Word: backups
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...your penchant for adult material around campus. But even if he wouldn’t tell FM exactly what depravity he’s encountered on student PCs, FM’s source admits that “a lot of personal data gets shown...because it is data backup sometimes there is personal data, take it as you will.” But hot co-ed action isn’t what get these UAs turned on. When asked about the craziest thing he’d ever seen on the job, the UA’s mind didn?...
Metaphor became reality last week, as a major backup in the pipes underneath Eliot House yielded flooding localized to the D, E, and F entryways, but, unfortunately, not to their bathrooms. Congestion from deep in the bowels of Eliot caused water, that made the Charles River look potable, to spring from the shower drains and fill the rooms of a few unlucky souls. The inhabitants fled to not-so-nearby Dunster House as their infected common rooms began to be decontaminated. An event such as this can only be interpreted as the will of a higher power...
...vacated by graduate Ali Boe ’06. But the Canadian rookie injured her knee during a local tournament in early August, tearing the MCL in her knee. Kessler is slowly resuming hockey activities, but while she continues her rehabilitation, the untested Toretta will serve as the only backup on a team with title aspirations.“It doesn’t matter who’s behind them,” Martin says. “My team’s going to play well in front of them. I’m just there behind them...
...Monday run-in with problematic plumbing swiftly flushed away all hope of an uncomplicated week for several Eliot House residents. Three entryways—D, E, and F—along with parts of the basement, were flooded when a major backup in the pipes underneath the House caused water to come up through shower drains. Caroline Silva ’08 said a liquid appearing to be clear water began rising from her drain at about 8 a.m., but “as [the liquid] kept coming out it got murky and brown colored.” She said...
...heightened by the fact that with some electronic voting machines, there is no such thing as a real recount. When asked again for the tally, the computer could spit back the same response as the first time. For that reason, at least 27 states have built in a backup that requires electronic voting machines to provide an attached voter-verified paper trail--a running ticker that allows voters to see on paper that their votes are recorded as cast. That way, if there's a question about the electronic tally, the paper records can be counted by hand...