>
Let us suppose you and I are colleagues in the same company and we are less than friends, to put it mildly. Actually, I have accused you of many things and have even tried to persuade our chief to fire you. You have discovered this and feel offended by me. Even more, you have the feeling that I am talking about you behind your back with others. Our desks are in the same room and you notice that my computer is still unlocked. You know I won't be back within an hour.
>
>Will you, or won't you try to have a look in my Inbox and Outbox of Outlook? >
>Peter, let me get this straight. You stated earlier...
>
>
"If Naomi is right here, and Andy's password equalled his username, then it was merely his own plain stupidity." >
>And yet you're telling me you're going to leave for an hour with your computer on and unlocked? I ALWAYS fire up my screen saver/password when I leave, and I don't walk away until I know it's "kicked in". Always. I've been called paranoid several times - I'd rather be called that, than "stupid".
>
>Kevin
Kevin, it's a suppose-situation. What would you do.
Groet,
Peter de Valença
Constructive frustration is the breeding ground of genius.
If there’s no willingness to moderate for the sake of good debate, then I have no willingness to debate at all.
Let's develop superb standards that will end the holy wars.
"There are three types of people: Alphas and Betas", said the beta decisively.
If you find this message rude or offensive or stupid, please take a step away from the keyboard and try to think calmly about an eventual a possible alternative explanation of my message.