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Here an example of some dick i have to help at work
This guy is the biggest idiot their is.
keep in mine
he as a mailbox of over 10g and a .pst of 30gig+
USer: Outlook has been slow all week (Wednesday to Today – I was on the road Monday and Tuesday). Now I can hardly use it. I need someone to dial in right away.
I have a lot of friends in business and no one has recurring issues like this.
Me: Oh yha and they live on earth ?
User: (ignoring my comment) Just took 30 seconds to pull a name up in trying to respond to an e-mail.
ME : mhmmm Let me take a look i guess.
USer: Had to hit SEND button three times to send last e-mail. User:Takes up to 10 seconds just to go from one e-mail to another. User: Just took 10 seconds for an e-mailo to open. USer: I rebooted multiple times over the last three days.
What did you do? Change?
Deleted Items and Spam folders were purged by me.
Why would it ne taking me up to 20 seconds to open an e-mail and sometimes a minute to send one?
USER: This is non sense , 10 seconde between each email. why isnt this getting fix
ME: it Took you over 10 minute to spam the hell out of us. You could of took those 10 minute and spend them wisely managing your outlook.
Poor choice for a company managment. Now please be patient a technician will be with you shortly.
No need to email us again as we are AWARE OF THE ISSUE.
if you dont like my frenglish you can always post somewhere else .
90 post and growing your very active on this forum keep it up with out you we wouldn't make it .
and love the sig.. Muggle is slang for weed.. funny because i always tought that weed was slang for marijuanna . they are slang for slang this days ?... great . ~!
Muggle is the word used in the Harry Potter series of books by J. K. Rowling to refer to a person who lacks any sort of magical ability and was not born into the magical world. (A non-magical person who has wizards for parents is a Squib.) The word occurred in popular culture and literature prior to Rowling's adoption of it. However, the Harry Potter series popularised the word, and it has come into common usage in other contexts.
Muggle" was added to the Oxford English Dictionary in 2003, where it is said to refer to a person who is lacking a skill.[2] "Muggle" is used in informal English by members of small, specialised groups, usually those which consider their activities to either be analogous to or directly involve magic (such as within hacker culture;[3] and Pagans, Neopagans and Wiccans[4]) to refer to those outside the group. "Muggle" (or geomuggle) is used by geocachers to refer to those not involved in or aware of the sport of geocaching. A cache that has been tampered with by non-participants is said to be "muggled".[5][6] The NBC science fiction drama series Heroes features a dog named Mr. Muggles, who is owned by the Bennet family. The writers of the show have stated that the dogs name is an allusion to the Harry Potter series as, like Harry, Claire Bennet has been adopted by a family who does not have any special abilities. In TV Tropes, "Muggle" is used to describe non-powered humans or Earthlings appearing in a science fiction or fantasy story (ie. humans in the X-Men comic books, Earthlings and non-Plumbers in Ben 10, "micronians" in Robotech, etc.).
APPARENTLY IT DOESNT MEAN WEED IN ANY SHAPE OR FORM
where the hell are you from. Perhaps wiki need to visit your country to get some updates. !