It’s Saturday and I don’t feel like posting anything. So I’ve scheduled this post to be published sometimes in the evening.
Here’s an Office Cat.
Now pointlessly enhanced with AI
It’s Saturday and I don’t feel like posting anything. So I’ve scheduled this post to be published sometimes in the evening.
Here’s an Office Cat.
It’s a computer running Windows 7 with tons of services failed to load. I suspected that there was something wrong with the file system. So I scheduled a Check Disk.
I had an assignment earlier today involving Mac Pros. Considering that I’d be having some travelling and waiting, I decided to bring some music with me. At home I went through my collections and picked up one CD that I haven’t touched in a long time, physically. Yeah, thanks to the convenience of digital music, in the cloud. I loaded the CD in my computer and, well, you can guest the rest.
It’s Metallica’s 1986 seminal record Master of Puppets. I actually listened to the whole record from beginning to finish, without skipping a single second. That’s the whole 54 minutes and 46 seconds of musical bliss, to me.
The first time I saw this cup, I immediately said: “Hey, it’s Master Shake in disguise.”
Taken with Canon EOS 60D and Canon EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS II SLR Lens.
No, it is not that kind of beads. It’s the electronic kind.
I believe that each square in the background represents dimension of 5 mm by 5 mm.
Taken with Canon EOS 60D and Canon EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS II SLR Lens.
I wonder which Genius was the one did the Personal Setup for one particular customer. I saw the paperwork and it specifically said what the customer name and username should be. For some reason this “Genius” assigned “Owner” for the name of the account. To top it off, the customer was not given the password to access her own MacBook Pro.
I reset the “Owner” password using the Recovery System. Then I created an account with the proper name.
This was the bowl of granola I had for breakfast.
UPDATE:
This picture is now featured at Sconeage.com, where I got the granola from.
Taken with Canon EOS 60D and Canon EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS II SLR Lens.
Image is edited using Pixelmator 2.2.