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The liquor stores have to remain open for the lucrative tax revenue. Closing them would also inundate hospitals with alcoholics suffering withdrawal, which can be life threatening.
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Greg Utas wrote: Closing them would also inundate hospitals with alcoholics suffering withdrawal, which can be life threatening. Sad but true...
They are just picking the lesser bad
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Inundating the hospitals with alcoholics could get them their Corona fix.
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At least, the pot will keep them calm, but the alcohol may stir up their anger
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Maintaining the government's revenue stream is essential.
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I've still got the terrible habit (picked up in Brummidgehum) of calling them "outdoors", so be careful: I'm a carry-out-er!
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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It is certainly helping me - just a couple of pints at the end of the day - life is strange enough at the moment without having to stop drinking
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Two major flavors of OS to use on a PC and they both come with stupid issues that cause major problems.
*sigh* I'll probably have to run win10 as my primary OS next time as my $600 MIDI controller is a paperweight in linux, and my VM software can't fully preserve the MIDI connection over USB from the host machine for some reason
Due to that, and some hardware issues - my wifi dongle mysteriously won't work with ubuntu this time, though it worked with the same exact OS and version last time i installed it, and a well earned lack of trust in ubuntu's grub installation, particularly where my shiny new NVMe system drive will be concerned, I can't justify using it. Linux is kind of a toy, mainly due to lack of software and hardware support, but also because of general awkwardness - you can tell it was designed by a million different hands. "What's so bad about that?" Imagine a piece of furniture built that way. I'd use MINT but I've had similar issues.
And Windows is a total horrorshow when it blows up. I've managed to, through custom install settings and tweaking after the fact, got it to stop sending massive amounts of information back to microsoft, but disabling the spyware "feature" of the OS is just part of the problem. Sometimes it just randomly fails. I had Visual studio blow up my entire windows installation but only where one visual studio feature was concerned (reinstalling VS and even moving to a new version of VS didn't fix it) to where I couldn't make VSIX packages anymore. Random nonsense like that. It's infuriating. That and eventually it gets slow enough to be hateful no matter what you do. Registry bloat is the most likely culprit, but series of service packs and patches can't help.
What I wouldn't give for a nice, stable, OS without all the garbage, that just worked, and was close looped dev enough that it all worked together consistently, and supported my hardware.
Is it really too much to ask?
Real programmers use butterflies
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iOS?
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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haha
Real programmers use butterflies
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Stability and an open hardware platform is always going to be a difficult combination to achieve, I'm afraid.
Apple has it easy - they control the hardware (boy, do they ever control the hardware!) and they produce the software, so they have a much easier job of it: though even then bugs get through, like a battery saving measure being mistaken for a "slow down the old kit before the new stuff launches" feature.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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I won't buy apple because they're overpriced, they have the same lack of software problem linux does, and they screwed my family over in 1986 because we were conned into buying an Apple ][gs. Six months after it cost $2000 new (in 1986 money) apple wasn't supporting it and nobody was writing new software for it.
Never again
Real programmers use butterflies
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That's a long time to bear a grudge!
But no, I don't buy Apple either: overpriced, overhyped, and (if you're honest) not very good. The people who complain how Windows monitors them and won't let them near their own machine should try setting foot outside the Apple ecosystem and see how hard they make it to do anything ...
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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I'd get over the grudge if they changed their behavior.
Real programmers use butterflies
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OriginalGriff wrote: ...the Apple ecosystem and see how hard they make it to do anything .. That is 100% factual right there.
"One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson
"Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons
"You can easily judge the character of a man by how he treats those who can do nothing for him." - James D. Miles
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OriginalGriff wrote: The people who complain how Windows monitors them and won't let them near their own machine should try setting foot outside the Apple ecosystem and see how hard they make it to do anything ...
Tell me about it. I'm suffering through that right now. I've just bought a refurbished Mac mini with Catalina installed. Just tried compiling my software that uses the Tk toolkit, and have discovered that the Cocoa calls that extract a CGGraphics from an NSWindow no just return nil. No reason. Code compiled on a High Sierra works just fine on Catalina, but the same code compiled on Catalina returns nil. Same dynamic libs employed. Tk code is identical versions.
Now attempting to install High Sierra in a Virtual machine. Had to jump through hoops just to get VirtualBox installed (need to allow Oracle to install stuff your computer, but the notifcation is hidden in preferences panel, so you don't see it). Now trying to get High Sierra installed on the VM, more hoops to jump, which are sufficiently different from the case under High Sierra that its a case of googling to work out what hacks are required. Why, oh why does Apple make it difficult to install their stuff on a virtual machine? It just gets in the way of actually producing the software that runs on their machines.
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honey the codewitch wrote: a nice, stable, OS without all the garbage, that just worked
I have two of them: Ubuntu 18 and Windows 10, dual booted on my PC; both nice and stable. I cannot remember when I last had a Windows hang or crash, probably Windows 7 or even XP.
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The problems i mention are with Win10 and Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. I've run into the GRUB installation issues with 18.04 on my two most recent PCs. Hardware issues on the latter as well in terms of supporting my wifi dongle. Also desktop/window manager issues.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Just like in Richard case (adding my note for mere statistica purposes...), the two of them give a sane feeling of stability here (well Windows 10 actively refuse to handle my old HP scanner, but that's a minor flaw).
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CPallini wrote: Windows 10 actively refuse to handle my old HP scanner
Alas, old scanners are a problem in Win64 ad the TWAIN support is very poor.
There are software as VueScan that could permit to use very old obsolete scanner with Windows x64 versions.
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Plus 1 for VueScan, has kept my $$$ slide/negative scanner going quite nicely.
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I too, thanks to VueScan, was able to reuse an old Epson scanner with negative film scanning capability.
I wrote some applications in windows that use scanners, and I discovered very early that most scanners, both old and new, do not have native 64-bit twain support. Only WIA. If I remember correctly there is a layer inside twain to access wia scanners but not vice versa, at least that I know of. VueScan probably accesses old scanners "directly" bypassing the wia or twain layers of the operating system.
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I'm currently using Linux Mint (based on Ubuntu 18.04) and the scanner support is the best I've ever had on an OS. I was blown away by how easy it was to use the network scanner.
In terms of general hardware support - I've found Linus to be very good. It seems that only the special gear is a problem. So far the only thing I've not got to work is the Guitar USB integration for a game I bought a while back.
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Now that's interesting. Thank you.
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honey the codewitch wrote: Is it really too much to ask?
Ah, that is why I am working in embedded -> Only the necessary and sometimes even less.
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