Busy 17 9.10 Download

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Fisseha Aranda

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Aug 5, 2024, 2:55:19 AM8/5/24
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Thebusiness analytics feature is only available for memoQ server users, and you can create and download the reports through the memoQWeb interface. To create or access your reports, go to the Reports tab on the left side of your screen. If you have already created reports, they will appear here.

When you create a report, you need to set its name, a description, and the date range you want the data from. Then, once the report is finished, it will appear among your reports, and you can download it as a .csv file. Your report will contain information on your memoQ projects, such as:


Once a report is created, it reflects a certain point in time, so if you want an updated report later, you will have to create a new one. On the Business analytics dashboard, you can also see the creation date associated with every report, so you can organize and search them as needed.

Once you download a report from Business analytics, you can then load it into your chosen analytics tool (like Excel or PowerBI) to further work with it and gain the insights that you need.


The second one is the glossary function. When setting up your DeepL plugin, your glossaries will be listed in the panel, and can be imported into your project. You can use only one glossary per language pair, and to update a glossary, you have to delete it and import the updated version. memoQ (or other CAT tools) cannot use glossaries created on the DeepL website, and vice versa.


Inside a TB entry, you find source terms and target terms. Sometimes one source term has multiple target terms or vice versa. In that case, the terms are saved in the order in which you added them. We are now adding the opportunity to modify the order in which these terms are stored. To do so, just click on the term you want to sort, and use the arrows on the right to put it in the position you want.


So far, when you exported LiveDocs corpora from memoQ as a .zip file, you could not reimport the .zip file into memoQ without unpacking it first. From 9.10 on, you can import the whole content of the exported .zip file, or select the specific corpus documents you want to include in your import.


Perthshire is such a beautiful part of Scotland and I regularly take a break from the hustle bustle of the Central Belt for a weekend of peace, quiet and fresh air. This time, my wife and I, after organising babysitters for the weekend, took ourselves to Braes Lodge, 15 minutes north of Aberfeldy, tucked away in the shadow of the mountain of Schiehallion. This was a stunning retreat, with views to die for.


There are a multitude of fantastic walks in the area; ranging from gentle strolls alongside The River Tay and the 'Big Trees' of The Hermitage, to dramatic gorge walks through the Birks of Aberfeldy and strenuous climbs up some of Scotland's most dramatic mountains.


This time, we opted for the relative ease of the Rob Roy Way, walking from the official end point of the trail in Pitlochry (or start, depending on which way you are walking from), back to Aberfeldy - a lovely 9 mile stretch through woodland, hillside and finally along the River Tay.


Starting at the War Memorial near Pitlochry town centre, we made our way towards the damn and fish ladder before climbing away from the town, carefully crossing the busy A9 road and heading into the tree covered hillside. Upon reaching the A9, we crossed the road and followed a farm track, passed the farm itself, soon reaching the tree line. At this point the path climbed steeply through the trees along what was now a forestry track. A few minuted later, I was glad to see a Rob Roy Way signpost which directed us away from the wide vehicle track onto a more natural, narrow footpath which followed a lovely tumbling burn upstream. We were still climbing at this point, but with the path winding through a combination of newly planted evergreens, whispy Brooms and age old Birch Trees, it was a delightful section of the walk.


As we reached the top of the hill, the path rejoined the forestry track and continued through the forest. Approximately 2.5 miles from the start, the forest opened out provide excellent views of the surrounding mountains, where we also spotted an ancient Stone Circle - the perfect spot to stop for some lunch. We were soon on our way, heading back into the woods, where we continued along the track to the edge of the forest. After climbing over a tall stile, we were out on the open hillside as we descended gradually towards Grandtully. The walk down towards The Tay was completely different to the hill above Pitlochry, with gorse and heather much more prominent now. The path itself was a winding, narrow footpath which eventually followed the course of the Tullypowrie Burn as it cascaded towards the Tay. As we descended off the hill, the path ran alongside a fantastic dry stone dyke, meticulously built many years ago and; although clearly weathered, covered in spongy green moss and somewhat crumbly in places, there was an air of beauty surrounding this early age construction (as strange as that may sound).


Soon after, we reached Strathtay Golf Course and stood an awe at the grandeur of the stunning buildings which scatter the area around the villages of Grandtully and Strathtay. After a well deserved pint at the warm and cosy 'The Inn on the Tay', we started our riverside section of the walk. This was never going to be as interesting as the walk from Pitlochry to Grandtully, however, it allowed us a more gentle stroll along the banks of The River Tay, even holding hands on the odd occasion (it is sometimes possible to be romantic while wearing khaki combat trousers and mud covered walking boots). For the first 1.5 - 2 miles, the track follows an old disused railway, and is very linear in its direction. After a while, the path becomes much more natural in form, following the contours of the river, hugging the banks for most of the remainder of the walk into Aberfeldy. We saw lots of evidence of Beaver activity, whether it be attempted damns (not a good idea on the Tay) or gnawed on trees, which looked more like huge pencils with their newly made pointed tips.


The last half mile of the walk into Aberfeldy town centre, from the Dewars Distillery, is along the main road. This is no great disaster as the knowledge that your not too far from a bite to eat and a cheeky draught ale is always a welcome comfort.


We were in no rush from the outset, starting at 12:30 and finishing at 17:00, which included a 20 minuted break for lunch and another half hour at The Inn at Grandtully. We had an extremely enjoyable March afternoon walk, with this stage of the route very typical of the terrain and landscape encountered throughout the Rob Rob Way. The route is waymarked throughout, although car must always be taken when navigating the paths and tracks across the remote hills and forests.


I was editing a program, continously uploading and testing it, when I clicked the "Serial Monitor" button so I could debug (which had worked fine just minutes ago).

First I get a lot of weird char's, like you'd get trying to Serial.print a non-alphanumeric byte (although it was an int) - then, after fiddeling with the Serial rate from the IDE (while the Arduino program was still running), I got an error.

Ctrl+c, ./arduino and "Upload to I/O Board"... Still get an error.


... i got it working briefly today by sudo ./arduino then pasting in my code into the default (and empty) sketch and saved then uploaded it without looking at the selected Serial port, Yay success, but the next upload a minute later failed with the old 'Serial port /dev/ttyACM0 not found' nutmeg


i deleted the preference file, but it did not help. i used a fresh sketchbook folder. i was not able to change/see the serial port and it complained com1 was busy. my serial port is /dev/ttyACM0. i closed the application and edited the serial device in the preference file. when i started the application, it automatically had chosen the duemilanove instead of uno and i could see/set the serial port. i changed it to uno and the serial port was gone.


also i found that after i manage to upload a sketch without serial output, all seems to be fine again. if i upload one of the basic examples without all seems ok (i tried "blink" and can use the software again). if i upload basic-analogreadserial it is broken again.


thank you, i could solve my problem with some further reading in this fine forum. it is a problem of the old firmware of the 8u2 (uno's replacement for the ftdi). basically it blocks the serial port by constantly sending data when serial output is used in a sketch.


Just started doing this. I was using Ubuntu 9.10 for a few weeks now, then out of the blue the busy inodes message started flooding the log. I checked the log to see if I was still getting the pulseaudio[5406]: ratelimit.c: 173 events suppressed messages. The log instead was swamped full of the inodes deal. I used the CD infrequently, but did so a few hours ago.

I am used to using the drawer button on the CD/DVD player.


I got this too on Ubuntu Karmic 9.10. I stopped the message flood just by clicking eject on the dvd icon that was still in Nautilus although there was no DVD in the drive. I wouldn't have noticed it if I hadn't been looking for another error in the logs. I don't think it makes any sense for this message to be repeated many times per second. I think that the eject button on the drive ought to work without causing problems like this.


This affects me on 11.04. Even worse, it also affects those pesky usb thumb drives that for some reason also emulates a CD-ROM drive, rendering the entire drive unusable until you "eject" the emulated CD-ROM drive.


Same problem for me on Natty.

I have a usb pen drive that emulates a CD-ROM drive that gives this message. After ejecting the drive the flood stops, but no usb drive is automatically recognized anymore, you have to mount them manually or reboot the system. VERY BAD BUG!


Joolz, this bug was reported a while ago and there hasn't been any activity in it recently. We were wondering if this is still an issue? If so, could you please test for this with the latest development release of Ubuntu? ISO images are available from -live/current/ .

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