Crocodile
- 16 Dec 2002 03:59
ExecLine
- 27 Feb 2014 15:19
- 10492 of 11003
2:59 is the regular film. See Rotten Tomatoes:
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_wolf_of_wall_street_2013/
For more sex and swearing see:
http://collider.com/the-wolf-of-wall-street-extended-cut-4-hours/
Jordan Belfort ('The Wolf', played by Leonardo DeCaprio) gets told 'No more nooky!' by Margot Robbie (played by Naomi Lapaglia), whilst at the same time being shown how good it actually looks and reminded just what he's going to be missing:
http://collider.com/wp-content/uploads/the-wolf-of-wall-street-margot-robbie-leonardo-dicaprio.jpg
skinny
- 27 Feb 2014 15:24
- 10493 of 11003
I think the original will be fine!
skinny
- 05 Mar 2014 07:24
- 10494 of 11003
If they cut the "F" word out of the film, it would probably only be about an hour and a half long!
Haystack
- 05 Mar 2014 09:57
- 10496 of 11003
The guy that the story is based on, said the other day that only 25% of what happened was shown. There was far more sex in particular and far more tablets but less cocaine and heroin.
ExecLine
- 11 Mar 2014 15:47
- 10497 of 11003
Are you getting enough?
Find out at
http://www.netindex.com/
Click on 'Go to my Location' and then click on 'Allow' to give your browser permission to give your computer's location. The site then gives a map revealing the fastest broadband speed available in your area. There are also links to other tools, including 'Speedtest' and 'Pingtest'.
Balerboy
- 11 Mar 2014 16:59
- 10498 of 11003
Probably opens up your comp to a lot of undesirables too.,.
Mega Bucks
- 19 Mar 2014 07:44
- 10499 of 11003
Looking for a new windows based laptop for the wife,i guess about 15'' screen,as we have mainly used WinXp dont really want to go down the route of Win8 due to the bad press and not very user friendly.
So i would think Win7 would be the best option,brand names like Dell would be the front runner as well.And the worst bit of all is the price,i just hat spending money as i am getting more like scrooge every year.
Regards
Fagin
skinny
- 19 Mar 2014 07:56
- 10500 of 11003
Here is a suggestion :-
or failing that :-
HP Pavillion - it comes with windows 8.1 which allows you to boot straight to the desktop thus looking like windows 7 - I personally do not have a problem with Windows 8/8.1 (think I've said that before :-) )
Or if you insist on Windows 7 -
45% Off Windows7 Laptops‎
Mega Bucks
- 20 Mar 2014 09:44
- 10501 of 11003
@skinny,went for that HP Pavillion in the end,although i did not really want Win8 on the laptop,but after thinking about it if you can master it then its must be pretty easy to use :o)
Thanks again for your input.
Just need to get over the shock of spending all that Wonga,i am finding the older i get the tighter i am getting,its going to be really bad when i get to 60 in about 15 years time :-)
skinny
- 20 Mar 2014 09:55
- 10502 of 11003
LOL
With windows 8.1, its a piece of p*ss to boot straight to the desktop :-
Idiots Guide
HARRYCAT
- 21 Mar 2014 16:08
- 10503 of 11003
A really bizarre problem:
After the outage on the EE network the other day, my router then started to play up, only allowing access to a few UK website home pages. (I am with EE/Orange on both mobile & landline / broadband).
The help desk conclude that it was the router at fault having done a number of 'ping tests' and they have duly sent me a new router. It's all set up and is running normally, allowing all of my computers and a number of mobile phones in the house to access the internet. However, the laptop running Vista belonging to the Italian lodger here, now can access the router (the router diagnostics page is showing her computer) but she cannot get past the router to the internet. We ran a Windows diagnostic and it says to unplug the router, turn off the computer, reboot both and all should work. Needless to say it doesn't. She says she has not altered anything from the time when it could connect via the previous router. I will check the boxes in the advanced internet options menu, but am wondering if there is anything obvious which I have missed?
The laptop finds the router, the router recognises the laptop but either settings in the laptop prevent it from going further or within the router. I have tried disabling her antivirus, firewall and internet security settings, but nothing changes! Five hours later and I am still b*ggering about with it!
Balerboy
- 21 Mar 2014 22:51
- 10505 of 11003
Harry, I had a doc, which i used to renew the IP number with the router but i must have deleted it. I googled this and found how to do it and got connected.
HARRYCAT
- 22 Mar 2014 22:16
- 10506 of 11003
Thanks guys. Have continued my efforts and found that though the router recognises the laptop, the laptop seems to connect to the router but doesn't seem to actually recognise it. So in Network settings it picks up the network but then doesn't want to assign a name to the network device.
Am trying to get lodger to test it with another network at Uni so that we can establish whether it is the WiFi card at fault or the router.
Driving me nuts! ....especially as all the Windows diagnostics are in italian!
hilary
- 23 Mar 2014 12:32
- 10507 of 11003
It sounds like the laptop's NIC might still be configured to connect to the old router, Harry.
As a start, I'd check if it's using DHCP by running "netsh interface ip show config" from the command line.
HARRYCAT
- 23 Mar 2014 15:01
- 10508 of 11003
Thanks. Will give it a try.
hilary
- 24 Mar 2014 11:42
- 10509 of 11003
Actually, depending on her OS, your lodger might not have the network shell tool installed so that command might not do anything. If not, 'ipconfig /all' from the commmand prompt will also tell her if the NIC has DHCP enabled. If she doesn't want to use the command prompt, there'll be a GUI to do the same thing.
HARRYCAT
- 24 Mar 2014 11:55
- 10510 of 11003
Thank you. I have the laptop and will check myself, though need to be on a Vista machine to compare the settings. Have already tried your original command and it shows the WiFi, LAN and another configuration, but all is in italian (though I put in the command in english). I need to sit and compare the screens as the info is not in the same order as the my english version, though much of it is common sense when comparing.
HARRYCAT
- 24 Mar 2014 12:22
- 10511 of 11003
Most seem the same. DHCP is enabled as is auto configuration.
The only two differences are the last two digits of the IP address and a number of digits in the physical address.
DNS, DHCP, Lease dates, subnet mask, default gateway all the same.