some from my project team.
From top-row-left – Mai-san, Ashwini, Amruta, Prafulla,
Rujuta, and then us !
Sharing a photo taken on the last day of our stay in Pune. This was taken at my office, with a few members from translation team, while some from my project team.
From top-row-left – Mai-san, Ashwini, Amruta, Prafulla,
Rujuta, and then us !
Some photos from our recent stay in India.
Will be sharing a few videos as well !
I was having trouble with my computer. So I called Richard, the 11-year-old next door whose bedroom looks like Mission Control, and asked him to come over.
Richard clicked a couple of buttons and solved the problem.
As he was walking away, I called after him, “So, what was wrong?”
He replied, “It was an ID ten T error.”
I didn’t want to appear stupid, but nonetheless inquired, “An, ID ten T error? What’s that? In case I need to fix it again.”
Richard grinned. “Haven’t you ever heard of an ID ten T error before?”
“No,” I replied.
“Write it down,” he said, “and I think you’ll figure it out.”
So I wrote it down: I D 1 0 T
Much recently to my dismay, I figured out that I cannot remove Symantec’s Endpoint Protection from my own laptop without administrator password. I do not own this password, and I do not want anybody other than me permitting me what to uninstall. Hence I went ahead for manual uninstall according to these instructions (from Symantec’s own site) below-
The instructions are crisp and clear. I could manually uninstall following each step of those instructions, but there is one big trouble. The instructions talk to removing over 100’s of registry keys, values which I believe is sheer impossible manually. Why didn’t Symantec simply provide a small tool which has all those instructions bundled in a simple click-n-go fashion?
I have tried to create a small registry file which can automate the removal of registry entries Uninstall Registry entries for Symantec Endpoint Protection
For all other manual deletion of files, it would be great to write a small AutoIt script compiled to an exe. Maybe sometime later…
1)On solr.master: +Edit scripts.conf: solr_hostname=localhost solr_port=8983 rsyncd_port=18983 +Enable and start rsync: rsyncd-enable; rsyncd-start +Run snapshooter: snapshooter After running this, you should be able to see a new folder named snapshot.* in data/index folder. You can can solrconfig.xml to trigger snapshooter after a commit or optimise. 2) On slave: +Edit scripts.conf: solr_hostname=solr.master solr_port=8986 rsyncd_port=18986 data_dir= webapp_name=solr master_host=localhost master_data_dir=$MASTER_SOLR_HOME/data/ master_status_dir=$MASTER_SOLR_HOME/logs/clients/ +Run snappuller: snappuller -P 18983 +Run snapinstaller: snapinstaller You should setup crontab to run snappuller and snapinstaller periodically.
Remember way back when – when you got your first management job. What do you wish someone had told you then? What would be the one tip you would give to a manager just starting out?