Crazed girls flood Parkland school shooter Nikolas Cruz with fan mail
Mass murderer Nikolas Cruz is getting stacks of fan mail and love letters sent to the Broward County jail, along with hundreds of dollars in contributions to his commissary account.
Teenage girls, women and even older men are writing to the Parkland school shooter and sending photographs — some suggestive — tucked inside cute greeting cards and attached to notebook paper with offers of friendship and encouragement. Groupies also are joining Facebook communities to talk about how to help the killer.
The South Florida Sun Sentinel obtained copies of some of the letters showing that Cruz, who had few friends in the outside world, is now being showered with attention.
(Note that I'm still using iOS 10.0.1. In general I am quite hesitant to update any of my software if I'm happy with the version I've got.)
I will attach a sysdiagnose log when I get home this evening.
Summary:
This only happened to me once during the most of a year that I have owned my iPhone 7. It is likely to be quite difficult for you to reproduce.
The combination lock screen and home touch sensor were unresponsive, leading me to believe that my unit was hung.
Pressing the side button once - to turn off the video - then again - to turn the video back on - restored normal operation.
Steps to Reproduce:
Log into an iPhone 7.
Configure your device to use the six-digit combination lock.
Use some apps for a little while. Mostly I use Safari and the Music app.
Press the side button to darken the display.
Press the side button again to light up the display.
Press the home touch sensor to display the combination lock screen.
Touch all the buttons. There is no response.
Touch the home touch sensor. There is no response.
Press the side button to darken the display.
Press the side button again, to light up the display.
The combination lock screen now works normally.
Expected Results:
The buttons on the combination lock screen would respond to finger touches.
Actual Results:
None of the buttons on the combination lock screen responded to touches.
Version/Build:
iPhone 7 Model MNA62LL/A
iOS 10.0.1 (14A403)
Configuration:
256 GB Flash
Tresorit Launches Campaign To Build An End-To-End Encrypted Social Network
The new technology that aspires to #DeleteFacebook for good (Mastodon)
At the end of these charts, you can see a small spike in Diaspora users.
It might all be in the name. People/"dumb fucks" will sign up for a "Facebook", but "Prevaat"?
Stormy Daniels, Donald Trump, and Shark Week: ‘He made me sit and watch’ (archive)
Clickbait? Sure. But reading about the history of "Shark Week" in that context really makes something click.
Stormy Daniels describes her alleged affair with Donald Trump (w/ transcript)
"Wow, you-- you are special. You remind me of my daughter."
Some Soylentil replied to a previous diary about my aim to bootstrap a mining operation, by pointing out that leasing a warehouse would cost far less than colocating in a data center.
While a warehouse might not have enough circuit breakers, I expect most commercial landlords would be cool with me hiring an electrician to install some breakers, wiring and outlets.
For residential use, one Bitmain Antminer L3+ LiteCoin mining rig requires one circuit breaker. Possibly a warehouse could have higher-capacity breakers but really I don't know.
(I'm mining LiteCoin because the L3+ can work with 110 Volts, as God And Nature Intended, rather than that foreign 220V that is a Communist Plot to corrupt Our Precious Bodily Fluids.)
My apartment has three wall-outlet breakers. That yields the insight that the most I could profit by mining at home would be about one grand per month.
Just now I emailed the following to the usual suspects:
Subject: I'm hesitant to commit to a big cryptocurrency mining operation
Dear Suspects,
I wont need to decide until the time comes that I would have the cash to buy a fourth LiteCoin mining rig. I only have one now, so any possible fourth rig won't come until a few months from now.
Stefan points out that it is unwise for me to rely on LiteCoin mining for my livelihood, because the exchange rate could drop at any time. That's a common occurrence among all the cryptocurrencies.
There is a second problem: were I to lease a facility where I could operate more miners, commercial leases are typically three years. Were the price of LiteCoin to go down so much that I could no longer pay the monthly rent I would be quite screwed.
Just tonight I realized that even if mining were to yield enough income that I didn't have to work, not to hold a job would be bad for my mental illness. To work with other people is good for me.
I went totally bananas during graduate school because I had so much homework that I stopped hanging out with my friends. There was no one to point out the error of my ways when I began to grow paranoid about the North Korean nuclear reactor. It was discovered by a US spy satellite during my second quarter of grad school.
I felt the need to inform the entire world that it wasn't as hard to build nuclear weapons as most people thought: the US, in its infinite wisdom, declassified all but one of the Manhattan Project secrets in 1965. The only remaining secret is the "initiator", which is a source of neutrons that gets the chain reaction started in plutonium bombs.
I know enough physics, and even then had enough computational power at my disposal that I figure I could design an initiator all by myself.
Were I to earn enough money through any means - not just mining - that I was no longer required to work among other people, without a doubt I'd be in a straightjacket within six months.
Introspectively,
Misha
I'm not clear why Party's URL is among my mental illness essays. It's dated April 16, 1992; I wasn't symptomatic then.
I expect I'll move it to a more appropriate directory but this link will still work because I'll install a redirect.
Yet Another American Football League: The Alliance of American Football
Another New Football League Says It Will Start Play in 2019
The N.F.L. is under pressure from falling television ratings, lawsuits over its handling of concussions, and fan opposition to player protests during the national anthem.
Yet investors keep lining up to help start new football leagues. On Tuesday, the longtime N.F.L. executive Bill Polian and the television and movie producer Charlie Ebersol became the latest entrepreneurs to join the fray when they unveiled plans for the Alliance of American Football.
There have been several short-lived football leagues before, including the United Football League, United States Football League and XFL. Like others before them, Polian and Ebersol say they have a formula for success. They have acquired investments from Silicon Valley firms that will allow their eight-team league to start playing a week after the Super Bowl in February 2019. Their partners include CBS, which will show a few games on its main channel and some on its cable network. They will also launch a smartphone app on which fans will be able to stream games and play fantasy football.
The league will also aim for two-and-a-half hour games (N.F.L. games generally last at least three hours). To achieve that, there will be no kickoffs or extra points — only 2-point plays — and a 30-second play clock, as opposed to the N.F.L.'s 45-second clock. There will also be no television timeouts, which will lead to about 60 percent fewer commercials.
Also at Variety.
Previously: As National Football League Ratings Fall, Could the "XFL" Make a Return?
NASA to Discuss Upcoming Launch of Next Planet Hunter
Join NASA at 1 p.m. EDT Wednesday, March 28, as astrophysics experts discuss the upcoming launch of NASA’s next planet hunter, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). Reporters can attend the event in person at the James Webb Auditorium at NASA Headquarters in Washington or participate by phone.
The briefing will be broadcast live on NASA Television and the agency’s website.
Scheduled to launch April 16, TESS is expected to find thousands of planets outside our solar system, known as exoplanets, orbiting the nearest and brightest stars in our cosmic neighborhood. Powerful telescopes like NASA’s upcoming James Webb Space Telescope can then further study these exoplanets to search for important characteristics, like their atmospheric composition and whether they could support life.