>>>>> "Graham" == Graham Cobb <[email protected]> writes:
Graham> On Saturday 07 March 2009 01:09:15 Mark wrote:
>> Ah, now I remember... that's the same problem I had. It is due to a
>> feature/bug with the onscreen keyboard where it always wants to
>> capitalize the first letter of every entry "for you". It seems to be
>> aware of MicroB and doesn't do that for Web logins, but does for text
>> entry in most other intstalled apps.
Graham> This doesn't help you but it is actually a bug in the
Graham> application. The program is supposed to tell the keyboard
Graham> whether or not to capitalise the first letter. It sounds
Graham> as though MicroB does do this for the password but Erming
Graham> does not.
Yes, I've reported it on the bug tracker, as well as my workaround.
(I worked around the problem by entering another letter in front of
the real password, and then deleting the extraneous letter.)
The problem with the time zone turned out to be that I hadn't set my
time zone on the 810.
I still haven't found a way to get GPE to display evening appointments
on the day view, but I can live without that.
--
Laura (mailto:[email protected] http://www.laymusic.org/ )
(617) 661-8097 233 Broadway, Cambridge, MA 02139
We had a young pitcher on that club named Jimmy St. Vrain. He was a
left-handed pitcher and a right-handed batter. But an absolutely
terrible hitter -- never even got a loud foul off anybody.
...he came back after striking out the second time, Frank Sele, our
manager, said, "Jimmy, you're a left-handed pitcher, why don't you
turn around and bat from the left side, too?"
Actually, Frank was half kidding, but Jimmy took him seriously. So
the next time he went up he batted left-handed. Turned around and
stood on the opposite side of the plate from where he was used to,
you know. And darned if he didn't actually hit the ball. He tapped a
slow roller down to Honus Wagner at shortstop and took off as fast as
he could go...but instead of running to first base, he headed for
*third*!
Oh, my God! What bedlam! Everybody yelling and screaming at poor Jimmy
as he raced to third base, head down, spikes flying, determined to get
there ahead of the throw. Later on, Honus told us that as a matter of
fact he almost *did* throw the ball to third.
"I'm standing there with the ball in my hand," Honus said, "looking at
this guy running from home to third, and for an instant there I swear
I didn't know *where* to throw the damn ball. And when I finally did
throw to first, I wasn't at all sure it was the right thing to do!"
Davy Jones, quoted in "The Glory of their Times" by Lawrence S. Ritter
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