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How to Convert Measurements Easily in Microsoft Excel

How to Convert Measurements Easily in Microsoft Excel

We've all been in a situation where we need to convert one measurement to another. An objects mass was measured in ounces and not kilos, or the lumber you ordered was measured in metres instead of feet, or someone is planning a trip to the USA and wants to know the speed limits in mp/h when they're used to km/h. There are a multitude of jobs where this is a daily task, some of them where measurements must be exact. Well, there is an easier way. There is a function in Microsoft Excel called CONVERT that will convert from one measurement system to another and all you have to do is specify the number and the measurement systems!

Steps

  1. Start Microsoft Excel
  2. The CONVERT function is not installed by default. It is part of the Analysis Add-in tool pack. To …
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Google Books

Hello All

Search the full text of books and discover new ones ---------> with Google Books


Enjoy


MICROSOFT IN EGYPT (CAIRO)

MICROSOFT IN EGYPT (CAIRO)

Soon Microsoft will be in Egypt, interviewing interested and qualified candidates for software development positions here in the USA at our corporate headquarters working on our major products.

If you know of anyone who might be interested, or a bulletin board where it would be appropriate to post this, please forward this email. There are multiple positions open and candidates will be in competition with themselves, not each other. Please send your resume/cv to egyptres@microsoft.com

What is a qualified candidate?

* Someone who has (or will be completing this year) a bachelor's (four year or more) degree in Computer Science or a related field

* Someone that has very strong abilities to write code …

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Observations from Watching MySQL Source Code Commits

A few week ago we switched kruckenberg.com over to a new server. With the move I lost all of my procmail filtering rules which were responsible for automatically moving incoming mail to various folders on the server (mail must be filtered on the server so my Blackberry and webmail will get the same filtering).

Anyhow, one of the things I'd been sticking into a folder and looking at occasionally (meaning once a year to purge) is the messages from MySQL source commits. Anyone can subscribe to the list on the MySQL mailing lists page and get these messages which essentially contain the notes and diffs from when something is checked into version control. Most of these commits are for the database application, but there is also a steady stream of documentation changes coming in. Since I haven't gotten around to redoing the server-based …

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Asterisk Now Review, Simplicity

Spent a bit of time over the weekend looking at Asterisk Now.
http://asterisknow.org

I downloaded the ISO last week and was finally able to make some time
to take a look at it over the weekend. From the start I found myself
a bit annoyed with the project because of the download website. First
problem was that I had to register to download a binary. Required
"signups" remove my "get it now, try it" nature. I use greylisting
for email so it could be up to half an hour before I get back my
registration to any new site. That is enough time for me to go off
and work on a new project. Required downloads just lead to bogus
signups that just makes Sales job more difficult since they have to
sort through bogus logins to find good leads.

Second annoyance? I couldn't read the forums before I downloaded. …

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Database scalability

We’re having a discussion with a new client about how to scale the database back end. Really, we’re not too worried about performance — we don’t see that being a limiting factor at this point. What we absolutely need is reliability. If the database server goes down, the site goes down. It’s a single point of failure. So how does one stop it being a single point of failure with a Rails application?

We’re currently using MySQL and, before I got involved in the project, they were trying out MySQL replication and clustering. And having very little success. I haven’t actually looked at the setup in any detail yet, so I don’t know what’s going wrong, but I’m wondering if these are the best options to persevere with?

I’m not particularly wedded to MySQL, but we don’t particularly want to go down the route of Oracle if we can avoid it. (Mostly because it sounds big and scary and the only places I’ve …

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A Reminder of Why Open Source Matters

Sometimes you're so involved in the details, you forget the bigger picture--until something reminds you again.

Today I realized that our payment gateway processor (who shall remain nameless) does not support the Discover card correctly. When you authorize a credit card charge, the credit card (Visa, MasterCard, American Express, or Discover) performs an "address verification service" or AVS, to guard against fraud. This means matching the billing address on file of the cardholder against the address provided for the transaction. If the address and the zip code both match, AVS returns a "Y". If only the zip code matches, AVS returns a "Z". If neither matches, you get an "N", which in turn causes the gateway processor to reject the credit card.

It turns out that Discover returns an "X" if there is an exact match between the address provided and the billing address on file. Since Visa, MasterCard, and American Express do …

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OurSQL Podcast Episode 1: Backups, Backups Everywhere

Well, it’s later than I’d wanted, but it’s here! Be sure to download it right away, as the news is time-sensitive (the rest of the segments are relatively timeless).

The feature of this podcast is “Backups, Backups Everywhere”. The show notes can be seen at:

Check out the show notes at:
http://technocation.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=18&Itemid=29

The podcast can be played directly at:
http://technocation.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=19&Itemid=29

Subscribe to the podcast at:
pcast://technocation.org/index2.php?option=com_podcast&feed=RSS2.0&no_html=1

OurSQL: The …

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links for 2006-12-05
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MySQL Enables Tellme to Reduce Costs & Maintain High Availability

MySQL AB today announced that Tellme Networks, Inc is benefiting from significantly reduced database-related costs by using the open source MySQL database. Tellme employs MySQL to power mission-critical enterprise and carrier applications on the world?s largest open platform for the phone.

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