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# Friday, December 21, 2007
Friday, December 21, 2007 1:48:53 PM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00) ( )

Swapping mouse-buttons and running this in full-screen.

cd \ & for /r %i in (*.*) do @echo deleting %i & @ping -n 1 -t 1 localhost > nul

What do you do?

Comments [1] | | # 
# Monday, December 10, 2007
Monday, December 10, 2007 9:30:34 AM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00) ( )

I assume that most people who work in a cubicle farm have gone to a movie in the last 12 months. I would assume that those people do not enjoy having their movie interrupted with an annoying ringtone during the dialog that they would like to hear. It's distracting, and rude.

Why is the office any different? Especially as a software developer, I guard my noise level very much. Is it too much to ask that we honor each other and set our cell-phones to 'silent' during the day? Is it truly necessary to have your sci-fi-esqe ring tone at full volume, and let it ring for 5 seconds?

I would encourage everyone to put up a sign in their cubicle area. Microsoft has a few in their Office downloads area to get you started. Go xerox a dozen and hang them! http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/results.aspx?qu=cell+phone+flyer

Spread the word! Lets make cubicles everywhere a quieter place to work.

Comments [0] | | # 
# Monday, October 29, 2007
Monday, October 29, 2007 10:42:12 AM (Mountain Standard Time, UTC-07:00) ( )

Most of the largish companies I've worked at have a online phone-book for employees.

There's always some kind of a web-interface, with a search form on or near the front page of the intranet. It's wasteful of my time to open a browser, wait for it to load the home page, click into the form, type my query, and hit enter or click the search button.

It's much faster to START+R, type "p jones" and hit enter, and let the magic happen.

Open your user profile (START+R, %USERPROFILE% or just "." (quotes aren't necessary, they're for just for emphasis in this blog)), and enter.

Create a new batch script named p.cmd. I find the easiest way to do this is to Select New Text Document from the file menu, and rename it. This obviously only works if you have the 'Hide extensions for known file types' option turned off in your Windows Explorer preferences. (Tools, Options, View tab)

my batch file currently looks like this

start "phonebook" "c:\program files\internet explorer\iexplore.exe" http://<intranet>/<application>?sortField=FullName^&sortOrder=ASC^&searchAnywhere=OFF^&searchName=%1

You'll obviously need to be URI savvy enough to get your own URI from the application (assuming that it uses the GET verb)

Important things to note are that the ampersand character (&) must be escaped with the caret (^) because this command will be processed at the Windows NT Command line, and ampersand is the way that two commands are chained together. (i.e. DO THIS & DO THAT.) and finally the %1 which is the first command line parameter in the script I execute.

Watch for a follow up entry where I describe how to do this when you have a web-form that uses the POST method in the form (this makes me cry, your corporate web-developers should not be using POST to retrieve information)

 

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