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HEM

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Posts posted by HEM

  1. Just now, SwanR said:

    At that point you will see the address that the email has come from.

    Even that is not necessarily true.  If you have access to a server with SMTP you can totally fake things.

    Many years ago as a UNIX admin I used to know how to do this (via telnet) but my memory fades...
    Most decent installations nowadays disable telnet anyway.

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  2. Its always wise to hover your cursor over the apparent sender and often you see something totally different behind.

    One curious thing is that often when I order from Amazon (here they usually deliver via DHL) a short time afterwards I get a mail purporting to come from DHL but with dubious hidden sender.  Its as if these guys monitor traffic.

    • Like 1
  3. 11 hours ago, Chelsea14Ian said:

    This year we have Kasler, which for those that are unaware is German.

    Its actually spelt Kassler (with double "s").

    Since we are an Anglo-German family we combine both worlds: the German tradition is Christmas Eve evening (just the 3 of us) whilst on the 25th we do turkey UK-style for the enlarged family (9 people).

    What we will have this evening (Christmas Eve) is not finalised - daughter has stand-by duty from 8am to 8pm at the Tox lab of the forensic medicine department of UKE (Hamburg university hospital).  Thus it could be 20:30 before we eat.  Wife & I will go for final shopping: it will either be some sort of fish or a steak.  Dessert is the same as for past few years: Mousse au Chocolat (I made it up last evening & its in the fridge).

    • Like 1
  4. Every Christmas this one gets trotted out here - those who did "O"-Level German at school should manage:

    Quote

    Denglish Christmas Poem

    When the snow falls wunderbar
    And the children happy are,
    When the Glatteis on the street,
    And we all a Glühwein need,
    Then you know, es ist soweit:
    She is here, the Weihnachtszeit

    Every Parkhaus ist besetzt,
    Weil die people fahren jetzt,
    All to Kaufhof, Mediamarkt,
    Kriegen nearly Herzinfarkt.
    Shopping hirnverbrannte things
    And the Christmasglocke rings.

    Merry Christmas, merry Christmas,
    Hear the music, see the lights,
    Frohe Weihnacht, Frohe Weihnacht,
    Merry Christmas allerseits...

    Mother in the kitchen bakes
    Schoko-, Nuss- and Mandelkeks
    Daddy in the Nebenraum
    Schmücks a Riesen-Weihnachtsbaum
    He is hanging auf the balls,
    Then he from the Leiter falls...

    Finally the Kinderlein
    To the Zimmer kommen rein,
    And es sings the family
    Schauerlich: "Oh, Chistmastree!"
    And the jeder in the house
    Is packing die Geschenke aus.

    Merry Christmas, merry Christmas,
    Hear the music, see the lights,
    Frohe Weihnacht, Frohe Weihnacht,
    Merry Christmas allerseits...

    Mama finds unter the Tanne
    Eine brandnew Teflon-Pfanne,
    Papa gets a Schlips and Socken,
    Everybody does frohlocken.
    President speaks in TV,
    All around is Harmonie.

    Bis mother in the kitchen runs:
    Im Ofen burns the Weihnachtsgans.
    And so comes die Feuerwehr,
    With Tatü, tata daher...

    And they bring a long, long Schlauch
    An a long, long Leiter auch.
    And they schrei loud - "Wasser marsch!",
    Christmas is now - voll im Arsch...

    Merry Christmas, merry Christmas,
    Hear the music, see the lights,
    Frohe Weihnacht, Frohe Weihnacht,
    Merry Christmas allerseits...

     

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  5. I should add that I'm not a chemist - my father was a crystalographer (Reader in Chemistry @ Manchester University) & my daughter works in the toxialogical lab of the forensic department of UKE (Hamburg University Hospital) so there is some family trait there.

    On the other hand myself, my (German) wife & son are computer scientists...

    • Like 1
  6. 31 minutes ago, hazelgirl said:

    That looks like heaven on a plate :default_wub: well done you :default_icon_clap:

    It was pretty good :9_innocent:  All one has to do is to follow the checklist err recipe....

    Manchester - thats where I was before moving out here for one year (that was 36 years ago - still here).
    I worked then for Manchester University lived at my parent's place near Knustford.

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  7. I remember in the late 60s/early 70s staying in a cottage at Thurne & Basil Curtis of the then village shop said "we loikes to see the visitors feeding the ducks - because when they (the visitors) are gone - out come the guns".

    I was pals with Basil's son Ernie but have long since lost contact.  Ernie worked for a number of years in Singapore & them moved to Ormesby (where I once visited him) but I have since lost all contact.

  8. On 16/11/2018 at 11:38, MauriceMynah said:

    That looks like a Rover 2000 and a Ford Corsair in the garden.

    Brings back memories - my father bought a (new) Ford Corsair automatic in 1966 to take with us when we spent a year in Germany (Munich).  It got sold a few years later just before I got my driver's license.

  9. On 18/11/2018 at 07:48, TheQ said:

    Advice to a new driver,  Robin don't ignore flashing reds...

    There are enough people around our way who believe that flashing red lights (or even lowered barriers) do not apply to them.
    Some even do it with kids in the back seat & the local Polizei on hand to watch.

  10. 45 minutes ago, Timbo said:

    It will do so within the next year and will then will pass into UK law in the next two years or sooner if we do as I anticipate and just adopt EU law wholesale.

    I thought that with BREXIT the UK would be rid of the shackles of EU law?

    • Like 2
    • Haha 2
  11. 6 hours ago, LondonRascal said:

    I am spending 90% of my time now in in Norfolk, ...

    So do you now work from home?  (I've not been reading all the threads).

    I worked from Home Office the final 15 years or so of my working life & for me it was positive.
    Whilst missing the "by chance" information from colleagues in the office I was not disturbed
    or distracted by said colleagues - and in my case my immediate team members plus managers were
    in a different country (e.g. USA) anyway.  Saved the half-hour commute each way.

    In the end I went into local office about once per quarter.

  12. My sailplane passed its annual inspection today so its good for another 12 months.

    Not really to celebrate, but we went to a nearby Italian restaurant for a far-too-good meal before our daughter has to be available on-call (she works in the toxicological lab of the forensic medicine department of a nearby major hospital).

     

    One more task left for the day: change the clocks in the house.

    • Like 1
  13. On a recent visit to NE England & Scotland I was able to buy two Christmas Puddings & a supply of good sweet mincemeat.
    Since one of the puds is good into early 2020 we are set up for the next two Christmases even if BREXIT prevents my visiting the UK or the import of Christmas puds (at one time rumoured to set off the explosive detectors at Manchester airport) into the EU next year.

    I can vouch for the explosive detector at MAN story .  Some years ago I was in Manchester (where my then employer had the European training centre & I had been helping out) and had a Christmas pud in my hand luggage.  Sure enuf a security lady came towards me with my bag to be opened - on seeing the pud & three Terrys chociolate oranges (hand genades?) she just laughed.

  14. 1 hour ago, CambridgeCabby said:

    ...than a large family who spend all the time arguing and shouting obscenities at each other and their children 

    Sad isn't it? 

    I remember a few years back sat at Ibiza airport waiting for our luggage conveyor to start moving (we'd just arrived from Hamburg).  There were masses of folk stood (well, staggering) around the neighbouring carousel fighting over their luggage & cursing their kids for just being there.  That flight had come in from North of Hadrian's Wall and the adult passengers had been engaged in "mid-air refuelling".

    I felt really sorry for those poor kids at the start of their holiday.

     

    • Like 1
  15. I still have the complete set of AR's S&A series - most are original hardbacks (the copy of Secret Water shows "16s" (shillings) on the inside cover).  The first book I read at age 9 or 10 was "Coot Club" which I found in a cupboard of the classroom at junior school.  I believe I saw a few episodes of the 1963 TV series (we didn't own a TV back then) & (just as with the Hobbit & LoR) I have not & will not see modern filmings as it would spoil the vision I have from back then.

    Nowadays one has to read these books in their historical content - which youngster now would understand that half of Pigeon Post is taken up with the subject of carrier pigeons whereas today the reaction would be "why didn't they use their cell phone?"

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  16. If its any consolation its been +34C for large periods of the recent days where I live (West of Hamburg).

    Given our normal bad Summers this is a shock for the system - and the local agriculture where we
    have not had much useful rain for weeks or even months.  Sleep is problematical.

    Yesterday a big BLACK could rolled up that emitted bright flashes & rumbling noises but it moves off to the East
    and dropped nothing on us.  Apparently not far away there was torrential rain.

  17. My day yesterday: 6 hours 48 minutes in the cramped cockpit of a glider (I'm too tall for this sport)
    flying a 511 km pre-declared task around Hamburg airspace.  The last leg was into a head wind
    finding me South of the river Elbe short of 200m altitude to get home with a bunch of
    windmills threatening to put nasty cuts under my fuselage.  After several tries under dying
    clouds (at time accompanied by a stork) I found a thermal to provide the necessary
    height gain as shown to be needed by the onboard Nav system plus a bit to spare.

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