Today's technical question
- silvercamaro
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Today's technical question
Seriously, I would like to know -- and have no intention to consider this political in any way, even considering the context in which it came to mind -- can a laptop computer even hold "approximately 650,000 e-mails"?
That seems like it would take an enormous amount of hard drive space, especially considering the many e-mails that take up two or more pages, often containing photographs, lengthy attachments, emojis, videos, slide shows and random jokes forwarded by a little old lady to everybody she knows.
The laptop I'm typing this on has 8GB of RAM, which seemed astonishingly big to me when I bought it. Do I have room to add on another 645,000 jokes from the little old lady before I start deleting like crazy? (I don't really save any of the jokes, as most of them are unreadable and the rest are unfunny.)
I am curious, though.
That seems like it would take an enormous amount of hard drive space, especially considering the many e-mails that take up two or more pages, often containing photographs, lengthy attachments, emojis, videos, slide shows and random jokes forwarded by a little old lady to everybody she knows.
The laptop I'm typing this on has 8GB of RAM, which seemed astonishingly big to me when I bought it. Do I have room to add on another 645,000 jokes from the little old lady before I start deleting like crazy? (I don't really save any of the jokes, as most of them are unreadable and the rest are unfunny.)
I am curious, though.
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- Bob78164
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Re: Today's technical question
8 GB / 500,000 e-mails is 16000 bytes per e-mail. That seems like a lot of room for nothing but text. Attachments would make them grow quickly. --Bob
"Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason than that of blindfolded fear." Thomas Jefferson
- goongas
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Re: Today's technical question
A modern laptop hard drive can have at least 500 GB, so 650,000 text emails would easily fit on a modern laptop hard drive.
- silvercamaro
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Re: Today's technical question
Thanks, Bob and Goongas.
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- themanintheseersuckersuit
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Re: Today's technical question
8 GB is the amount of Random Acccess Memory, not the measure of storage capacity.
Suitguy is not bitter.
feels he represents the many educated and rational onlookers who believe that the hysterical denouncement of lay scepticism is both unwarranted and counter-productive
The problem, then, is that such calls do not address an opposition audience so much as they signal virtue. They talk past those who need convincing. They ignore actual facts and counterargument. And they are irreparably smug.
feels he represents the many educated and rational onlookers who believe that the hysterical denouncement of lay scepticism is both unwarranted and counter-productive
The problem, then, is that such calls do not address an opposition audience so much as they signal virtue. They talk past those who need convincing. They ignore actual facts and counterargument. And they are irreparably smug.
- silvercamaro
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Re: Today's technical question
Okay. I will go find my specifications. Eventually. I may even get it right, sooner or later.themanintheseersuckersuit wrote:8 GB is the amount of Random Acccess Memory, not the measure of storage capacity.
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Re: Today's technical question
Especially if the attachments were photos of Anthony's Wiener.Bob78164 wrote:8 GB / 500,000 e-mails is 16000 bytes per e-mail. Attachments would make them grow quickly. --Bob
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- Estonut
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Re: Today's technical question
Hey, sc! You have a microsoft operating system, correct? On the older ones, there was an icon on the desktop labeled "My Computer." I have Win 8 and just used the search feature (brought up by putting the mouse in the upper right corner of the screen) to search for "My Computer." That brought up an option for "This PC." I clicked on that and it brought up a navigation window, very similar to the old "My Computer" display.silvercamaro wrote:Okay. I will go find my specifications. Eventually. I may even get it right, sooner or later.themanintheseersuckersuit wrote:8 GB is the amount of Random Acccess Memory, not the measure of storage capacity.
If you get this far (either way), you should see a reference to "C Drive." Right-click on that and then click on "Properties" to bring up the Properties window. It should default to the tab labeled "General." If you're on a different tab, click the General tab. You should see figures for your used space, free space and your disk capacity. Disk capacity is the size of your main hard drive.
- silvercamaro
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Re: Today's technical question
Aha! Getting there is somewhat different in Windows 10, but I discovered I have 921 GBs on the C drive. I wish I had that much storage space, comparatively speaking, in my kitchen cabinets.Estonut wrote: If you get this far (either way), you should see a reference to "C Drive." Right-click on that and then click on "Properties" to bring up the Properties window. It should default to the tab labeled "General." If you're on a different tab, click the General tab. You should see figures for your used space, free space and your disk capacity. Disk capacity is the size of your main hard drive.
Thank you, Esto.
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- BackInTex
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Re: Today's technical question
I'm more concerned with why 650,000 emails are on a single laptop. Typically, a person's laptop would contain a mailbox of only their active emails. How (or why) does a single user get on the distribution of 650,000 emails. For the period HRC was SoS, that is 441 emails per day, or 18 her hour, every hour for 1,473 days.
It seems to me that for the laptop to contain that many emails, whoever's laptop it is contains many many emails that were not directed to that person. Why would they be there? Should they be there (even aside from the security aspect)?
It seems to me that for the laptop to contain that many emails, whoever's laptop it is contains many many emails that were not directed to that person. Why would they be there? Should they be there (even aside from the security aspect)?
..what country can preserve it’s liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? let them take arms.
~~ Thomas Jefferson
War is where the government tells you who the bad guy is.
Revolution is when you decide that for yourself.
-- Benjamin Franklin (maybe)
~~ Thomas Jefferson
War is where the government tells you who the bad guy is.
Revolution is when you decide that for yourself.
-- Benjamin Franklin (maybe)
- themanintheseersuckersuit
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Re: Today's technical question
The word for today is terabytesilvercamaro wrote:
Aha! Getting there is somewhat different in Windows 10, but I discovered I have 921 GBs on the C drive. I wish I had that much storage space, comparatively speaking, in my kitchen cabinets.
Thank you, Esto.
Suitguy is not bitter.
feels he represents the many educated and rational onlookers who believe that the hysterical denouncement of lay scepticism is both unwarranted and counter-productive
The problem, then, is that such calls do not address an opposition audience so much as they signal virtue. They talk past those who need convincing. They ignore actual facts and counterargument. And they are irreparably smug.
feels he represents the many educated and rational onlookers who believe that the hysterical denouncement of lay scepticism is both unwarranted and counter-productive
The problem, then, is that such calls do not address an opposition audience so much as they signal virtue. They talk past those who need convincing. They ignore actual facts and counterargument. And they are irreparably smug.
- Bob Juch
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Re: Today's technical question
The emails wouldn't have to be downloaded onto the laptop. They could remain on the server and be retrieved via the Web. That's how your smartphones do it.
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- Appa23
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Re: Today's technical question
Not that I need to defend HRC, but I easily can see her getting (and sending) up that many e-mails a day (though she likely would have had to have received more than that number, as she likely would have deleted some.)BackInTex wrote:I'm more concerned with why 650,000 emails are on a single laptop. Typically, a person's laptop would contain a mailbox of only their active emails. How (or why) does a single user get on the distribution of 650,000 emails. For the period HRC was SoS, that is 441 emails per day, or 18 her hour, every hour for 1,473 days.
It seems to me that for the laptop to contain that many emails, whoever's laptop it is contains many many emails that were not directed to that person. Why would they be there? Should they be there (even aside from the security aspect)?
In the last couple years, I likely average over 400 e-mails sent and received per day (M-F), and maybe 75-100 on weekends. I am just running a legal office (with some big cases), not an entire executive department.
- bazodee
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Re: Today's technical question
BackInTex wrote:I'm more concerned with why 650,000 emails are on a single laptop. Typically, a person's laptop would contain a mailbox of only their active emails. How (or why) does a single user get on the distribution of 650,000 emails. For the period HRC was SoS, that is 441 emails per day, or 18 her hour, every hour for 1,473 days.
It seems to me that for the laptop to contain that many emails, whoever's laptop it is contains many many emails that were not directed to that person. Why would they be there? Should they be there (even aside from the security aspect)?
Someone particularly compulsive might have instructed the entire staff to cc: her on everything. My guess is that 99% of these will be duplicates that the FBI have already seen. But I'm still wondering why they're on Weiner's laptop, especially now that Huma has claimed that she doesn't know why they are there.
- TheConfessor
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Re: Today's technical question
I happen to be in Vienna tonight. I was surprised how bigly they celebrate Halloween here. I saw tens of thousands of people in the central city reveling with costumes and painted faces.silverscreenselect wrote:Especially if the attachments were photos of Anthony's Wiener.Bob78164 wrote:8 GB / 500,000 e-mails is 16000 bytes per e-mail. Attachments would make them grow quickly. --Bob
Anyway, since the city is called Wien here, it made me more aware of the spelling of Anthony Weiner and his wiener. And I've only been here half a day, but I've already enjoyed a tasty currywurst and an awesome schnitzel sandwich. I also learned that there's no Danube here. In Wien, it's called the Donau.
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Re: Today's technical question
Lawdy, I'm feeling old again. I remember buying PCs for a company where the biggest hard drives were 10MB, and the folks said, "you won't need anything more than that!" (I said, "yeah, right, do you know what kind of memory hogs I put on these things?")Bob78164 wrote:8 GB / 500,000 e-mails is 16000 bytes per e-mail. That seems like a lot of room for nothing but text. Attachments would make them grow quickly. --Bob
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Re: Today's technical question
And regardless of why, there is the fact that they are there, somewhere they shouldn't be; more evidence of a pattern of "recklessness" within the SoS in regards to cyber-security.bazodee wrote:BackInTex wrote:I'm more concerned with why 650,000 emails are on a single laptop. Typically, a person's laptop would contain a mailbox of only their active emails. How (or why) does a single user get on the distribution of 650,000 emails. For the period HRC was SoS, that is 441 emails per day, or 18 her hour, every hour for 1,473 days.
It seems to me that for the laptop to contain that many emails, whoever's laptop it is contains many many emails that were not directed to that person. Why would they be there? Should they be there (even aside from the security aspect)?
Someone particularly compulsive might have instructed the entire staff to cc: her on everything. My guess is that 99% of these will be duplicates that the FBI have already seen. But I'm still wondering why they're on Weiner's laptop, especially now that Huma has claimed that she doesn't know why they are there.
..what country can preserve it’s liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? let them take arms.
~~ Thomas Jefferson
War is where the government tells you who the bad guy is.
Revolution is when you decide that for yourself.
-- Benjamin Franklin (maybe)
~~ Thomas Jefferson
War is where the government tells you who the bad guy is.
Revolution is when you decide that for yourself.
-- Benjamin Franklin (maybe)
- ghostjmf
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Re: Today's technical question
I think AW's spelling may have more to do with Ellis Island or similar pt-of-entry scribes than w/ German/Austrian spelling rules.
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Re: Today's technical question
Bill Gates supposedly said in 1981 that "640K ought to be enough for anyone." No one's ever been able to prove he said it.SpacemanSpiff wrote:Lawdy, I'm feeling old again. I remember buying PCs for a company where the biggest hard drives were 10MB, and the folks said, "you won't need anything more than that!" (I said, "yeah, right, do you know what kind of memory hogs I put on these things?")Bob78164 wrote:8 GB / 500,000 e-mails is 16000 bytes per e-mail. That seems like a lot of room for nothing but text. Attachments would make them grow quickly. --Bob
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Re: Today's technical question
Again, it depends on what sort of documents are there. In many organizations, the boss is copied on all sorts of things regardless of whether he or she ever reads them.BackInTex wrote: And regardless of why, there is the fact that they are there, somewhere they shouldn't be; more evidence of a pattern of "recklessness" within the SoS in regards to cyber-security.
I'm all for tightening up cybersecurity measures with government agencies, federal, state, and local. But it needs to be done in a non-partisan manner, with the goal of improving security, not engaging in a partisan witch hunt to "prove" the other side is guilty of doing dumb things that both sides are probably guilty of to the same extent.
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Re: Today's technical question
Make sure you visit the street called Juchgasse.TheConfessor wrote:I happen to be in Vienna tonight. I was surprised how bigly they celebrate Halloween here. I saw tens of thousands of people in the central city reveling with costumes and painted faces.silverscreenselect wrote:Especially if the attachments were photos of Anthony's Wiener.Bob78164 wrote:8 GB / 500,000 e-mails is 16000 bytes per e-mail. Attachments would make them grow quickly. --Bob
Anyway, since the city is called Wien here, it made me more aware of the spelling of Anthony Weiner and his wiener. And I've only been here half a day, but I've already enjoyed a tasty currywurst and an awesome schnitzel sandwich. I also learned that there's no Danube here. In Wien, it's called the Donau.
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.
- Douglas Adams (1952 - 2001)
Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere.
Teach a child to be polite and courteous in the home and, when he grows up, he'll never be able to drive in New Jersey.
- Douglas Adams (1952 - 2001)
Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere.
Teach a child to be polite and courteous in the home and, when he grows up, he'll never be able to drive in New Jersey.
- Estonut
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Re: Today's technical question
He probably gets enough Juchgasse around here.Bob Juch wrote:Make sure you visit the street called Juchgasse.TheConfessor wrote:I happen to be in Vienna tonight. I was surprised how bigly they celebrate Halloween here. I saw tens of thousands of people in the central city reveling with costumes and painted faces.
Anyway, since the city is called Wien here, it made me more aware of the spelling of Anthony Weiner and his wiener. And I've only been here half a day, but I've already enjoyed a tasty currywurst and an awesome schnitzel sandwich. I also learned that there's no Danube here. In Wien, it's called the Donau.
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- Bob78164
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Re: Today's technical question
You did note that shinycar expressly noted that she didn't intend to consider this political in any way? I guess she didn't quite expressly state that she'd prefer to keep politics out of this thread, but that's certainly how I understood her post. --BobBackInTex wrote:And regardless of why, there is the fact that they are there, somewhere they shouldn't be; more evidence of a pattern of "recklessness" within the SoS in regards to cyber-security.bazodee wrote:BackInTex wrote:I'm more concerned with why 650,000 emails are on a single laptop. Typically, a person's laptop would contain a mailbox of only their active emails. How (or why) does a single user get on the distribution of 650,000 emails. For the period HRC was SoS, that is 441 emails per day, or 18 her hour, every hour for 1,473 days.
It seems to me that for the laptop to contain that many emails, whoever's laptop it is contains many many emails that were not directed to that person. Why would they be there? Should they be there (even aside from the security aspect)?
Someone particularly compulsive might have instructed the entire staff to cc: her on everything. My guess is that 99% of these will be duplicates that the FBI have already seen. But I'm still wondering why they're on Weiner's laptop, especially now that Huma has claimed that she doesn't know why they are there.
"Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason than that of blindfolded fear." Thomas Jefferson
- silvercamaro
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Re: Today's technical question
It's okay, Bob. I don't pretend to decree how and in what direction any thread should proceed. I simply was trying to find out what was a possible maximum capacity for an ordinary laptop. I specifically didn't name names because I wanted to avoid, for as long as possible, answers skewed toward or against any particular candidate, his or her assistants, and seemingly creepazoid spouses of said assistants. You'll notice that I dropped out of the discussion once the names started to appear.Bob78164 wrote:
You did note that shinycar expressly noted that she didn't intend to consider this political in any way? I guess she didn't quite expressly state that she'd prefer to keep politics out of this thread, but that's certainly how I understood her post. --Bob
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Re: Today's technical question
I've now met BiT in person and found that he can be quite reasonable for a Neanderthal, so I thought he might have overlooked your apparent preference rather than deciding to disregard it. --Bobsilvercamaro wrote:It's okay, Bob. I don't pretend to decree how and in what direction any thread should proceed. I simply was trying to find out what was a possible maximum capacity for an ordinary laptop. I specifically didn't name names because I wanted to avoid, for as long as possible, answers skewed toward or against any particular candidate, his or her assistants, and seemingly creepazoid spouses of said assistants. You'll notice that I dropped out of the discussion once the names started to appear.Bob78164 wrote:
You did note that shinycar expressly noted that she didn't intend to consider this political in any way? I guess she didn't quite expressly state that she'd prefer to keep politics out of this thread, but that's certainly how I understood her post. --Bob
"Out" once again is where I intend to go.
"Question with boldness even the existence of a God; because, if there be one, he must more approve of the homage of reason than that of blindfolded fear." Thomas Jefferson