Friday, April 19, 2019

Can't Edit My Google Site - Solution

Problem: Editing a Google Site in Google Chrome keeps throwing error messages.
Solution: Edit the Google Site in Firefox.

I was trying to edit embedded HTML code. I got:

   Aw Snap! Something went wrong while displaying your document.
   To continue, please reload your browser
   Code: 3c4daba
   Error: Client Error

The error code appears to change every time. I got 388abdc and 3b7f02b and 510fb2c and b3324e and 77846a. At that point, I gave up and Googled my problem. I found a forum comment about a totally different Google Site editing problem that was solved by switching from Chrome to Firefox to do the editing. That seemed counterintuitive, but I tried it, and it worked.

Monday, September 11, 2017

Humor | Enjoy

⟳ Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal
⟳ XKCD
⟳ Doonesbury
⟳ Daily Kos Comics
⟰ Existential Comics
⟰ Cat and Girl
⟰ Jesus and Mo
⏯ The Daily Show - Guest Hosts
⏯ Full Frontal - Samantha Bee
⏯ Last Week Tonight - John Oliver
⏯ Late Show - Stephen Colbert
⏯ Late Night - Seth Meyer
⏯ Real Time - Bill Maher
⏯ The Problem with Jon Stewart - Jon Stewart
⏯ Montana PBS - Requires Login for Passport items
⏯ Politically Reactive
⏯ Projectr - MSU Library access
⏯ The Atlantic - MSU Library access

Friday, October 16, 2015

Wisdom from the Master

If your touchscreen is clean, you did not need that device.

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Query too complex - Possible solution

Look for suspicious query or field names in the query itself, or in any other queries leading up to it. Avoid anything in the Microsoft Access special characters list. At the time of this writing, round parentheses ( ) are not in the list, but they should be. I had a flakey "Query Too Complex" error, failing sometimes but not others. The error went away when I deleted a pair of parentheses from the name of a query a couple of queries earlier in the chain.

Monday, February 3, 2014

Presentation Update Interrupt Block

During presentations at the local, state and national level, from small classrooms to huge convention halls, I see this often. In the middle of a presentation, over the presenter's slide pops a dialog asking if you would like to update some software now. Of course not! This is the middle of a presentation.

Some people use elaborate systems of shutting down all updaters (complicated) or Internet access (not always desirable) or creating super-clean user accounts for presentations, but this should not be necessary. Presentation software, be it Powerpoint or Keynote or Prezi or whatever, should automatically block these update requests until after the presentation is over. If operating systems do not allow such a block, then they should be rewritten so they do.

When we go to a movie, we anticipate sitting through the entire film without being asked if we want to have the projector software updated. The same should be true of any presentation.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

No, I am not that Bill Freese

Genetically modified foods? Yummy. Still, there is a lot to be said for an heirloom tomato.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

[fa] = Former Acronym

I propose any organization that adopts their acronym as their official name add the lower case letters fa in square brackets to the end of their name so the rest of us do not waste time trying to find out the actual name of the organization. The Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development is now just ASCD, but if they do not tell us, how will we know. Call it ASCD[fa] and all is clear. In reading the name aloud, the [fa] is silent. Now if you will excuse me, I am hungry and am going out for some KFC[fa].