links for 2006-10-31
Posted on October 31, 2006
Filed Under del.icio.us | 1 Comment
Quicken 2007 Basic ignores Daylight Savings time change
Posted on October 30, 2006
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Oops.
I don’t think this was a problem in Quicken 2005 or 2006.
I have Quicken set to auto-update at 8 am every weekday morning.
This morning, at approximately 7:15 am I was surprised to see the update running in my task bar.
My computer may think it’s an hour earlier than it was on Friday, but apparently Quicken didn’t get the memo.
Anyone else see this behavior?

Carbonite: easiest PC offsite backup
Posted on October 29, 2006
Filed Under Uncategorized | 3 Comments
I backup both my Mac and PC to external hard drives every single night. Religiously. I use Retrospect 7 on the PC, ChronoSync on my Mac. However, having only one backup strategy is a recipe for disaster. Especially if you’re backing up to vulnerable media like a hard drive or CD. It’s not a matter of if your external (or internal) hard drive will die. It’s when.
So I always have a second method in place for backup. I’ve tried many hosted backup solutions over the years but I’ve never been happy with them and stopped quickly. Why? Two reasons: It’s slow and it drags down my computer while the upload is happening.
Carbonite bills itself as “Backup for Everyone” and so far, they’re not giving me any evidence otherwise. It’s so easy, I’m confident I can give my Mom the link and she can use it without any instruction or support from me and that says a lot.
Carbonite provides unlimited hosted backups for $50 a year. Store a GB of data, pay $50 a year. Store 50 GB and pay $50 a year.
What makes Carbonite worth blogging about isn’t what it does, but how it does it in such a “non-scary for newbies” way.
Carbonite doesn’t schedule backups like its competitors do. It backs up continually. It takes a few days to do the first backup, but after that it backs up files quickly as they are changed. It backs up only during idle time, so there is absolutely no impact on system performance when the machine is in use. That is what drove me crazy about other online backup systems….they’d start when they were scheduled and be damned anything else I wanted to do at the same time. I could never let the backup finish. I always had to stop it to get anything done, even if it started overnight.
Carbonite’s status window shows how the backup is going:
When you need to restore a file (or folder), it’s right there in “My Computer” and you can browse and copy back anything you want…or if you’re on a different computer you can log in to your account and restore from the website.
It adds a small colored dot to the corner of each file to let you know whether it’s backed up or waiting to be backed up. It even has a handy option that gives Carbonite lower priority if it’s interfering with Skype or Vonage calls. So far, I haven’t had any problems with Vonage with Carbonite in its default setting.
So yeah, I’m impressed. I’m not throwing out my external drives. Carbonite only backs up data, no system files or applications. So if your hard drive goes completely, you can’t use Carbonite to completely restore everything. But if you’re in big do-do if you lose your budget files or that report you’re working on and like me you need set-it-and-forget-it-backups (and you’re on a PC running Windows), Carbonite is exactly what you’re looking for at a very reasonable price.
Is Comcast email really this bad?
Posted on October 29, 2006
Filed Under Internet & Technology | 3 Comments
I maintain an active mailing list for parents in my local community around special education issues in our school district. It’s a new group that has started up here that has already made a big difference in our lives. If it wasn’t for this group, we would have never found the fantastic private occupational therapist Laini is seeing now. Anyway, I donate my time in managing this list (and so far, all associated costs) as my way of giving back. Eventually I’ll finish the website for them, too.
I’m getting sick and tired of dealing with Comcast email addresses.
—–Original Message—–
From: mailman-bounces@two.pairlist.net [mailto:mailman-bounces@two.pairlist.net] On Behalf Of mailman@wwpsksp.org
Sent: Sunday, October 29, 2006 9:40 AM
To: talk-owner@wwpsksp.org
Subject: Bounce action notificationThis is a Mailman mailing list bounce action notice:
List: Talk
Member: (member name)@comcast.net
Action: Subscription disabled.
Reason: Excessive or fatal bounces.
Since Comcast is the cable provider here, many of the 85+ folks on this list have @comcast.net email addresses. When I get this bounce for one, I can expect a flood as every other @comcast.net subscriber on our list is having the same issue.
It’s simple enough to reactivate them, but first I like to send them an email and ask for them to reply to be sure that their account is working. PITA. Then they get back on and often need my help to get to the archives and figure out what they missed. Double PITA.
I don’t want to disable or fiddle with the list bounce settings, since they’re helpful for weeding out when people change email addresses without unsubscribing. The software does send 3 warnings to the user before letting me know that the account has been disabled.
I have Comcast as my ISP, but I never touched the email. Is it really this flaky?
links for 2006-10-29
Posted on October 29, 2006
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overview of IDEA 2004(tags: specialeducation)
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This site was created to provide a “one-stop shop” for resources related to IDEA and its implementing regulations, released on August 3, 2006.(tags: specialeducation)
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A supposedly easier way of entering text/data on a PocketPC that I’d like to try