How outlook s***ks today
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Outlook (MS outlook 2007) is automatically unlocking a locked Win XP machine. I locked my machine and left for a meeting, immediately after opening the outlook. When I came back the system was unlocked. On researching I found that it is due to a weird behavior of Outlook, which unlocks the Machine automatically once it loads completely. Does any one else face the same issue?
"Never put off until run time what you can do at compile time." - David Gries, in "Compiler Construction for Digital Computers", circa 1969.
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Outlook (MS outlook 2007) is automatically unlocking a locked Win XP machine. I locked my machine and left for a meeting, immediately after opening the outlook. When I came back the system was unlocked. On researching I found that it is due to a weird behavior of Outlook, which unlocks the Machine automatically once it loads completely. Does any one else face the same issue?
"Never put off until run time what you can do at compile time." - David Gries, in "Compiler Construction for Digital Computers", circa 1969.
:wtf: Are you serious? Of course everything can happen, but unlocking a password protected computer just after launching outlook? X| PS: Here I've never seen it, probably, though, I've never followed your steps.
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modified on Thursday, June 30, 2011 2:28 AM
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Outlook (MS outlook 2007) is automatically unlocking a locked Win XP machine. I locked my machine and left for a meeting, immediately after opening the outlook. When I came back the system was unlocked. On researching I found that it is due to a weird behavior of Outlook, which unlocks the Machine automatically once it loads completely. Does any one else face the same issue?
"Never put off until run time what you can do at compile time." - David Gries, in "Compiler Construction for Digital Computers", circa 1969.
How did it get your password?
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Outlook (MS outlook 2007) is automatically unlocking a locked Win XP machine. I locked my machine and left for a meeting, immediately after opening the outlook. When I came back the system was unlocked. On researching I found that it is due to a weird behavior of Outlook, which unlocks the Machine automatically once it loads completely. Does any one else face the same issue?
"Never put off until run time what you can do at compile time." - David Gries, in "Compiler Construction for Digital Computers", circa 1969.
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Outlook (MS outlook 2007) is automatically unlocking a locked Win XP machine. I locked my machine and left for a meeting, immediately after opening the outlook. When I came back the system was unlocked. On researching I found that it is due to a weird behavior of Outlook, which unlocks the Machine automatically once it loads completely. Does any one else face the same issue?
"Never put off until run time what you can do at compile time." - David Gries, in "Compiler Construction for Digital Computers", circa 1969.
I've experienced this a few times with Outlook and XP when starting up. After logging in and the system is still starting up, click an icon to start Outlook and then Ctrl-Alt-Delete to lock up your workstation. Eventually, the workstation becomes unlocked. It's not 100% reproducible, ie. it doesn't happen always, but I've witnessed it several times. Did you find a KB article about it? :)
Chris Meech I am Canadian. [heard in a local bar] In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. [Yogi Berra] posting about Crystal Reports here is like discussing gay marriage on a catholic church’s website.[Nishant Sivakumar]
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Outlook (MS outlook 2007) is automatically unlocking a locked Win XP machine. I locked my machine and left for a meeting, immediately after opening the outlook. When I came back the system was unlocked. On researching I found that it is due to a weird behavior of Outlook, which unlocks the Machine automatically once it loads completely. Does any one else face the same issue?
"Never put off until run time what you can do at compile time." - David Gries, in "Compiler Construction for Digital Computers", circa 1969.
Here's another example of Outlook suckage -- Email to a friend requesting an important document. Twelve exchanges with him on this particular topic. Exactly one email sent to the Junk E-Mail -- the one containing the document I was waiting for. :confused: Unfortunately, none of the other emails mentioned the attachment in the junked one, so I only discovered I'd gotten what I asked for a couple DAYS afterward... (I get enough junk mail that I don't regularly monitor that folder, and it's always bold because there's unread mail in it.) Why on earth would Outlook decide mail from a valid sender to one person -- me -- is junk??? HEY OUTLOOK, STOP TRYING TO BE SMARTER THAN ME! :mad: