No, that's true, but I don't think you can really protect against
Acts Of God. Some insurance companies will not even insure against
such things either.
Unfortunately, those things, while they are a natural part of
life, are something we can do nothing about. The DSL however, we
can do something about, so long as there's a working LTE tower
nearby. in which case, you can use your mobile, or dedicated
Wireless router to substitute.
On 10/10/2018 04:04, Mike DeZinno
wrote:
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
I hear you about the cloud, but what happens to
Skype when
your Internet service goes down,
Or like us here in SC waiting for another hurricane which
usually means
days without electric power or DSL or cable connections.
This is after all life on the web and just like real life
nothing in
virtual life is a 100% guarantee! LOL
Playing the what if game is fun to a point but history has
proven that
most of what we fear never happens anyway.
Stay calm, and stay the course,
in the end it usually sorts itself out.
Mike, preparing for a real hurricane in SC
At 08:34 AM 10/9/2018, you wrote:
well 1
thing people when the cloud
goes down, then what.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Shaun Oliver"
<blindman75@...>
To: <skypeenglish@groups.io>
Sent: Tuesday, October 09, 2018 8:32 AM
Subject: Re: [skypeenglish] refusal of ypdating to a new
version of
Skype
Thank you Doug,
That is my point exactly. the Cloud, is the way of the
future, and the
three major vendors are gearing their services towards Cloud
Computing.
It was always going to be this way, and I could see that
even five or so
years ago.
Really, there's nothing to complain about, other than it's a
slight
irritation, yet, like ripping a band aid off, do it quickly
and the pain
goes away with some alacrity.
On 9/10/2018 22:43, Doug Lee wrote:
The part that
gets me almost
giggling resignedly here is that we're arguing over a
program that costs
us nothing. People sometimes get mad at me for saying
things like,
"The next version of the Skype scripts will no longer
support any JAWS versions older than 15.0." I do that when
it lets
me do better things in scripting than the older JAWS
versions allowed, or
when older JAWS versions simply can't handle the newest
version of the
application.
But people generally have the sense to realize that I'm
(1) not doing it
to hurt people, (2) am actually doing it for a reason, and
(3) cannot be
called mean because I'm giving away for free what I'm
doing
anyway.
The only time I can remember complaining about a change to
a free program
was when Roger suddenly vanished with very little warning.
My complaint
at that time was that they gave us little warning and also
gave us
nowhere to go.
Microsoft has given us way plenty of warning and has also
given us not
one, but two places to go (Skype 8 or Skype UWP). And
despite a small
number of claims in this thread, we have absolutely solid
and prolific
proof that at
least Skype 8 works well enough with both JAWS and NVDA to
be usable. It
has its quirks, but so did Skype 7. So Microsoft gave us
the easiest
feedback system for reporting them that I have ever seen,
bar none: Open,
type into a
box, press Enter, done!
Finally, if anyone wanted to complain loudly, I think it
should have been
me. My Command Line Interface for Skype, Clisk
(http://www.dlee.org/skype/clisk),
is completely unsupported after the end of this month.
That's a loss
of
years of my time, at least arguably.
So why don't I yell about that one? Again, Microsoft gave
plenty of
warning, good explanations for why they are doing what
they're doing, and
even delayed Skype 7's demise partly because of one
feature Clisk used,
that being
the ability to redirect and record sound from Skype. I
will seriously
miss Clisk, but that is no reason to cry foul.
In conclusion, I'd say this Skype update should best be
treated like a
hurricane; and that hurricane actually has a name: Cloud.
Cloud
infrastructure is why this update is happening. Skype, as
I said before,
is changing how it
communicates. It is starting to use a cloud structure.
Skype 7 was not
ready for that and never will be. So Microsoft gave an
evacuation order,
with several months' warning - which is unusual for a
weather bulletin
lol. But
really, in this storm, if we cling to our islands, we
truly will end up
lost at sea.
On Tue, Oct 09, 2018 at 07:13:12AM -0400, Joseph Machise
wrote:
well, that's the trouble with Microsoft, who are they to
tell us what to
do.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Shaun Oliver"
<blindman75@...>
To: <skypeenglish@groups.io>
Sent: Tuesday, October 09, 2018 7:11 AM
Subject: Re: [skypeenglish] refusal of ypdating to a new
version of
Skype
as has been
stated in the official
notice from ms, they will no longer be
supporting Skype 7 or classic as it's now known. this
means that you
will
either be forced to update, or your classic skype will
begin to stop
working until it no longer works entirely.
On 9/10/2018 12:49, Josephine Hirsch wrote:
Hi all,
What if you refused to update to a new version of
Skype? I like the
Skype Classic because it is easier for me to navigate
on Skype
Classic
than Skype 8.30, and I could never get anyone to hear
me on Skype
8.30
any longer, and I tried everything and no go with
Skype 8.30
Thanks,
Josephine
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