20090619

Problem ID: 7501297095880458297
Entered by: Ben Simo

There are no items to show

I receive a daily digest email from a mailing list that I don't care to follow right now. Wanting to delete this and all the other emails recently received from this list, I right click on the message in Outlook, then select the option to find all messages from the sender.



The Outlook Advanced Find window opens and the little magnifying glass moves in circles indicating that a search is being performed. It then displays "There are no items to show in this view." where I expect to see search results.



How can there be no items to show? At the very least, the email I right-clicked to search by sender exists in my inbox. I try other searches and they work. I repeat this search and it still returns no results.

There is a problem here.

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20090617

Problem ID: 3629989844290161074
Entered by: Ben Simo

What do you want me to do?



I got this error trying to sign into a web site. I had last signed into the web site about 17 hours prior to getting this error message. What is this message telling me?

Is it saying that I signed in too soon? If so, how much longer than 17 hours do I have to wait?

Is it saying that my browser can have cookie issues that are capable of forcing me to do things too soon?

Is it saying my browser is doing things on its own because of cookie issues?

Or maybe this message is telling me what to do.

Is it saying that I should sign in again too soon? If so, how soon is too soon. And if it is too soon, why should I do it?

Seriously, I doubt this message is at all related to the actual problem. The message makes no sense. This is the kind of message that makes we wonder why some coder spent time entering the error message text into a computer.

And now I'm cringing at the thought that I may have -- sometime in the distant past -- written error messages that are just as confusing.

Pressing the back button and resubmitting the login resulted in the same error. However, I then closed the browser tab and re-clicked the link that led me to login to the site. This time I was not prompted to login. I was sent directly to the destination page that requires user authentication.

It appears my browser had the appropriate session cookies.

  Edit

20090604

Problem ID: 7612217920589669178
Entered by: Ben Simo

Useless and Unknown




Got this trying to apply a filter to data in an Access 2003 data table.

If it really is unknown, how does Access know there is something worth reporting to the user? And if there is something worth reporting to the user, why not report it?

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