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Full Discussion: What is your age? (Part 2)
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What is your age? (Part 2) Post 302100815 by cassj on Friday 22nd of December 2006 02:27:06 PM
Old 12-22-2006
Wow, jimmyc, that's some beautiful woodworking you've done!

Well, I'm 42, but I tell ppl I feel like my brain thinks I'm somewhere between 24-32. The jobs I had all involved computers, and I was "The Guy" in the office to help a user or fix a hardware problem, so I decided that is really what I enjoy doing so I made it my career choice. I'm a Apple/Macintosh person way back from the Apple ][ days, but I'm not a Mac biggot. I live and work comfortably in MacOSX, WinXP/2000, and Linuxeseses. I now work for a large global company as an in-house Mac devloper for their Graphics dept.

My hobby/addiction since 3/18/2005 is Second Life (http://secondlife.com). It's an online 3D community where everything inworld is made by the residents who live there. It has a real economy where many people make their living creating items they sell or by being virtual real estate brokers. Many Univerities (Harvard) and companies (IBM, Adidas, Reebok, Amazon) do real life training inworld. I'd love to show you around if you decide to visit. My avatar name is "Cazzj Brearly". I own 2 private islands, Enchanted & Escape.
 

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SubmitDiagInfo(8)					    BSD System Manager's Manual 					 SubmitDiagInfo(8)

NAME
SubmitDiagInfo -- sends diagnostic information to Apple SYNOPSIS
SubmitDiagInfo DESCRIPTION
SubmitDiagInfo is a system process which runs periodically. If the user has opted-in for automatic reporting of diagnostic and usage infor- mation, then SubmitDiagInfo collects and sends to Apple any recent diagnostic information which has not yet been sent to Apple. SubmitDiagInfo also cleans up any diagnostic and usage information which was created more than one month ago and is no longer needed. Sending diagnostic and usage reports to Apple helps us improve the quality and performance of our products and services. It helps Apple identify common usage trends and issues that enable us to allocate our resources efficiently, and it helps us provide better support services to you and other customers. All of the diagnostic and usage information is collected anonymously from your computer in a way that does not personally identify you. Reports may include the following information: - Details about application or system crashes, freezes, or kernel panics. - Information about events on your computer (e.g. whether a certain function, such as waking your computer was successful or not). - Usage information (e.g. data about how Apple and third party software, hardware and services are being used). Automatic reporting of diagnostic information is off by default and no information is sent to Apple unless a user has opted-in to automatic collection of diagnostic information. A user is offered the opportunity to opt-in for automatic collection of additional diagnostic and usage information after the user has manually sent a crash, hang or panic report to Apple. Users may at any time opt in or out of automatic reporting in the Security & Privacy pane of the System Preferences application under the "Privacy" tab. All diagnostic and usage information which is eligible for automatic reporting is visible in the Console application under the "DIAGNOSTIC AND USAGE INFORMATION" heading in the application's sidebar. (The information appears here even if a user has not yet opted-in for automatic reporting.) For security purposes, some system diagnostic information will only be visible to admin users and will only be submitted when an admin user is logged in. Users who need technical support should use http://www.apple.com/support or other authorized support channels. Developers who are ADC mem- bers should submit bug reports using http://bugreporter.apple.com in order to allow for two way communication between Apple and the bug reporter. SEE ALSO
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