Here's a little trick that works really well for those types of labels. Have you watched professional wrappers at Christmas time curling ribbon with a pair of scissors? It works for removing the backing from the labels as well. Hold the backing of the label against the side of a pair of scissors / knife / even a key with some sharper points on it, and drag it across the edge. This will make the ends separate a little bit, allowing you to take hold and easily separate the pieces. Check out this site that shows it being done with scissors if you've never seen it http://www.wikihow.com/Curl-Ribbon Make sure it's the backing side being scraped across the scissors, not the printed side. Wade -----Original Message----- From: Randy Bush [mailto:randy@psg.com] Sent: Thursday, February 16, 2012 4:09 PM To: North American Network Operators' Group Subject: time sink 42 ok, this is horribly pragmatic, but it's real. yesterday i was in the westin playing rack and stack for five hours. an horrifyingly large amount of my time was spent trying to peel apart labels made on my portable brother label tape maker, yes peeling the backing from a little label so remote hands could easily confirm a server they were going to attack. is there a trick? is there a (not expensive) different labeling machine or technique i should use? randy ________________________________ This electronic mail, including any attachments, is confidential and is for the sole use of the intended recipient and may be privileged. Any unauthorized distribution, copying, disclosure or review is prohibited. Neither communication over the Internet nor disclosure to anyone other than the intended recipient constitutes waiver of privilege. If you are not the intended recipient, please immediately notify the sender and then delete this communication and any attachments from your computer system and records without saving or forwarding it. Thank you.
My crappy PT-80 has this little slot in the top built for doing just this..it works pseudo-magically! Jesse Krembs - Data Network Architecture & Planning FairPoint Communications | 800 Hinesburg Rd, South Burlington, VT 05403 | jkrembs@fairpoint.com www.FairPoint.com| 802.951.1519 office | 802.735.4886 cell -----Original Message----- From: Kierstead, Wade [mailto:wade@e-novations.ca] Sent: Friday, February 17, 2012 10:41 AM To: 'Randy Bush'; 'North American Network Operators' Group' Subject: One solution -- time sink 42 Here's a little trick that works really well for those types of labels. Have you watched professional wrappers at Christmas time curling ribbon with a pair of scissors? It works for removing the backing from the labels as well. Hold the backing of the label against the side of a pair of scissors / knife / even a key with some sharper points on it, and drag it across the edge. This will make the ends separate a little bit, allowing you to take hold and easily separate the pieces. Check out this site that shows it being done with scissors if you've never seen it http://www.wikihow.com/Curl-Ribbon Make sure it's the backing side being scraped across the scissors, not the printed side. Wade -----Original Message----- From: Randy Bush [mailto:randy@psg.com] Sent: Thursday, February 16, 2012 4:09 PM To: North American Network Operators' Group Subject: time sink 42 ok, this is horribly pragmatic, but it's real. yesterday i was in the westin playing rack and stack for five hours. an horrifyingly large amount of my time was spent trying to peel apart labels made on my portable brother label tape maker, yes peeling the backing from a little label so remote hands could easily confirm a server they were going to attack. is there a trick? is there a (not expensive) different labeling machine or technique i should use? randy ________________________________ This electronic mail, including any attachments, is confidential and is for the sole use of the intended recipient and may be privileged. Any unauthorized distribution, copying, disclosure or review is prohibited. Neither communication over the Internet nor disclosure to anyone other than the intended recipient constitutes waiver of privilege. If you are not the intended recipient, please immediately notify the sender and then delete this communication and any attachments from your computer system and records without saving or forwarding it. Thank you. _______________________________________________________________________ This e-mail message and its attachments are for the sole use of the intended recipients. They may contain confidential information, legally privileged information or other information subject to legal restrictions. If you are not the intended recipient of this message, please do not read, copy, use or disclose this message or its attachments, notify the sender by replying to this message and delete or destroy all copies of this message and attachments in all media.
participants (2)
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Kierstead, Wade
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Krembs, Jesse