[88368] in tlhIngan-Hol
Re: quvHa''eghmoH machchu'-tun ghunwI'pu'.
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (lojmIt tI'wI' nuv)
Fri Dec 3 13:18:52 2010
From: "lojmIt tI'wI' nuv" <lojmitti7wi7nuv@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <C305E6BD33E2654DAE1F8F403247B6A60218AD8D45DF@EVS02.ad.uchicago.edu>
Date: Fri, 3 Dec 2010 13:09:49 -0500
To: tlhingan-hol@kli.org
Errors-to: tlhingan-hol-bounce@kli.org
Reply-to: tlhingan-hol@kli.org
I wanted to copy four large folders from one drive to a different drive. Begin the second copy command before the first finishes. Begin all the copy commands before the first finishes. This will reliably kill Windows. It's a repeatable experiment. No error messages. Everything appears to be working... except that the drives in question stop making any head-movement noises, and though you can move your mouse cursor around, you can't do much else until you pull the power cable from the wall.
I was not having a good day.
But that's off topic. I only reply so that people understand what my original message sought to communicate.
pItlh.
lojmIt tI'wI' nuv
On Dec 3, 2010, at 11:55 AM, Steven Boozer wrote:
>
> QeS:
>>> One way I might have said "I copy X" is {chang'eng vIchenmoH 'ej wa'
>>> vIQay}. Obviously, other ways are possible.
>>
>> mujang Voragh, ja':
>>> X nIb vIchenmoH "I make an identical X":
>>> De' nIb DachenmoHchugh bIquvHa'
>>> To duplicate data is a great dishonor. [DCTF2]
>>
>> Cool, yes, I'd forgotten about that example! It's perfect here. So for
>> lojmIt tI'wI' nuv's sentence, perhaps:
>>
>> tInbogh loS De' ghom nIb vIchenmoH vIneHchugh...
>> "if I want to copy four large data sets..."
>>
>> maybe with a locative noun like {latlh qawHaqDaq} to clarify further.
>
> I've deleted the original message. Did he want to make four copies of the same data set, or one copy of four different data sets?
>
> I wonder if you could use {lab} "transmit data (away from a place)" for copying data from one computer to another. I've usually seen it used on the List for posting an email or uploading a file, but isn't that what he's doing?
>
> ? latlh qawHaqDaq tInbogh loS De' ghom nIb vIlab vIneHchugh...
>
> Examples of {lab} from canon:
>
> labbeH
> (The device) is ready to transmit data. (TKD)
>
> HablI', Su': labbeH.
> Ready to transmit. (ST3)
> ["Data transceiving device, attention: prepare to transmit." (ghunchu'wI')]
>
> labmeH 'evnagh Se' lo' tlhIngan QumwI'
> A Klingon communicator sends a signal through subspace radio. (S19)
>
> Marc Okrand jIH. De' potlh vIlab.
> I am Marc Okrand and I bring you an important message. ('U'-MTK)
>
> ghe'naQ Daqvo' QInvam wIlab.
> We will place a homing device transmitting this message at the site of the opera. ('U'-MTK)
>
> The last two come from Okrand's recent "Message to Kronos" about the opera {'u'}.
>
>
> --
> Voragh
> Ca'Non Master of the Klingons
>
>
>
>