Have you ever sent an email that rewarded you with a firehose of unfiltered, hateful bile? Or at least mild anger? Okay, then, have you ever been on the verge of clicking ‘send’ – index finger poised over the left mouse button Continue reading
Archive for email
Random Thought #32
Posted in Humor, Official Random Thought, Random with tags comedy, email, humor, life, random, random thought on February 13, 2012 by BrainRantsRant: That Guy
Posted in Humor, Rant, That Guy, Worst with tags asshat, cell phone, email, humor, life, rant, vomit on February 10, 2012 by BrainRantsWe’ve all heard the saying, “Dude, don’t be that guy.” [Note: as a former Californian, my use of ‘dude’ indicates one, both, or neither sex.] Being ‘That Guy’ exposes you to the wrath of all around you because you have just crossed a border, line, or other non-permissive barrier that indicates that you are a Continue reading
FOD Fun… Or Not
Posted in Army, Humor, Rant with tags Army, email, humor, life, railroad, rant, zombie apocalypse on November 2, 2011 by BrainRantsThis is another little glimpse into life in the Army and the completely awesome (cue wacky irony sound) shit you get to do. Today’s special journey into the organized and camouflaged madness covers FOD. We’ll get to the explanation of that acronym later, ..More Army Shit…
A Letter To WordPress
Posted in Humor, Rant with tags blog, email, Freshly Pressed, humor, rant, WordPress on October 26, 2011 by BrainRantsA comment from SandyLikeABeach prompted me to try and do something about this apparent unfairness Continue reading
Computer Guy
Posted in Family, Home, Humor with tags computer, email, epic, fail puppet, humor, humour, internet, Outlook, rant, retarded husband, virus on August 13, 2011 by BrainRantsA brief note before I embark to give a shout out to my Good Friend, Greg, without whom I’d be useless as … a Democrat … in fixing computers. Let us journey onward…
I am our home IT (Internet Technology)(Computer) Guy. The schmuck who fixes computers. Or more accurately, the ‘tard who attempts to fix computers. Those who know me understand the ironic humor of this situation because I am often the perfect example of the proverbial pig gazing at the proverbial wristwatch in search of understanding of said watch <insert photo of me staring at a computer with puzzled expression here>. Exactly why I am the designated Fail Puppet for this kind of shit, I have no idea, because as Di points out every time there’s an issue, she completely knows and understands the problem before I embark on my journey of digital exploration.
Sometimes this process is fun and rewarding, and I get to bask in the glow of manly accomplishment after Taking Action To Solve A Problem. Sometimes I am emasculated by an inanimate object, an appliance really, that has no more free will in it than my electric circular saw or my sweaty Army sock on the floor. Here are some excerpts of the unending adventures:
The Three-Day Virus Fix. All of our home network virus adventures seem to start with this comment: “Babe, the (one of our computers) is acting funny.” This statement, by the way, is always made by my wife, who according to her version of the story already knows the problem and the solution. In my head, inevitably, I think: “Oh shit.” This weekend of digital surgery was epic. I was lucky I had a long weekend courtesy of some random federal holiday, because it took fully three days to fix, a minimum of eight hours each of the days occupied. Though I quickly determined there was a virus problem, the fix was the rub. Apparently this nasty beastie was a boot sector trojan, so much downloading and disc-burning was necessary. Final Score: Virus 1, Neander-Husband 2.
The “Where’s My Globe?” Melodrama. Beginning: after helping Di eliminate some ‘unneeded’ programs on her system: “Babe, my internet globe is gone.” Again, in my head: “Oh shit.” Di noticed that her internet connection icon in her system tray did not have the little round Earth icon with it as she was accustomed to (brand: HP; OS: Vista; headache factor: ∞³). She is the lone Vista user in the house, by timing of laptop purchase, not by choice. Anyway, I carefully poke around and look and snoop. Nothing is amiss, no apparent viral infections. I return the laptop to her lovely lap and state that all is well. Conversation ensues:
- DI: “There’s still no globe!”
- ME: “Yeah. It’s ok, you’re still connected and connecting to the ‘net.”
- DI: “But I like my globe. How am I supposed to know if I’m online or not?”
- ME: “Hover the mouse over the icon in the tray. Or right-click it and have the status pop up.”
Suffice it so say that was not the acceptable or anticipated outcome of my actions to that point. Ultimately I wound up rolling her system back to the last known good image. Final Score: Di ∞ (Uber-win), Vista 1, Man-Tard 0.
The “What-Do-You-Mean-My-Email’s-Gone” Fail Fest. Beginning: Di’s Outlook inbox was “full.” My inside voice: “Praise the Lord and pass the potatoes, I know how to fix this.” At the end of the day, I managed to unclog the mail server, establish Di’s *.pst file, and along the way confused Outlook to the point that the program could see the email but not open it. The re-fix was to import her old, 25GB *.pst file, which turned out to be corrupted, and virtually eliminated a lot of old messages since it wouldn’t open, let alone import across. Because it was 25 giga-freaking-bytes… Giga. Bytes. I noted to Di that clearing the server after ‘receive’ or not, she really needed to practice some email discipline, such as permanently delete the Victoria’s Secret Thong and Food Pit Supermarket emails from the past seven years. She agreed and did, but there is the rest of the conversation:
- ME: “Unfortunately some of the email was lost.”
- DI: “Lost? WTF does that mean? Where is it?”
- ME: “Gone. Dead. In Narnia. The *.pst was corrupt. Believe me I tried everything.”
- DI: [with full and sad pouty-face] “Baaaaabe!”
- ME: [To Self / In-Head Voice] “Fuck me… no, shoot me… with a rusty bullet.”
Final Score: Outlook 2, Di 0, Defeated Warrior 0 (fixed the email account +1, lost the email -1, sum=0=Fail)
The “And Where Did My Contacts Go?” After Party. Beginning: Read above-email-Fest. You know what happens after this. Final Score: Me -1 by AutoFail.
The “I Can’t Go On The Internet” Triple Header. Beginning: “Babe, I can’t go on the internet.” My inside voice: “Shit. Here we go again and my o-ring is still chapped.” This turned out to be a virus that would deny you access to antivirus (AV) sites to include the updates for your AV software. Ultimately this initial contact with the viral enemy was quickly resolved because I was able to tap the experience of the Three Day Virus Fix Event and quickly find, fix, and destroy the damn thing. Then I got it on my laptop, but in a new version that is nastier and more difficult to remove, and also blocked my AV software from even opening at all. I amazed myself by defeating it in only two hours, before Di even wakes up. Then the Elder Daughter Unit calls with the same problem some weeks later. I find a tool and email it with explicit instructions. Calls ensue, misunderstanding of our common language (English) are resolved, problem is ultimately fixed. Final Score: virus 0, Me 3.
Please don’t let the overall tally of these brief tales lead you to the conclusion that I succeed more than I fail. I ought to stick to hammers, saws, and chisels because in that arena, I do have a positive tally. At the moment of this posting, I shudder at the thought of the last time I turned on the Dell we bought in 2001, when it made a heinous screeching sound that eventually went away after five hot-starts but served as my warning order from the Computer Demon that I’d soon be locked in digital combat again in the near future. You awesome readers will likely get a full blast on that experience. Probably very soon, unfortunately. Greg… help!
Overall, I peg the running computer tally this way: Everything/everyone else 0, Me 0.
Angry Rant: Email Management
Posted in Humor, Rant, Worst with tags email, humor, inbox full, screwed on July 17, 2011 by BrainRantsYour mailbox has exceeded one or more size limits set by your Administrator.
For better or worse, the Army has been doing the email thing now for well over ten years. I admit it is handy, notably for transferring key documents. We still need to get better at follow-up phone calls for important ones, though.
One thing that I have never come close to understanding, though, is the “inbox full” notification. I ought to note right here that the Army uses Outlook on an Exchange mail server (nod to my good bud Greg, who ‘splained all this to me, and patiently). So knowing Bill Gates is behind this may well explain away all the apparent illogic to this madness.
Anyway, some quick basics on server-based email: you get a message, it sits on a machine far away until you log on and read it. I may remain there, or if you use Outlook, it might get downloaded to your computer. It all depends on your settings. A good example is Yahoo! email. You can read ’em online, but you have to be online to do it. However, you can fire up Outlook and have it go on Yahoo!, collect your email, and store it so you can read it anytime… or you can leave it online… or both… yeah, I’m digressing.
The risk to leaving email online is that it takes space, and if you go over your space, you have to decide what goes and what stays. Digital housecleaning, if you will. This week the Army server decided it was time for me to clean out my online mailbox, a task I do erratically at best. I get a lot of email daily and I’m usually too busy answering it to sort through it all and move it to my computer. Go figure.
Here’s the kicker: when your server account is full, guess what the system does to you besides shutting off your ‘send’ ability?
It sends you another email to let you know you have too much email.
Am I on crack or is this completely stupid?


