My sister’s kids are the best! This is Rosie my niece, and Arthur my nephew, when they visited me for a day in York.
I recently commissioned a new HP DL380 G7 server – and stuck a problem when registering the iLO Advanced license – this is needed to continue using the Remote Console beyond the initial install process.
I already had an HP account and I’ve done this before, so no problem I thought. Wrong. After inputting the registration code, I was asked for my SAID (Service Agreement IDentifier) – with no indication on the page, the registration certificate or anywhere else as to what that was.
Thankfully our reseller found out the answer – “It’s unknown”, she said. “OK… but the site’s insisting on an entry”, I said. “You actually type ‘UKNOWN’”, she said. And it worked. Crazy but true.
A suit made of white LEDs, a dark ski slope, a champion snowboarder, and a RED camera. Very, very nice.
I’m always having the perceived faults of the iPhone 4 pointed out to me, especially Android users. I’m usually happy to fight the corner, but there are some things the iPhone 4 is lacking. One of them is a notification LED. Most of the phones I’ve owned have had them, but not this one.
Except now it does, using the camera flash – it turns out it was added quietly in iOS 5.
Settings, General, Accessibility, LED Flash for Alerts – Job done!
I’m aware there is a problem with IE9 users, the post titles do not appear as they should. I’m working on it.
Update: a new theme has fixed this.
- ¼ cup of oil (light olive oil works well)
- 400g potatoes, diced into 1-2 cm cubes
- 100g jamón serrano (or pancetta or similar), cut into strips
- 1 large red pepper, cut into thin strips
- 1 medium onion, chopped
- 500g chopped tomatoes (peeled and chopped vine-ripened tomatoes are best)
- 100g trimmed asparagus spears, all except 4 chopped into 2-3 cm lengths
- 100g green beans (preferably fine green beans), chopped into 2-3 cm lengths
- 100g frozen peas
- 2 tablespoons tomato paste
- 4 eggs
- 100g chopped chorizo
- optionally, some chopped parsley
There’s been a really annoying problem with Chrome recently – going to Google, Gmail and so on can result in a page not found, where the actual hostname is replaced in the URL bar by localhost.localdomain. IE9 worked fine with the same setup, although I’ve heard reports that IE8 does have the problem occasionally. At least in Chrome, there is a fix.