I'd wipe my drive and use only Linux if I could find a text editor I like. And yeah I'm actually quite good at GNU Emacs and at one time I enjoyed it but came to prefer the GUI text editors on the Mac. Bluefish gets me most of the way there but it works poorly with projects that have lots of source files.
I'm working on an in-house app that is built out of multiple Free Software components. Some of them are quite large; I need to modify them. I'm not going to sell my project rather the results of its computations.
My Acer Aspire E 15 mostly works OK when it's plugged in but is reluctant to start up when it's not plugged in, also it has spontaneous shutdowns when it's not plugged in. A couple days ago I "refreshed" my PC, which Windows claimed would be a system reinstall that would delete my apps but save my settings. Well it wiped my settings too.
The problem was alleviated somewhat but did not go away.
If I run memtest86 or memtest86 I have no problems. This leads me to believe it's a problem with software, such as a corrupted system file or setting.
It's still under warranty if I can't diagnose it myself I'll call tech support. I just don't want to have to send it in if I don't absolutely have to because I'd want to run a full backup first, but I've torrented vast quantities of pr0n Open Source installation ISOs.
Norman King suggested I adjust my battery power options, that would rewrite the battery settings. That didn't help.
Lobbyists, in Strategy Session, Conclude That Refugee Crisis “Helps Us” Defeat Regulations
In an audio recording of a strategy session obtained by The Intercept, major trade association lobbyists discussed how the refugee crisis has changed the political dynamics in Washington to their advantage.
In the conference call held last week, lobbyists representing a number of high-polluting industries agreed that the battle between Congress and President Obama on refugee policy will give them the cover they need to attach a legislative rider to the omnibus budget bill that rolls back newly expanded clean water regulation.
“I think that probably helps us,” one participant said, referring to the coming confrontation over refugee policy.
[...] “We’re suddenly not the big issue,” said one call participant. “I mean, this is all going to turn on refugees.”
“I think that helps us,” said another call participant. “I think it helps us with the White House being on defense,” another legislative strategist on the call said.
The remarks were made during a political strategy call hosted last week by energy utility industry lobbyists. A recording was sent to The Intercept by someone on the call.
Coal CEO Thanks Lamar Smith, Asks Him to Expand Probe of Climate Scientists
Koch "Alliance" on Criminal Justice Reform Exposed as Trojan Horse
How the Gates Foundation Reflects the Good and the Bad of "Hacker Philanthropy"
If you read the news you often read about the incredible cruelty shown towards the homeless, for example about "police sweeps" in which - just a couple weeks ago - 150 people were tossed out of their tent camp in Vancouver, Washington, followed by a bulldozer "cleaning up" what were once their possessions.
But in my actual experience the kindness shown towards homeless people such as myself is far, far more common than is the cruelty. It's just that the cruelty gets more press.
I often hang out at all-night restaurants as I prefer to sleep during the day - during the day there are day centers for the homeless but at night one must either brave the cold, or find a restaurant that will permit one to hang out all night long in return for purchasing one single coffee.
The restaurant I'm at right now gives me my coffee absolutely free of charge. I tell them they don't have to do that, they I sing on the street for tips and so have the means to pay.
"You should accept help when it is offered to you," pointed out one of the waitresses. Just now she asked me if I wanted breakfast.
This isn't the first time, a while back the manager of a Carl's Jr. bought me breakfast, also the owner of a Burger King bought me lunch.
I finally applied for Social Security Disability Insurance, as a result of my Aphasia (not my mental illness). The clerk who took my application was confident it would be approved but there is some problem with my tax records that I expect I can straighten out.
When one's SSDI is approved one's first check is backdated to the lesser of one year before one's application or the date one became disabled. For me that would be quite a lot of money.
I am not dead certain but I contemplate donating all that money to the charities that look after people like me.
Laptops
Storage
Consoles
Categories
Articles
Expounding on what I feel ban-worthy as linked in a recent story I subbed...
These are my opinions not site policy. That said, they are also my minimum requirements to remain on staff.
Over-the-top spam: This means dozens of spam comments to a single story, automated or not. Anything less can and should be dealt with by simply modding the comments as Spam.
Gross/repeated illegal activity: Linking to copyrighted works and other illegality of the minor variety that we notice should be resolved by editing the comment in the database and letting the user know why their comment was edited in a reply. Bans should be reserved for things such as illegal and credible threats or multiple instances of minor illegal activity that was not ceased when notified that it should be.
Opinions, truly held or of a trollish nature: Absolutely never should this be criteria for a ban.
The meaning of "site bans": Banning an account or IP address from posting to the website. I don't have as much issue with IRC bans, it's a secondary means of communication for us not our primary one.
Any further clarification or other questions, feel free to ask.
I plan to buy a house next spring, so I'll almost certainly need a new refrigerator. There's a problem: they don't make the fridge I want, and never have. I can't figure out why.
Refrigerators today are quite different than antique ones, using a different coolent because of the ozone layer, better insulation, the use of rare earth magnets in the motors, and other improvements.
But they're still incredibly wasteful.
The fridge I want has two vents outside, much like dryer vents but insulated. There is an electronic outside thermometer, one in the refrigerator, and one inside the freezer.
When the temperature outside is above seventy fareignheight, the heat taken from the fridge is vented outside, so the air conditioner doesn't have to work harder to cool the hot air refrigerators let out inside the house.
Under seventy the air is vented into, rather than outside, the house. If the heat is on, it doesn't work as hard.
But most of all is winter. It's ludicrous that we pump the heat from our freezers with a lot of energy expenditure, while freezing air is right outside that could come in the intake hose and freeze and cool your food. At freezing, this fridge doesn't need the compressor at all and compressors take a lot of energy to operate.
I don't know why nobody is selling those things.
I have just seen the most revolting thing the human race has ever produced in a British baking show. Behold and tremble in terror:
http://www.pbs.org/food/recipes/rhubarb-prune-apple-pork-pies/
Mankinds greatest atrocity consists of a kilogram of flour, half a kilogram of lard, four kilograms of pork, a puree of rhubarb, prunes, and apples, and is garnished with edible flowers and bay leaves. This monstrosity was the day's winning dish.
The losing dish involved a lavender meringue, and stands as a small consolation to the civilized world by showing that there is some outer limit to what the British consider to be edible.
There is an article in the Guardian called Britain is heading for another 2008 crash: here's why.
The premise seems to be that government running a budget surplus leads to contraction in the private sector i.e. recession. Therefore, austerity will continue to make things worse for us.
The reasoning is very simple, perhaps simplistic.
You may be objecting at this point: but why does anybody have to be in debt? Why can’t everybody just balance their budgets? Governments, households, corporations … Everyone lives within their means and nobody ends up owing anything. Why can’t we just do that? Well there’s an answer to that too: then there wouldn’t be any money. This is another thing everybody knows but no one really wants to talk about. Money is debt.
I understand that people may borrow money to invest in e.g. a business where they might need to buy machinery and to pay staff before the profits start to roll in, and that hopefully the profits will be large enough to pay back the load and to make a living, but that's where my small brain gives up.
What is the rest of the story?
Also, note the graph of house prices.
Update: here come the sub-prime mortgages again. Only this time we, the public, have to bail out the banks when it all goes horribly wrong. Remember how they changed the law after the last crisis, so that the same terrible fate would not befall the banks again.
Didn't watch this time. Ben Carson sure is popular isn't he?
Wikipedia
Fireworks Fly In Unruly Third GOP Presidential Debate
Four Republicans Battle For Attention At Undercard Debate
PolitiFact