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  • This just in,… Formatting a removable USB drive with 2 partitions — Keith’s Consulting Blog

    TL;DR – Starting with Windows 10 Insider Preview Build 14965, you can format any “Removable” USB Flash Drive with more than one partition. Perfect for installation of large (over 4GB) WIM files on UEFI machines! Hey all, back from a week at the Microsoft MVP summit, a Week in the UK, and a week […]

    via Formatting a removable USB drive with 2 partitions — Keith’s Consulting Blog

    Back in 2013 I attempted to put a Patriot 64GB USB thumb drive through the paces as a Universal WinPE (BIOS and UEFI 64bit). But Win7 Diskpart couldn’t do it, couldn’t back a primary and a primary part. I read up on some tricks to perform a forced firmware update, trying to “flip bits” on the firmware to get it to look like a fixed disk instead of a removable USB thumb drive. None of the tricks worked. So I gave up on it. In the time that’s passed, I did move from a Patriot to a SanDisk Extreme 64GB and it looks like for all intents and purposes I might be able to get THAT thumb drive partitioned up as a universal WinPE with 2 partitions (one Fat-32 the other NTFS).

    To date my workaround was to just do a WinPE 32bit/BIOS only flavor. That allowed me to use an NTFS partition and flat-boot the whole thing in one big 64GB partition on the thumb drive. This worked on the Patriot and the SanDisk equally well. It works on smaller older thumb drives too. One partition does all the heavy lifting, no dual partitions required. But still I knew in time this would need to be migrated forward to get on board with Win10 and UEFI/GPT format computers.

    Reading this article just now gives me hope for the production release of the next Diskpart that finally sheds the limits of USB drives and gives them the benefit of the doubt, letting them masquerade as fixed disks with multiple partitions. Now we can get a universal WinPE that boots 64bit UEFI or 64bit BIOS machines and can lay down images on either. Now THAT, is a change I can believe in. And I will now pursue getting onboard the UEFI/GPT bandwagon along with Win10.

  • Rejoinders ‘R’ Us,…Mike Caulfield on Scanning the Facebook Feed as a Rebuttal Shopping Experience — Hapgood

    The Stream is a weird place. Your Facebook feed, for example, is a series of posts by various people that in some ways resembles a forum, but in other ways it’s not at all like a forum. When you post something to Facebook, there’s not an explicit prompt you are responding to, which seems non-problematic […]

    via Scanning the Facebook Feed as a Rebuttal Shopping Experience — Hapgood

  • The American election, the morning after: American Brexit edition — Bryan Alexander

    I propose resurrecting the T-shirt based on I’m with Stuipid design, the hand pointing to the person on the left, with the words 2016 emblazoned across the top. ‘Cuz that’s about what this hostage situation feels like up in these here United States. Here now a well thought out essay by Bryan Alexander.

    I woke up at 6 am EST to find my fellow Americans had elected Donald Trump pre… presi – presid- … Damn. It’s actually hard to say. Saying or writing “Drumpf” isn’t quite as funny as it once was. I have many reactions and thoughts, starting with this: I also have many personal thoughts about […]

    via The American election, the morning after: American Brexit edition — Bryan Alexander

  • Trouble With Twitter, Reddit, Or The Rest Of The Internet This Morning? It’s Not Just You. — Consumerist

    Update: Dyn reports that as of about 9:30 a.m., service has been restored and affected sites and services should start returning to normal. Read on to see what happened and how big it was. Original story: Users of dozens of popular sites and services — including Spotify, Twitter, Github, Reddit, Airbnb, and others — are…

    via Trouble With Twitter, Reddit, Or The Rest Of The Internet This Morning? It’s Not Just You. — Consumerist

    I found out reading on Gizmodo, that root level DNS servers are the ones most often attacked. One work around is to use the DNS of a very large cloud services/hosting company say like Google. Their DNS servers are 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 for starters.  According to a single comment on the Gizmodo article, Google’s DNS almost never gets attacked with a denial of service.

  • This Is Probably Why Half the Internet Shut Down Today [Updating]

    via This Is Probably Why Half the Internet Shut Down Today [Updating]

    As of 9:05 EDT, it sounds like the attack is spreading and affecting more websites on the Internet. The one I’m most dependent on for day-to-day operations is our company’s Box.com domain.

  • Reminder: Customer service and human dignity — Jon Udell

    It’s been a decade since I interviewed Paul English on the subject of customer service and human dignity (audio). He was CTO and co-founder at kayak but in this interview we talked more about GetHuman. It had begun as a list of cheats to help you hack through the automated defenses of corporate customer service […]

    via Customer service and human dignity — Jon Udell

    I remember the links and postings some years back that Jon mentions in this posting. All the phone trees were slightly different, but people were way more interested in getting to a person at their bank. So that was my first introduction for the customer service tree workaround. Now it seems like things are even more elaborate than just getting to a customer representative. If you’re willing to pay you can do all sorts of creative things to get in touch with a customer rep. I think something similar to this might have been posted on Cosumerist.com prior to it being folded into the Consumer Reports enterprise.

  • An ounce of follow-up is worth a pound of cure.

    You just found out your credit or debit card info has been used by someone else to make a fraudulent purchase. There are so many different people you can call, each involved in some aspect of this theft. There’s your bank that issued the card, the credit card network the issuer uses for that card,…

    via Who Am I Supposed To Call When My Credit Card Info Is Stolen? — Consumerist

    Work with your bank first and foremost and do it immediately. Time is not on your side when disputing a fraudulant charge to a credit card. Once you got the wheels rolling with your credit card issuer, at the very least add your incident to the FBI list of Internet Crimes. They may not investigate  your individual incident but use it ganged up with others to link related incidents. If they don’t know about  yours, they may not have enough info to link up. So at the least report it to the FBI too. Then take necessary precautions to protect your personal identifying info.

  • CORNAMI’s sea-of-cores solution may defuse data explosion | EE Times

    A couple of years ago, I wrote about a company called SVIRAL that appeared to have cracked one of the toughest problems in computing today — that of creating software programs that can effectively use multiple processing cores and threads without requiring programmers to have PhDs in computer science (see Startup Cracks MultiCore, Thread Programming Problem).via CORNAMI’s sea-of-cores solution may defuse data explosion | EE Times

    Boy howdy, it seems like the ghosts of massively parallel multi-core architectures is back in teh nooz’s ;^)

    And by that I mean the likes of companies past like Tilera perhaps?

  • A little insight to a japanese dining custom…

    Our Japanese-language writer used to give himself a pass, until he encountered a woman who changed his mind. If you’ve watched many Japanese TV drama or anime series, you’ve no doubt come across a scene where someone sits down for a meal and says “Itadakimasu” before beginning to eat, often accompanied by an awkwardly phrased…

    via Should you say “Itadakimasu,” Japan’s pre-meal expression of thanks, when eating by yourself? — RocketNews24

  • New Yorkers go crazy for taiyaki fish ice creams — RocketNews24

    This New York store has only just opened and already the Internet’s gone into meltdown over their unique Japanese-influenced ice creams! One of Japan’s most well-known sweets is a fish-shaped cake called taiyaki, which literally translates to “baked sea bream”. Made with a rich waffle or pancake batter and traditionally filled with a sweet adzuki red bean…

    via New Yorkers go crazy for taiyaki fish ice creams — RocketNews24