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I am a winner!

I went to the Atlanta PowerShell Users Group tonight.  The topic was tips and tricks.  My trick was this script, which task scheduler reads to me in the morning. Assuming you use Hiveminder--and you should, because it's awesome--you only have to edit the RSS locations...

Fun with Exchange Management Shell

I'm really digging the Exchange Management Shell.  It's FUN FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY! Okay, maybe not the whole family.  😉 Short example:  someone wanted to know if I could tell them how many emails someone sent in a specific time period.  Short answer:...

Obituary spam

There is a special circle of hell for people who spam obituaries. As it turns out, I have a modest talent for obituaries.  (Also job references, and for the same reason:  I'm good at finding unique good things about people and saying them.)  Unfortunately, I have now...

I haz a Goodreads listing nao.

I <3 Goodreads.  I like categorizing my books and tracking them;  it appeals to my unused library degree.  Also, much as they suspect, my friends have similar reading tastes. Here's my author page on Goodreads.  Most of the stories are available via the equally...

So, um, I have this friend… *shifty eyes*

So, I have this friend *cough* who had a domain controller that needed a new motherboard. Due to the excitement of the hardware vendor's tech forgetting to reattach the RAID, then the server no longer recognizing its network cards, and then the tech realizing that he...

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Immortal Gifts invites readers to re-evaluate the meanings of things such as life, death, freedom, hate and love from the first page. Katherine Villyard manages to capture some of the most poignant questions we ask ourselves as we go through our individual lives. Is it worth being able to live forever if, in the end, we’ll lose the ones we love to mortality? Is Death really the ultimate enemy to life, or is death just life’s misunderstood old friend? To stop hate, do we need to restrict our freedoms? This book makes readers ask and answer tough questions not only about the characters and plotline, but about their own beliefs, understandings, and dreams.

– Megan Weiss on Reedsy Discovery

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