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Author Topic: Well it's definitely cold so I think we'll start the Winter Flickr now  (Read 32590 times)

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Offline Betty

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Re: Well it's definitely cold so I think we'll start the Winter Flickr now
« Reply #40 on: February 28, 2015, 07:49:26 PM »
You mean you called tech support & actually got someone you could understand? For years whenever I call Verizon, Akamai, Yahoo, IX hosting, or Google, I always seem to get some guy named Mohammed that can barely speak any English.

My sister, with Time/Warner always gets connected to some guy who sounds like Gandhi, with a very difficult accent to understand. She says it's too hard to get mad at them when they screwed up something or can't understand them, because she keeps visualizing she's talking to someone who looks like Gandhi, & probably only makes $4 a day.

Mohammed is always polite & friendly (even though I can't understand what he's saying most of the time), but I feel very annoyed that they would route tech calls from Americans to middle eastern countries with outrageous human & women's rights violations, that suppress all freedoms except the freedom to shoot, behead, whip, or torture innocent people. And they all hate us over there anyway.


Online andyg0404

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Re: Well it's definitely cold so I think we'll start the Winter Flickr now
« Reply #41 on: March 01, 2015, 02:29:01 PM »
Hi Betty,

I'm pretty xenophobic when it comes to tech people, my hearing is not so great and the accent definitely makes it harder for me to understand them. My last tech had an accent but it wasn't pronounced and he spoke clearly and slowly which helps. One of my biggest peeves is people who leave a voice mail and speak very quickly, slurring their words and racing through their message. Especially if they have an accent. There have been times when I've played messages back numerous times and could not figure out the person's name or be sure of the phone number. If you're leaving a message, speak slowly and repeat your name and telephone number at the beginning and end of the message. If it's a long message and I miss your phone number I don't want to have to play the whole thing back again just to hear the number at the end. Particularly if I have to play it back numerous times until I think I know what it is. I have trouble speaking on the phone for the same reason. Some people when asked to identify themselves say their names very quickly. Then if I ask them to spell it, they spell it very quickly. They haven't figured out that while they know who they are, I'm trying to figure it out. But I guess I'm just another cranky old man.

Andy G.


Online andyg0404

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Re: Well it's definitely cold so I think we'll start the Winter Flickr now
« Reply #42 on: March 07, 2015, 04:54:53 PM »
Hello everybody and welcome back to My Weekly Flickr.

Shall we talk about the weather? Let’s.  Another week , another storm, although the forecasters say this should be the last storm of the season. Of course forecasters also swore the Titanic wouldn’t sink. And there were snow flurries on my bar mitzvah which I think was April 9th, so while I fondly hope there are no more storms I’m not ready to put my walking cleats away for the season. Left work early on Thursday when I saw the snow coming down steadily and made it home before the Port Authority got mobbed; bus ran slowly but I had a seat and was grateful the trip only took about a half hour longer than usual. I wore my boots, not my cleats, as I knew there would be accumulations of snow. What I wasn’t prepared for was the fact that underneath the snow and slush the sidewalk had frozen. So I literally slid a good portion of my walk back to the bus station. Very scary as I almost fell down more than a dozen times. And half way there I noticed that it felt like I had a pool of water in one of my boots. Very unpleasant feeling to have to experience while walking or on a bus ride. When I got home I pulled off the boot and a cup of water poured out, the boot seam had split. Two days later my shoe was still damp. And I now have about two feet of snow in my back yard so it doesn’t appear I will be able to turn my car around back there any time soon.

All I can say is, it’s enough, OK, were tired of it and it needs to stop. Hope Mother Nature is listening.

Anyway, today I walked up to MOBIA, the Museum of Biblical Art, on Broadway and 61st street. As it was a short distance I walked back as well. It was cold and on the walk back my eyes started to tear but I digress. This is more than likely my last visit to MOBIA at this location as the building MOBIA is in is owned by the American Bible Society; MOBIA is not affiliated with the Society in anyway, and the Society has put the building up for sale, which means MOBIA needs to find a new space. It will be some time before they relocate as the current exhibit is open until June. And the current exhibit is a blockbuster, Sculpture in the Age of Donatello. 23 sculptures from the Florence Cathedral have been packed up and brought to the United States for the first time ever. Most of them have never left Italy. The logistics of packing and transporting these bigger than life statues must have been daunting. The insurance too. And MOBIA is their only venue, once it’s over they go home so it’s really a once in a lifetime chance to see them. The museum is expecting big crowds, they are selling tickets online, but my brother went earlier in the week and said that he was able to buy a ticket onsite and there weren’t crowds of people there. The museum opens at 10AM and I arrived about 9:45 AM and there were a few people sitting in the lobby. By the time we were allowed to go up only a few more had arrived and there were never more than a dozen people in what is a large exhibition space at any time. It has to be a large exhibition space as several of the sculptures are full size, probably six or seven feet tall. Very impressive. Donatello is the star but there are also pieces by Brunelleschi, Nanni di Banco, Luca della Robbia and others. There are two larger-than-life seated evangelist figures, St Luke and St John,  made to flank the church’s main western portal, by Nanni and Donatello which are awesome. The main piece is Donatello’s full size sculpture of the old Testament prophet Habakkuk which is very impressive. In an article I link to below Donatello repeatedly shouted at the statue, Speak, damn you, speak!,” while carving it. You might expect it to.  The exhibition space has been done up with white walls and a shiny white floor.  There are white mesh hangings from the ceiling with comprehensive and interesting wall texts on them. I confess I read them all and found them useful in viewing the sculptures but I can’t say I retained much of that knowledge. I’m glad there won’t be a test. This is a link to the MOBIA website with a very good description of the show as well as a slide show at the top showing many of the pieces. http://mobia.org/exhibitions/sculpture-in-the-age-of-donatello#slideshow7 and this is a review in the New York Review of Books that speaks specifically about the Habakuk http://tinyurl.com/q7y4z9l

Splendid show, I’m glad I was able to see it.

Let’s walk over to the Flickrs.

Andy G.

There's a story behind this    

https://www.flickr.com/photos/78801732%40N03/16686156356

You big sissy you!

https://www.flickr.com/photos/64419249%40N06/16469268882 

girlie look 2015

https://www.flickr.com/photos/123462347%40N02/16442138376 

DSC03792

https://www.flickr.com/photos/117560929%40N03/16292851508 

Recently Kaige told us he wishes he could be both a boy and a girl because he likes playing princesses as much as ninjas and he doesn
 
https://www.flickr.com/photos/irkajavasdream/16060993034

Shiny maid...

https://www.flickr.com/photos/shinypenny77/15864159614 

beautiful cd terrible backdrop for so much beauty

https://www.flickr.com/photos/123125505%40N06/16558554418/

Helping boy (center) in drag
 
https://www.flickr.com/photos/104546207%40N08/16674390552

Sussie/Dave in his little baby outfit. He needs to be fed lots of hot man cream.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/118871084%40N05/15834227764

IMG_7200

https://www.flickr.com/photos/chantal_fouet/16158274950

Womanless Contestant

https://www.flickr.com/photos/104546207%40N08/16273017740

ms 1943-54 AB-107

https://www.flickr.com/photos/dboo/16509961621


Online andyg0404

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Re: Well it's definitely cold so I think we'll start the Winter Flickr now
« Reply #43 on: March 14, 2015, 04:12:22 PM »
Hello everybody and welcome back to My Weekly Flickr.

No snow today or freezing temperatures or sleet or gale force winds so what is there to complain about? Well, it did rain most of the day but it was a light rain and the temperature made it into the upper 40’s and the wind was only occasional so I will keep mum so as not to ape the woman with the little boy in the old joke. The woman and the little boy are at the beach when an enormous wave washes up and snatches the child out deep into the ocean. The woman jumps up and starts wailing and crying and imploring God to return her baby boy. Suddenly an enormous wave washes up on the beach again, this time returning the boy to his mother. Oh thank you, thank you, thank you she cried as she hugged him dearly. Then she stopped and looked up and said, he had a hat!

Anyway, as it is March 14th, I can only hope that we are heading in a spring like direction. I was a little surprised when I went out to the grocery store this morning that it was still dark out until I remembered that we turned the clocks ahead last week. And the snow has disappeared from the front of my property, although there was still enough in the backyard to prevent my turning around. But if things continue the way they’ve been, this should be my last week of backing out of the driveway. And without the wall of snow it was a little easier driving backwards although in backing up I drive the way I walk; I have a tendency to drift to the side.

I considered going to the Japan Society for an exhibit that I know I will enjoy but I would have wanted to walk there and back and with the rain and its opening hour of 11AM I decided to put it off until next week. Instead I walked up to the Frick museum to see their current exhibit, Coypel’s Don Quixote Tapestries: Illustrating a Spanish Novel in Eighteenth-Century. My brother had seen it and did not rave about it so I wasn’t expecting much but it turned out to be a pleasant visit. Charles Coypel, an 18th Century French artist, painted 28 illustrations of scenes from the novel Don Quixote which were subsequently woven into tapestries by the Gobelin manufactory in Paris.  The Frick had three of them in their oval room; I would guess they are about 12 feet by 12 feet. All three, as I imagine all 28, have the same perimeter design, something that took me a little while to notice, although some are mirror reflections. The painting, or cartoon, is woven into the middle and they are comical scenes showing Quixote’s antics. There were also two enormous tapestries, inspired by Coypel’s art, one that was probably 24 feet wide, by the workshop of Peter Van Den Hecke, an 18th Century Flemish artist. These are from the Frick’s collection; purchased by Mr. Frick and bequeathed to his son, Childs, who gave them to the museum in 1965. It was their first time on exhibit in ten years. I’ve mentioned the Frick’s ability to pull things out of the attic and this is just another instance of that. Additionally there were five of Copyel’s oil paintings which I found evocative of Francois Boucher. In doing a little Googling I found a passage from a book in which it says that Coypel’s painting The Rape of Europa is a remarkable anticipation of Boucher’s Triumph of Venus. Here are links to the two paintings so you can tell me if you agree. http://daystarvisions.com/Pix/Masters/Full/Francois_Boucher-Triumph_of_Venus-1740-Web_Gallery_ver-edited_DC-lvl11.jpg http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/92/No%C3%ABl-Nicolas_Coypel_-_The_Rape_of_Europa_-_WGA05595.jpg  Additionally the exhibit had 18 engravings that illustrated editions of Don Quixote that were on loan from the Hispanic Society.  This is a link to the Frick website description of the exhibit. http://www.frick.org//exhibitions/don_quixote This is a link to the Frick press release about the exhibit. http://www.frick.org/sites/default/files/pdf/press/DQ_Press_Release_V5_web_0.pdf Increase the magnification of the page to better see the illustrations.

Very enjoyable, glad I went.

And now let’s take a little stroll over to the Flickrs.

Andy G.

Cute Little Trap

https://www.flickr.com/photos/130580623%40N08/16319336298

Ready for school

https://www.flickr.com/photos/82499223%40N08/15875620334

Gabriela Bocaccio

https://www.flickr.com/photos/46955578%40N06/16513403626

Glamour-Girl´″°³♡

https://www.flickr.com/photos/cross_dresser/16364758790

aliina-aliina    A few new ones in this album

https://www.flickr.com/photos/129919732@N03/

IMG_0449

https://www.flickr.com/photos/63419548%40N00/16547053105

Hostess Irene

https://www.flickr.com/photos/irene-michaela/15932735703

Ana Mancini

https://www.flickr.com/photos/68958443%40N08/16515355136

Service With A Smile :)

https://www.flickr.com/photos/30517065%40N00/16354323137

101_7156

https://www.flickr.com/photos/boobs22/16533446356

More pink room malarkey...

https://www.flickr.com/photos/shinypenny77/16364382748

LBD

https://www.flickr.com/photos/110386909%40N08/16326994638

Online andyg0404

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Re: Well it's definitely cold so I think we'll start the Winter Flickr now
« Reply #44 on: March 21, 2015, 04:39:25 PM »
Hello everybody and welcome back to My Weekly Flickr.

Well I certainly hope this is the last time we need to discuss snow in the weekly Flickr, at least until next year. I mean really, it’s officially spring, it’s enough now. As snow storms go, and I’m certainly glad this one has gone, it wasn’t too bad. It started late in the day yesterday so I managed to get home without any difficulties. We got about 3 or 4 inches before it finally ended sometime during the night. And even though my man came over and moved it around early this morning, it’s currently in the mid 40’s and most of it has melted. Here’s to real spring like weather coming soon.

It wasn’t a bad day today, it was chilly when I headed into the City but not bitter cold and there was no wind so the walk wasn’t bad. I wandered over to 333 East 47th Street, between Second and First Avenues, to the Japan Society for a show that should definitely appeal to Betty, Life of Cats: Selections from the Hiraki Ukiyo-e Collection. I expected to thoroughly enjoy this show and I was not disappointed. It was filled with the colorful wood block prints that I have come to appreciate, along with some scrolls and manga. And a small Manet etching of a cat. To quote from the website, “The exhibition is divided into five sections: Cats and People, Cats as People, Cats versus People, Cats Transformed and Cats and Play.” The first image in the exhibit was by Hiroshige, the artist who opened up this world to me when I saw his work at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. If I’ve done this properly you should see this print below. In some of the prints cat are peripheral to the central action, just hanging out being cats. In cats as people there are prints of Kabuki actors depicted as cats although the accompanying text explains that viewers of that era would have recognized them instantly. In cats versus people, the cats loom large and menacing taking up a great section of the print and being depicted as malevolent creatures. In cats at play we see them like children playing games, or enjoying a spa. There are three videos on the website, one of which shows the cat’s spa. Go to full screen for the videos as they are otherwise very small. They had intact sheets of paper doll cats that were mirror images, front and back, with clothing, also front to back, for children to cut out and create the fully clothed cats. The text pointed out how rare it was to find sheets like this intact since the whole point was to cut them up. In cats and people we see people cuddling up to and playing with their cats, in one which unfortunately isn’t on the website, we see a cat from the rear heading into his mistress’ bosom seeking warmth.

This is a link to the Japan Society website http://www.japansociety.org/page/programs/gallery/life-of-cats When you get to the website, as you scroll down you’ll see the three videos as well as a gallery of images. If you click on the first image in each section it opens up a full page slide show for each of the images in the exhibit. This is a link to a NY Times article on the exhibit with a slide show. http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/13/arts/design/review-life-of-cats-spotlights-a-centuries-old-fascination-in-japan.html

Let me reiterate that this is one of the most enjoyable shows I’ve seen this season. And I’m pleased to say that on May 1st I can go back for a second viewing as they will be rotating 50 items out to be replaced by 50 new ones. Something to look forward to.

And on that pleasant note, lets catwalk over to the Flickrs.

Andy G.

My Mothers Encouragement    Hi Britney, very, very pretty!

https://www.flickr.com/photos/britney_smith/16823444925

Golden Years

https://www.flickr.com/photos/95644297%40N07/14000171880

Contestant

https://www.flickr.com/photos/104546207%40N08/16207958623

What's up?

https://www.flickr.com/photos/chantal_fouet/16328362488

prom date

https://www.flickr.com/photos/52912530%40N04/15910452053

Girls-Force-boy-into-a-dres

https://www.flickr.com/photos/radicalfeministrule/16529806542/

118

https://www.flickr.com/photos/131158978%40N06/16362786450

2

https://www.flickr.com/photos/57904782%40N08/15056549670

newest dress

https://www.flickr.com/photos/10792226%40N00/15950547204

cf301p

https://www.flickr.com/photos/124061677%40N05/16384787057

sissy Sarah Jane

https://www.flickr.com/photos/23788525%40N06/16374963588

Offline Betty

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Re: Well it's definitely cold so I think we'll start the Winter Flickr now
« Reply #45 on: March 21, 2015, 09:20:42 PM »
Yep. Seen those kitty pix before online. Pretty cool & some bizarre stuff. These were a few of my favorites.

Online andyg0404

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Re: Well it's definitely cold so I think we'll start the Winter Flickr now
« Reply #46 on: March 28, 2015, 04:56:01 PM »
Hello everybody and welcome back to my Weekly Flickr.

It still continues to be spring only chronologically, very cold and windy this morning. The forecast called for possible snow showers and while I saw a few flakes I’m grateful that nothing became of it.

I’m sitting here waiting for my plumber to arrive. I was having breakfast Wednesday morning when I heard noise from the basement and when I went downstairs I was greeted by steam coming out of the boiler and a pool of water on the floor. This took place at 4AM so I wasn’t in a position to do anything about it aside from stand there gawking, feeling like a ninny, until the hour got to be a little more reasonable. I waited until 5:50 AM and called my plumber, much to my chagrin I woke him up, but he said he would come to take a look and showed up after a little while.
 
Something in the mechanism on the boiler was clogged which caused the pressure to build, hence the steam and the leaking out of the water. He took it out, cleaned it, and put it back in. He checked to make sure the tank wasn’t cracked which was a concern. My boiler is 25 years old and the hot water heater is 17 years old; we discussed replacements and agreed that he would replace the boiler in the summer when they’re less expensive and it won’t matter if it’s shut down for a few days. For the last several years he’s mentioned that it’s time to replace the hot water heater as their life span is generally considered to be ten to twelve years so I’ve been living on borrowed time for a while. Of course he always laughs and says that his is just as old. I’ve been considering it but the fact that it appears solid has always made me procrastinate. But the next night I dreamed about the hot water heater going and flooding the basement and it haunted me all that day so I called and made an appointment for a new one.

My fear of flooding the basement is real. I have a large part of my collection in the basement, all of it paper, so it would be a real catastrophe if the tank ever burst. The hot water heater holds forty gallons of water and if it cracks, as the water leaks out, it will refill just as if I was taking a shower. So if it cracked right after I left one morning it would flood water out all day, for 11 hours, thousands of gallons of water. A nightmare to say the least. The boiler only holds ten gallons and when the water runs out there’s no automatic feed. And once the water runs out the boiler has an emergency switch which shuts it down.  Even though the heaters usually fail slowly with you noticing a little water it’s not unheard of to have them just crack and that’s the scenario I want to avoid. The joys of home ownership.

This morning I wandered up to the Metropolitan Museum of Art and saw two minor exhibits. First was, The Plains Indians; Artists of Earth and Sky. This was native American arts and crafts, more crafts than arts though. It was filled with coats, dresses, robes and hides made from buffalo skins, as well as paintings on the skins. There were also head dresses that were probably one of the few things the movies accurately portrayed. There were pipes and carvings and other items of day to day life. It was interesting to see but not really something I can get overly excited about. What was most interesting to me about the exhibit was that so many of the items caem from European collections. But in thinking about it that shouldn’t surprise me, the Europeans have always been fascinated by our Native Americans and the Old West. There was a German writer in the 19th Century, Karl May, who wrote many novels about the Old West, his recurring characters were Winnetou and Old Shatterhand. What was fascinating about the books is that he never visited most of the places he was depicting in these novels.  I have a friend who grew up in Hungary and he told me about reading May when he was a child. This is a link to the Met website showing the objects in the exhibit.

http://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/objects?exhibitionId=%7b254A181E-CA25-4BC9-B15A-A167688D711B%7d&rpp=60&pg=1

After the Indian show I walked over to the drawings corridor where the current group was recently installed. The Met has thousands of drawings, etchings and engravings and can only put a small amount on view so they rotate what’s up every several months. The starting section had a theme of horses and men, beginning with Picasso’s The Watering Hole, gouache on tan paperboard, depicting boys washing and watering their horses. It was the basis for a larger painting which he never did and it showed an early usage of his boy leading a horse image. This is a link http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/483414 Continuing along there were several Toulouse Lautrec’s, Degas and John Singer Sargent and a wonderful drawing by Theodore  Gericault, Two Draft Horses with Sleeping Driver. http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/337192 Also a very nice Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo, in the museum it is referred to as Horse Attended by An Oriental Groom but when I went looking for it I found it under the name Landscape with a Horse Held by a Page http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/459754 The rest of the exhibit had some names I’m unfamiliar with but several things by artists I do know that struck me as very nice. An engraving by Jean Etienne Liotard, Self Portrait. I’ve mentioned Liotard before as being someone I discovered at a wonderful exhibit at the Frick where there were numerous portrayals of Empress Maria Theresa, the mother of Marie Antoinette, and her family. One a wonderful small drawing of Marie as a child. This is the self portrait from the exhibit.   http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/334135?rpp=30&pg=1&ft=liotard+self+portrait&pos=2   A woodcut by Lucas Cranach, The Stag Hunt http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/383708 And finally a very sweet drawing by John Linnell, a British artist of the 19th Century, Portrait of a Mother and Child. A pencil drawing augmented by just a bit of color on their lips. Sentimental but charming to me. http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/671454

And that’s that. Let’s see what’s happening in our world now.

Andy G.

framed

https://www.flickr.com/photos/knessia/16570474906

Tartan Skir.: Three (2015)

https://www.flickr.com/photos/pollygraphix/16613877085

I am back , happy hour realness

https://www.flickr.com/photos/49254983%40N00/16567737632

 Reluctant Cross-Dresser !

https://www.flickr.com/photos/116315009@N08/16841538496

IMG_1371s

https://www.flickr.com/photos/ruwoldtm/16444320708

Mirror Skirt

https://www.flickr.com/photos/silverhalogenide/16605298915

Looks like a good obedient boy

https://www.flickr.com/photos/51886658%40N04/15048108817/in/pool-

Tracey is sitting pretty

https://www.flickr.com/photos/frillyknicks/16431782287

Florentina Satin Sissy Maid

https://www.flickr.com/photos/nikki_e-cd/16638989525

Sissy
 
https://www.flickr.com/photos/26984420%40N08/16048099434
 
Debbie's February
 
https://www.flickr.com/photos/saralegs/16444463337
 
Party Queen
 
https://www.flickr.com/photos/124114562%40N08/16512272620



Offline Betty

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Re: Well it's definitely cold so I think we'll start the Winter Flickr now
« Reply #47 on: March 28, 2015, 06:17:47 PM »
With water heaters & furnaces your mileage may vary... But that's the keyword, the mileage, not the age.

A 20 year old car with only 10,000 miles on it will be in much better shape than a 2 year old car with 100,000 miles on it.

An undersized furnace put in a large drafty house so it has to work hard all winter will wear out much sooner than a big furnace in a smaller better insulated house. Is the furnace running most of the day & night in the winter or just kicking in a handful of times through the day & night? Are you keeping the place at 68F or 78F? Likewise with the HW tank. Is it running almost scalding water for a family of 5 kids, for several apartments, who all love very long showers or just for 1 or 2 people?

Just because a unit had a clogged or blown part is no reason to consider replacing the whole thing regardless of how old it is, unless they can see obvious signs it's gonna die or blow soon.

Of course you never store anything that can't get wet or at least a little damp in the basement, especially papers. Being the lowest point on your property, water can come in from many sources. Just a cool night after a hot or humid day can make things very damp or wet down there just from condensation.

Online andyg0404

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Re: Well it's definitely cold so I think we'll start the Winter Flickr now
« Reply #48 on: April 04, 2015, 11:16:31 AM »
Hello everybody and welcome back to My Weekly Flickr.

Yesterday was a nice day, in the 60’s, but with no sun. Today it’s sunny but it’s cooler, only in the 50’s and I hear the wind howling. But it’s not snowing.

Also yesterday, for the second time, for no reason, my chrome bookmarks disappeared. Just gone. I forgot I had saved the answer and spent a lot of time Googling it until I found the answer again. After I brought them back, without thinking I clicked on restore to bring my daily tabs back up. As soon as I did this, the bookmarks disappeared again. So I went to repeat the process and this time it wouldn’t do it saying a file using the program was still open. But it doesn’t say which file is open. And nothing I did closed the file, including rebooting. Finally I gave up and just imported the last set of bookmarks from October then tried to remember which ones were missing and recreate them. Very annoying. I now have a calendar item that recurs every two weeks reminding me to save the bookmarks. The fact that this is something that happens on a regular basis, based on what I see when Googling the problem, is remarkable. Why hasn’t Google addressed this?

Anyway, I’m off to the Jersey shore to spend the day with friends. A Happy Holiday to Betty and all the board members, tomorrow looks to be a beautiful day. Hope everyone enjoys it.

Andy G.

day250-43 AnkRouge White Blouse and Red Skirt
 
https://www.flickr.com/photos/yumiko_misaki/16455444209
 
Channeling His Future Sissy
 
https://www.flickr.com/photos/tinadupree/16470079700

Plays the part well.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/129919732%40N03/16700124985/ 

Rufus photobombing

https://www.flickr.com/photos/10792226%40N00/16496803238

Hoppner, John - 'Master Meyrick (William Henry Meyrick)'. c.1793

https://www.flickr.com/photos/97048587@N04/16751436457

DSCN0370

https://www.flickr.com/photos/83691018@N03/16151300414

Fairy Princess!

https://www.flickr.com/photos/rgaines/16558052050

CIMG9652

https://www.flickr.com/photos/dressrei/16142104924

technicolor5

https://www.flickr.com/photos/53899402@N04/16553971858

Another Chatty Cathy?

https://www.flickr.com/photos/60741642@N06/16098014354

bimbojami

https://www.flickr.com/photos/jaminheelz/16119378144

Sexy Bitch 1

https://www.flickr.com/photos/tgirlkitty/16081097333


Offline Betty

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Re: Well it's definitely cold so I think we'll start the Winter Flickr now
« Reply #49 on: April 04, 2015, 02:26:23 PM »
Golly. I never lost bookmarks on any machine or browser. I don't use chrome much though. For a few years now, well over 90% of my surfing in done with the Pale Moon browser. I imported my firefox bookmarks to chrome, opera, safari, & Pale Moon over 3 years ago. They're all still there. But I don't syc my browsers to other machines. Too much a risk of transferring bugs, tracking cookies, malicious toolbars (browser helpers), spyware, viruses, & other malware to other machines.

I just add bookmarks as I need them to another machine. I also have nothing set for auto-update, not even the websites or Betty's. I update manually, only after I make a backup. For my home machines, I just back up everything, & then update everything once a week or so. At Betty's, backups are made daily on the servers, plus make a backup at home off the servers almost daily (sometimes I miss a day or skip a day when not much changed since the last backup). I find if there's a server failure, the backups on the server may also fail. We almost never lose anything anymore since I save backups of Betty's at home more often.

When I was forced to give up XP & put windows 7 on my machines, everything was a clean new install.  So I got the Firefox & Pale Moon files I needed from the XP backup, & put them in the new browser installations. Bookmarks, preferences, & even the password manager got transferred over fine.

 

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