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We use a custom query that looks directly at the Donor Database's tables. Then, a summary (pledge amount, payments by month, total payments, fees assessed) is stored in a separate table, and the info is viewed via Excel. I wouldn't recommend this approach unless you have a strong database person. Our report was unreliable for years before it
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osTicket seems to have a good reputation among the PHP-based, open source crowd. A few months ago, I was also looking around for a Help Desk Ticketing system for freelance/personal projects. osTicket is what I settled on after researching, but I have not really had a chance to do a lot of work with it, yet. One warning, make sure to change the default
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@Chris: we're using ESXi on 2 servers, and we have to manually backup the virtual servers (take offline, copy files, bring servers back). It's a pain... and it keeps us from backing up as much as we would with an automated solution.
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Microsoft's lists the requirements for Hyper-V Server 2008 on its website. Microsoft also has a section devoted to virtualization (that you might have already seen). VMware's site also lists requirements for its server-based products . (Requirements are easier to find if you just Google: <product> requirements) I found an article, Planning
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It sounds like you can make it all the way through installation before there's a problem. Have you tried just rebooting? Does it hang on 1st startup?
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Welcome. Glad to have you here.
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...and then there's Typekit. Typekit Just released (a week ago). It allows you to use any font from the Typekit library. The fonts are stored on their servers and temporarily delivered to users via JavaScript. This way, users can see a font even if it is not installed on their computer. Here's a description from the Typekit website : We’ve
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Something to keep in mind when you're dealing with fonts on websites... Fonts are not delivered by webpages. Users will only be able to see fonts that are installed on their local systems. You are probably better off using a commonly available font than buying/downloading one. For example Say you install some font (such as Inconsolata ) on your
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Font Squirrel has a pretty good collection of fonts that are free for commercial use. I also found the Open Font Library but haven't used it. Linux installations usually have a pretty good selection of free fonts, including the DejaVu font family (sans, serif, and mono). You can probably find some more inexpensive fonts by Googling something similar
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I usually use Malwarebytes Anti-Malware (free) to remove malicious program like this