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Messages - 40hz [ switch to compact view ]

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226
Now THAT is a hacker in my book. Using timing to exploit running code is a lost art form these days. Having the know how to pull a trick like that off is even rarer. Time was when it was the lion's share of the lore leading up to the keys to the kingdom in the days of phone phreaking. It wasn't just the tones. It was also getting the timing exactly right in order to get in and not trip warning bells or let the dogs off the leash. Small wonder so many old school hackers (in the old meaning of the word) were also usually pretty decent musicians whenever they were away from their keyboard. It didn't mean a thing unless you could swing.

I don't know about any of this personally mind you. I've just "been told."  8)

227
General Software Discussion / Re: YNAB moving to a subscription model
« on: January 07, 2016, 03:07 PM »
YNAB 4 users out there. Would you still recommend for a newbie to buy YNAB 4 at this stage?

What could go wrong when support runs out at end of 2016? Would that mean it may no longer be possible to download account data from banks?

If you think you can run YNAB 4 as is for years (and there's no reason to assume you won't be able to) then yes, I would recommend YNAB 4. That said, the software isn't really that special. It's the philosophy/method that is so awesome. So be sure to read up on that and use YNAB to implement and follow the method.

I don't think importing data from banks would break either, unless they change their format. You just download a CSV, OFX (Microsoft Money), or a Quicken format file of all your transactions from your bank and YNAB can import them into your accounts. There's no reason for that to suddenly break next year.

Someone told me that they'd been using really old finance software for 15 years before they switched to YNAB last year. They expect to continue using YNAB 4 for the next 15 years. :)

I suspect I will be, too. :Thmbsup:

The on difference that I think has to be taken into consideration is the fact that YNAB is not a native compiled application, but a combination of actionscript and flash that runs on a proprietary engine ( AIR), so it's lifetime is tied to AIR.  That conceivably doesn't mean anything different in the short term, but in the long term, could.


You could just read their method and do it on a a couple of spreadsheets if it ever did stop working. IIRC, they came up with it using nothing but paper and highlighters.

Dave Ramsey uses the same method.  Again, because of privacy issues (surprising because of Dave Ramsey, but oh well), I won't be using it.  But he has low tech ways of doing the same thing.

http://www.daveramse...DGETING-cEnv-p1.html

I have a whole year for NANY... maybe I'll give a try at a basic version of this...

That would be awesome! Luck!! :Thmbsup:

228
General Software Discussion / Re: YNAB moving to a subscription model
« on: January 07, 2016, 12:55 PM »
YNAB 4 users out there. Would you still recommend for a newbie to buy YNAB 4 at this stage?

What could go wrong when support runs out at end of 2016? Would that mean it may no longer be possible to download account data from banks?

If you think you can run YNAB 4 as is for years (and there's no reason to assume you won't be able to) then yes, I would recommend YNAB 4. That said, the software isn't really that special. It's the philosophy/method that is so awesome. So be sure to read up on that and use YNAB to implement and follow the method.

I don't think importing data from banks would break either, unless they change their format. You just download a CSV, OFX (Microsoft Money), or a Quicken format file of all your transactions from your bank and YNAB can import them into your accounts. There's no reason for that to suddenly break next year.

Someone told me that they'd been using really old finance software for 15 years before they switched to YNAB last year. They expect to continue using YNAB 4 for the next 15 years. :)

I suspect I will be, too. :Thmbsup:

The on difference that I think has to be taken into consideration is the fact that YNAB is not a native compiled application, but a combination of actionscript and flash that runs on a proprietary engine ( AIR), so it's lifetime is tied to AIR.  That conceivably doesn't mean anything different in the short term, but in the long term, could.


You could just read their method and do it on a a couple of spreadsheets if it ever did stop working. IIRC, they came up with it using nothing but paper and highlighters.

229
General Software Discussion / Re: YNAB moving to a subscription model
« on: January 07, 2016, 12:50 PM »
If you think you can run YNAB 4 as is for years (and there's no reason to assume you won't be able to) then yes, I would recommend YNAB 4. That said, the software isn't really that special. It's the philosophy/method that is so awesome. So be sure to read up on that and use YNAB to implement and follow the method.

^Exactly this. :Thmbsup:  People don't really need financial software tools. They need a philosophy, a well thought out methodology, and a set of practical techniques to do it. YNAB provides that. The software is just icing on the cake.

Someone told me that they'd been using really old finance software for 15 years before they switched to YNAB last year. They expect to continue using YNAB 4 for the next 15 years.


It wasn't me. But I've done the same. As do most major corporations who don't ever do anything willingly when it comes to making changes to their financial software. Once they've got it debugged and customized - and it's doing what they want it to do - they leave it strictly alone. I worked in corporate accounting for several years. And the software I had at my disposal was written in either COBOL or RPG. It didn't have much in the way of bells or whistles. Most of it was strictly batch in fact. You got a two foot tall stack of "cornrow" computer output once a week that you broke apart and put into into binders - and then you did you work using those. First with a calculator and greenbar paper. Later with the only spreadsheet worth using at the time, which was Lotus 1-2-3. Not too elegant maybe. But you knew that the numbers that were on the reports the "big iron" generated were as accurate and correct as the raw data that was fed into them. You could trust what you were being told by the program. And getting it to that point didn't happen overnight.

If you told the accounting or financial planners of that era that there was going to be upgrades done every year, there would have been an armed revolt and no federally owned bird sanctuary would have been safe. Because in the finance word "If it ain't broke, then leave the bloody thing alone!" was the first, last, and only rule when it came to software.

Civilians don't seem to realize that there's seldom a good reason to upgrade financial software unless it's broken. And since the chances of breaking rise exponentially whenever you upgrade, unless there's an absolutely critical reason to bugger with something, you're far better off leaving it alone.

YNAB is coming to that realization I think, and desperately trying to figure out what to do. Their method is very simple (like any good financial method will be) - and it just works. It takes about a half hour to read through and digest it. And about a month of focused commitment to get in the habit. After that, it's yours and you don't need anything further from them.

Pretty hard to do repeat business in that scenario.

230
Skydrive, Onedrive, call it whatever it is today - was never my first choice.
Slow to sync (for a long time) for one...
Anyway Dropbox is still very good and there are others like Copy (very fast and good too!).

@40hz, wonder if your friend had considered modifying backup folder as a plan "b" to protect his data in case Onedrive has a hick again?

I did a whole multi-tier backup plan for him in the wake. He now has a local backup to an external HD plus a remote backup through AT&T business services, plus his OneDrive account. I had to play a few scripting and scheduling games to keep everything in sync and not have OneDrive get into a conflict with his other remote service - or drag his PC to its knees in the process -  but it all worked out in the end.

In fairness, Microsoft (on all three occasions) was able to get everything restored to OneDrive. But it didn't leave him with warm fuzzies. And as is usually the case with Mocrosoft, they refused to get into how it happened, or if there was anything he could do to avoid repetitions.

The problem with OneDrive messing up on him is that it's his on the road file repository. Backup services are ok for what they are. But they don't lend themselves to situations where you need normal file access from a remote location and sync features.

Office 360 is an interesting and capable product (one they get the rest of the bugs worked out) for a specific class of business cases. But it's not the panacea (at least yet) that Microsoft is selling it as. There's been two occasions (so far) where he had to completely reinstall everything. Which made me laugh because that was how you used to "fix" problems you were having with your Apple Macintosh before OSX came out - just reinstall the OS, or trash your prefs and reinstall a buggy application. Even weirder (if you were a PC person) that would fix it about 99% of the time.

Dunno...the more things change, the more they all start looking familiar to me. I guess I've been around long enough that the technology is starting to loop back and I'm now on my second trip through. I keep looking for the coda, but I just seem to keep hitting a dal segno in this tech opera. ;D

231
I have a mostly former client that abandoned his in-house infrastructure and shifted his entire business (he's an attorney) to Microsoft's cloud "solution."

It's been...less than ideal for him even though he staunchly sticks with it. He's had problems with OneDrive (files appearing and disappearing, and sporadic sync issues) and more headaches with OneNote (and he really is a very knowledgable and experienced power user when it comes to that app) than I'd be willing to tolerate if I were paying for Office 360.

Time was when he could call me and I'd be able to diagnose and straighten out whatever the problem was. Today, we  mostly have brief but pleasant chats during which I usually end up telling him he's going to need to get in the queue with Mothership Microsoft. Because only they are in a position to fix the issue(s) he's having - and I don't have any inside pull to speed things up like I do with the other companies I generally work with.

I've often said you can never trust any server you don't personally control. Lately, I've started to add you can also only fix a server issue if it's your server.

Brave new world. Glad I've elected not to be a part if it.

232
General Software Discussion / Re: YNAB moving to a subscription model
« on: January 01, 2016, 10:39 PM »
I don't use bank integration features at all. I log onto my bank's secure portal, then generate and pull down a file of any activity I need to import. It's a slight extra bit of effort for a huge amount more security.

But I also tend to manually key in my transactions on a regular basis so I seldom need to import anything.

233
General Software Discussion / Re: Magazine creator
« on: January 01, 2016, 11:38 AM »
Cheers! I'll check out your recommendations. Basically I was reading this magazine in pdf format:
https://drive.google...Q1E/view?usp=sharing
And found it difficult to read due to the choice of colors in some of the backgrounds and text fonts. I thought there would be some software out there that took this and made it more readable by changing a bit colors, font sizes, relocate articles positions,etc



I took a look and all I can say is: Ouch!

FWIW, that sort of thing is fairly common when somebody with little graphic design experience gets turned loose on an epub magazine or newsletter. Indeed, some design professionals are guilty of that as well because (not being readers themselves) they tend to see text as just another graphic element in a layout rather than as something intended to be read.

Good luck! :Thmbsup:

234
General Software Discussion / Re: YNAB moving to a subscription model
« on: January 01, 2016, 09:54 AM »
I understand them wanting to establish a regular revenue stream. But from my experience, most users aren't at all pleased with the "software as a service" concept. Especially if they're like me and prefer to own rather than rent whatever they're using.

I think YNAB (which I own and think highly of) is making a bit of a mistake with this move. The program pretty much is what it is. The philosophy and approach it teaches doesn't need updating. If anything it's just a nicely presented rework of some solid and classic financial advice. The program is simple and efficient - so it shouldn't require much if any updating to do its job. So I'm not sure what the additional value moving to a subscription revenue model is providing to their customer. Especially since so many people (myself included) are very uncomfortable having their finances stored anywhere other than on their own drive.

I wish them luck. But I'm afraid that unless they can hook up with some financial guru seminar or similar service, and bundle it in as an add-on service, it isn't going to fly.

The sad thing is that although there's a market for personal finance software, nobody seems to be interested in doing it. Because it's essentially a one-off sale. Most users of these packages aren't interested in new features. And without new features, there's no incentive to ever upgrade.

Intuit is looking for someone to take over Quicken right now. They've assured their customers that Intuit is going to make sure whoever takes over it's ongoing support and development will continue to keep Quicken going as a top notch desktop app.

And nobody with an ounce of brains believes Intuit for a single minute.

I'm sure Quicken will shortly be going the way of Microsoft Money, Andrew Tobias's Managing Your Money, and all those other nifty personal finance programs we used to know.

235
Living Room / Re: Movies you've seen lately
« on: December 31, 2015, 10:28 PM »
Ian McKellen (Gandalf!) and Laura Linney in Mr. Holmes.

Mr._Holmes_poster.jpg

Quietly brilliant and very unusual take on an elderly Sherlock Holmes. Well worth a watch - especially if you're like me and can't get enough Holmes in your diet.

236
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« on: December 31, 2015, 03:56 PM »
Eva Cassidy - Over The Rainbow:


Flat out lovely singer. She is sorely missed...

This is my fav:


237
General Software Discussion / Re: Magazine creator
« on: December 31, 2015, 03:28 PM »
Virtually any professional desktop publishing package could do that with the judicious use of formatting tags and templates. That's how most commercial magazines do get assembled. But in order to automate the formatting, you'd need to understand a bit about layout, typography, template creation - and how your specific publishing software works - and keep that all in mind when creating your source text and graphic files - or it won't happen smoothly.

Publishing software can do amazing things. But it can't read your mind or make judgement calls. As with as any other program you're running, the adage about "Garbage In = Garbage Out" is especially true when it comes to this type of application. So you'll need to meet it half way, and spoon feed it your source materials in the way it expects to see them, or it's all to no avail. And that usually means there's NO formatting or pretty anything done to the source text. All the stylistic elements and formatting needs to be handled by the publishing package, NOT the word processing or other text creation software.

Which I guess is a long way of saying that it's doable - but there's nothing out there AFAIK that will handle it completely automatically unless you did some preplanning and set up your original materials to be used in that fashion.

Luck!

Addendum: You might want to experiment with some free "book creation" software like Sigil to see if that will work for your purposes. Many successful magazines publish using the EPUB format rather than paper. You can find out more about it here.

If you're looking to also publish to paper, you'd probably be better off going with something like Adobe InDesign.

If you have some time and want to see how the process works in InDesign using a professionally designed template, you can watch the whole thing in this video:



As you might notice, there's a lot of things and terminology you'll need to familiarize yourself with in order to work efficiently with this sort of software.

238
Living Room / Re: Words fail me - you'll have to read this yourself
« on: December 28, 2015, 06:01 PM »
But really... deconstruction is fun in no small part because it creates cognitive dissonance in people where they simply no longer know what to think or say.

Yeah. I think the term for that is "speechless with rage."  ;) ;D

And that's the problem. It's like intellectual equivalent of cotton candy. It looks like something and tastes good. But it's totally lacking any real nutritional value.  8)

239
The Arduino excels at projects that you want to interface to other hardware devices. In many respects it's like the old PIC  Microcontroller which it's largely replaced in the hobbyist/small prototype/maker communities. It's not that great from a general purpose computer perspective IMO. But as the base on which to build some really crafty and smart hardware devices, there's a lot to like.

The RaspberryPi is a decent enough general purpose microboard PC. It's beginning to show it's age a bit now that it's spawned a host of more powerful imitators such as the Beagleboard and the CuBox. But it's easy to use and well documented. It's probably the most forgiving and easy entry point to getting involved with these little computers. Good user community too. Reminds me of the old hacker community that grew up around the computers of my youth such as the KIM-1, VIC-20/C-64, TRS-80, and the old Atari and Acorn PCs. Lots of information and project ideas being freely shared. I thought I stepped into a time warp when I first ran into it.

The R-Pi should work for what you want to do based on your brief description. You can build a decent DVR or media center (i.e Kodi/XBMC) with the thing. And it'll handle HD. So I'm sure it'll have no problem handling a plain audio file.

240
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« on: December 27, 2015, 08:48 PM »
Sortof seasonal music:


Banquet Hall - Loreena Mc Kennitt (instrumental)
from what I guess could be called her Christmas album - To Drive the Cold Winter Away (which I like a lot)

That's a great album! One of my favs by Loreena.

Which puts me in mind of this video. There's many of versions of To Drive the Cold Winter Away - many of which are a little over the top. Even Loreena beams out that high note enough you need to watch your levels if you're wearing headphones... and you value your eardrums. But this solo voice with lute rendition by Jim Keyes hits what I think is an authentic and rather sweet spot. Done nicely with no pretensions to virtuosity or art, I think it captures the spirit and simplicity of the song beautifully, even if it is a very abbreviated version with some modernization of the original lyrics. I invite the DC community's opinion.




241
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« on: December 27, 2015, 08:22 PM »
Ed (aka 40hz) once again showing some Puppy love. This one a bit of a departure from the usual avant-jazz-world thing Snarky Puppy usually does. Here's Tony Scherr doing what he does best, backed by Mike League & Co. - who just might be the best thing currently going!  ;D (Bass lovers and watchers: check out the Hofner 500/1 "Beatle Bass" Mike is using! And to think so many people think that little bass is only good for doing Beatles covers.)


242
Living Room / Re: Words fail me - you'll have to read this yourself
« on: December 27, 2015, 02:19 PM »
I think somewhere in here is the "difficult" copyability of art.

If it was just "any random but competent art" as a performance piece, we wouldn't care. And stories are just text, my copy is as good as your copy from Gutenberg's Mark Twain set. And for music, there's whole cultures (besides the lawsuits of grumpy musicians) of mashup. Same with pics.

So I think Form Factor and notoriety are all over this.


If you take the argument that "stories are just text" to the next level... then text is nothing but words...and words are nothing but letters...and letters nothing but geometric shapes and lines...and as such, have no meaning, or value.

On a certain level, everything becomes meaningless - if you allow yourself to fall for that deconstructionist nonsense. It might make you sound clever in certain faux-intellectual academic circles. But it leaves you with nothing if you embrace it without realizing the intellectual and spiritual cop-out it is.

I guess if someone doesn't believe in intellect, or spirit, or meaning, that's no great loss. Especially since there's nothing such people have to lose. Because there's nothing in them for them to lose. Sad really. Those are the true "walking dead" even if they're not the usual flesh-eating zombies we usually think of.

We create ourselves. And we create value. That's what makes us (hopefully) conscious and sentient creatures. We interact with our reality - we're not defined by it.

I forget who once said one's level of enlightenment can be determined by how well you can answer two very simple questions:

   1. Of all the possible things you could be doing right this moment, why are you doing this?

   2. And why now - as opposed to any other moment?

If you can consistently and completely accurately answer both questions, you have no need for instruction, prayer, or meditation. Because you already are enlightened.

So... out of all the things you could possibly do with a Picasso print, why would you want hack it into pieces Mr. Temkin ? And why do it around January 1?

Oh...and Mr. Danny-boy Gallagher, freelance blogger for C|Net and the usual techo-weenie websites? Don't bother trying to answer those questions. You've already clearly established you're a complete rectal orifice...

243
Living Room / Re: Words fail me - you'll have to read this yourself
« on: December 23, 2015, 12:02 PM »
^Sorry. But I have to disagree. I still haven't reached the point where I'm just willing to roll over and play dead about things like this. Stupidity counts on it being tolerated by people "who are better than that" and those who invariably take the moral (albeit silent) high road, in order for it to thrive. Publicity stunt or not, it's still worth challenging things like this - and crass self-serving 'justifications' such as Mr. Gallagher's. Especially in a country like the USA which  is now beginning to manifest all the societal symptoms of every other empire that realized it had passed its zenith and was now in the early stages of decline.  :(

244
Living Room / Re: Holy day
« on: December 23, 2015, 08:24 AM »
I suspect it was always a festival of light...


One of them anyway. ;D

Depending on which pagan or craft practitioner you speak to, the festival of light could also be Imbloc, which is traditionally celebrated on midwinter's day and marks the return of spring. The Christian feastday of Candlemas (Feb 2 usually) was conveniently located next to it in the same manner Christmas was relocated close to the solstice - for purely practical rather than scriptural reasons.

When reprogramming a society's spiritual belief system, it's generally wiser to co-opt and meet the older tradition half way, rather than try to engineer a complete and immediate overhaul.  :)

245
Living Room / Words fail me - you'll have to read this yourself
« on: December 22, 2015, 06:52 PM »
Possibly one of the  most offensive bits of op-ed I've ever read, as written by CNET's Danny Gallagher, a douchebag of the first order.

Article here.

... imagine being an art lover of the most supreme order and hearing that one of your fellow art buyers plans to turn an original Picasso into a 150,000-piece jigsaw puzzle. You'd probably lose consciousness.

That's just one possible outcome for Picasso's "Tete de Faune" (translation: Head of a Faun). Cards Against Humanity, the game company based out of Chicago, purchased an original of the 1962 Picasso linocut for an undisclosed amount and will let supporters of its most recent holiday promotion decide whether the artwork goes to a museum or faces the business end of a laser-cutting machine.

I have to admit I'm really torn about this one. As a culture appreciator, I don't want to see a work of art by one of the world's greatest artists sliced up like a deep-dish pizza. However, as someone who paid for eight Hanukkah gifts from Cards Against Humanity, I also want to receive all eight gifts. And don't give me that crud about how knowing that you saved a priceless work of art is its own reward. You can't bring "peace of mind" to Best Buy for a refund, even if you still have the receipt.

Like I said: douchebag.


246
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« on: December 15, 2015, 02:21 PM »
I had In The Court of the Crimson King on vinyl.  The inside album cover had the lyrics.  I had them memorized back then.  I Talk to the Wind I enjoyed singing the most.


Brings back memories. A long-hair hippie-type band I was in going by the name of Babble-On (Har-har! Get it? God, we thought we were soool freekin' cooool!) spent about half a year getting 20th Century Schizoid Man down note for note. That was considered as badass a song as badass got back then. We used to do that number immediately before The End by the Doors - which is how we usually wrapped up our show. (Talk about a pretentious little bunch of jerks huh? Gotta love the late 60s and early 70s. Not.  ;D)

We were a fairly bad attitude bunch of young-uns back then.

247
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« on: December 15, 2015, 02:04 PM »
The brilliant Joan Armatrading. A woman who packs more soul and musical taste into a single note - and more meaning into a single verse - than some smusician songwriters do in their entire career. IMO she's one of the finest things out of the UK to ever hit vinyl or the stage performing Love and Affection. This recent one live in Glastonbury



And here's the orignal studio version from 1976 that put her on the radar. I think it's interesting how the passing years added depth to this simple but lovely song.



Lyrics
Joan Armatrading - Love And Affection 1976

I am not in love
But I'm open to persuasion
East or West
Where's the best
For romancing

With a friend
I can smile
But with a lover
I could hold my head back
I could really laugh
Really laugh

Thank you
You took me dancing
'Cross the floor
Cheek to cheek
But with a lover
I could really move
Really move
I could really dance
Really dance
Really dance
Really dance
I could really move
Really move
Really move
Really move

Now if I can feel the sun
In my eyes
And the rain on my face
Why can't I
Feel love

I can really love
Really love
Really love
Really love
Really love
Love love love love
Love love love love

Now I got all
The friends that I want
I may need more
But I shall just stick to those
That I have got
With friends I still feel
So insecure

Little darling I believe you could
Help me a lot
Just take my hand
And lead me where you will
No conversation
No wave goodnight
Just make love
With affection

Sing me another love song
But this time
With a little dedication
Sing it, sing it
You know that's what I like
Once more with feeling
Give me love
Give me love
Give me love
Love

(Instrumental)

Make love with affection
Sing me another love song
But this time
With a little dedication
Sing it, sing it
You know that's what I like

With affection
Sing me another love song
But this time
With a little dedication
Sing it, sing it
You know that's what I like

With affection
With a little dedication
Once more with feeling
You know that's what I like


248
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« on: December 09, 2015, 02:03 PM »
Very nice.  I'm not big on prog-rock (Rush, Yes, and ELO just about encompass all I care about the genre, to be honest) but this was enjoyable.  The keyboard guy obviously enjoys his role very much, and has the chops to back it up.  The only thing that bugged me was though the vocalist was very good, I kept getting the feeling that he was 'holding back'... that there's much more power to his voice than he lets through, as though he doesn't want to overpower the other musicians, when in fact a little more chutzpah with the pipes would have fit right in.  Just my 0.02, bravos all 'round otherwise.

He does seem to be an extremely powerful vocalist with something over a four+ octave range. And I think he does keep it all somewhat in check because of that.

They have a bunch of vids up on YT. Some tunes as good or arguably better than the above. A few less so.

I still haven't decided if I really do like them, but I'm definitely gonna be keeping them on my radar for the time being. Their bass player interests me enough to watch them for just that alone. And the keys player is definitely capable and fun to watch since he does seem to be enjoying himself so much. That's something you can't say that about most keyboard players these days. Most of them look like they just smelled something funny whenever you look at them.


249
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« on: December 09, 2015, 01:57 PM »

A track from the movie "The snake god":




That is one fun song! Thanks for sharing it.  :Thmbsup:

250
Living Room / Re: Recommend some music videos to me!
« on: December 04, 2015, 05:42 PM »
No wonder you couldn't find it, 40hz, Such a night is not on Afterglow.


1> I Know What I've Got 5:02 2> Gee Baby, Ain't I Good To You 4:18 3> I'm Just A Lucky So And So 3:34 4> Blue Skies 4:42 5> So Long 5:06 6> New York City Blues 4:00 7> Tell Me You'll Wait For Me 4:39 8> There Must Be A Better World Somewhere 5:21 9> I Still Think About You 4:19 10> I'm Confessin' (That I Love You> 4:26
-Afterglow

Mea culpa. I meant to say the album Trippin' Live.  :-[

Thx for catching that. It's now been corrected in my OP.  :Thmbsup:

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