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VirusTotal.com -- 8 engines report malicious content and phishing indicators...
VirusTotal[^]
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Microsoft doesn't use ".org". A store link looks more like:
"https://www.microsoft.com/store/apps/..."
(Later)
Do need to add that some of these sites are "legit".
The "download" is for a "unactivated" Windows 10 (or such) from Microsoft; what you get from them is a "1 user" key that will allow you to activate said software. The "key" might have been in use before but was "detached" from the original machine and is now available for a "new" machine and associated software. These outfits then are in effect, resellers of "old" keys. I've bought software this way before, downloading from Microsoft, and using "their" activation with the purchased key and saved "hundreds". No issues running / updating. You need to "vet" them of course, which as you see, is tricky.
And that is why you also need to "detach" your MS software when moving to a new machines and can't just move your SSD. The "key" and machine become one from an MS accounting POV.
It was only in wine that he laid down no limit for himself, but he did not allow himself to be confused by it.
― Confucian Analects: Rules of Confucius about his food
modified 26-Apr-20 18:01pm.
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You're already violating their terms (see terms and conditions on the page you linked to)
"You may not create any link to this website without our prior written consent".
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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I've been playing Baldur's Gate II: Shadows of Amn from GOG.com for the last week.
The original from 2000, not the newer Enhanced Edition.
GOG.com has their own launcher, GOG Galaxy 2.0.
When I start using the launcher it never works.
So I start it directly by opening BGMain.exe.
Sometimes it works right away.
Other times it hangs in the menu and goes into a small 800x600 box on the top left of my screen (not a window as I can't move or close it).
I still hear the music, but other than that it's unresponsive and I have to close it using the task manager.
The weird thing is, let's say I start it the first time and it does that as soon as I come into the main menu.
I start it a second time and it goes well, until I click something in the main menu and go into a sub menu.
Third time, same result.
Fourth time, it works.
It seems completely random
I'd contact GOG.com about it, but having to restart a few times isn't worth the trouble.
I still very much wonder how computers can have such erratic behavior though.
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Playing in Windows 10?
Sander Rossel wrote: I still very much wonder how computers can have such erratic behavior though. Because many of the people programming there are not as good as they think they are?
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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Since computers don't really know randomization I think this was written by geniuses
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Sounds like an initialization issue. When the program ran in its original environment, the problem didn't show up because the initialization "just happened" to work out a certain way or in a certain order. Now machines are an order or two of magnitude faster running in similarly expanded memory environments...
Wait a second.
Baldur's Gate was a 16-bit app (my daughter played it), which means it's running under some kind of emulation or in a VM. If you have any control over the VM environment, you might at what you can tweak.
Software Zen: delete this;
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So you're saying some part of the initialization finishes sooner than expected, like a race condition?
And whether or not it works depends completely on timing?
That could explain it.
I don't see an emulator starting.
This is BG 2 I'm talking about, not the original.
Although I've tried the original (also from GOG.com) and that works fine.
I understood, from some forums, that the original CDs can also still work on Windows 10.
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Sander Rossel wrote: I understood, from some forums, that the original CDs can also still work on Windows 10. "can" doesn't mean "should"
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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It's concerning for the airline industry that the virus could significantly change people's travel behavior. But what's truly concerning is that a staggering number of currency units are being conjured to bail out these kinds of businesses. This dilutes everyone else and is an insidious form of taxation.
The way it's supposed to work, before all this bail-out idiocy started some time ago, is that firms go into bankruptcy. This is hardly the end of the world, because their skilled employees and capital infrastructure are still there. The firm typically continues to operate while being restructured. Someone buys it for a song, so the primary losers are shareholders and, usually to some degree, the bondholders.
A lot of the US airlines are now looking for bail-outs. These are the same idiots who ran up tons of debt to buy back their own shares during a market bubble, which did wonders for their executives' stock options and bonuses. Most of these sphincters deserve to be sacked, which is probably what would happen to them under a new board and new ownership.
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Greg Utas wrote: These are the same idiots who ran up tons of debt to buy back their own shares during a market bubble, which did wonders for their executives' stock options and bonuses. Most of these sphincters deserve to be sacked, exactly
And if we start... could we add some lawyers, bankers and many politicians, please?
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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Bankers, especially central bankers, are even worse. Lawyers don't have much to do with this. Sacking is too good for politicians.
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Greg Utas wrote: Sacking is too good for politicians.
So is hanging!
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Greg Utas wrote: Sacking is too good for politicians.
Most definitely. I rate "politician" career-wise as a rung or so above "meth-dealer."
When people ask why I'm (post)-anarchist I just gesture expansively and say "consider the alternative"
Democratic centralized government is a nice trick, wherein we actually *elect* a small cabal of narcissists to do things *to* us at least as often as *for* us. Good long con, anyway.
Of course, a lot of people consider me crazy for my political views, but I don't mind. I'm not trying to change the world anyway, just navigate it.
Was this too political for the lounge? I feel like we're already dipping our toes into the political.
Real programmers use butterflies
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I disagree. I'd rate meth dealers above politicians.
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Real programmers use butterflies
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Whenever a US politician grant a billion dollars to a "worthy" purpose, such as keeping an airline alive, that amounts to three dollars per US citizen. Whenever a politician grants a trillion dollars to keep the economy running, that amounts to three thousand dollars per citizen. That includes newborn babies and retired grandmas. Whenever you hear "a trillion dollars worth of support", if you have four kids that is eighteen thousand dollars for your little family.
It must be paid by the tax payers; there is noone else to pay it. You and your family must pay back those eighteen thousand dollars. Maybe some of it is, in the first stage, paid by business life, through the taxes they pay. Where do they get their money? From their customers, the man in the street. If their taxes rise by a total of half a trillion, their income must raise by half a trillion. Their only way to do that is to raise their prices. So maybe your six-person household pays "only" nine thousand dollars in direct tax rise, but another nine thousand dollars in raised product prices. That is per trillion that is granted to keep business up.
I think that lots of people think of these trillions are money that they (or business) receive as a gift, without being worried about who gives this gift. They do not view the granting of a trillion as taking away three thousand dollar per person in the household from the economy of that household. But that is what it really is. Of course, some of it might manifest in other ways, e.g. schools having less funds to employ teachers or to buy new textbooks. Maybe they have to cancel the planned class trip. Maybe the village marching band loose their funding so they can't employ a conductor, and must close down. So you may see it not as money taken away, but as services and public offerings taken away. Nevertheless, you experience a loss. The total comes out as three thousand dollars per citizen, per trillion granted to "the economy".
A lot of people will agree, "It is a good idea to spend a trillion dollars to keep economy going". Far fewer will agree "Our six person family think it is a good idea to take eighteen thousand dollars from your household budget to keep economy going" - even though these are in fact saying the same thing.
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You're looking at not only what is readily seen, but also what is unseen, which is the foundation of all clear economic analysis.
Unfortunately, very few people do this. Politicians say "we're going to create jobs", hoping that no one thinks of the jobs that would have been created naturally, instead of in favored sectors, if taxpayers could have spent their money as they saw fit.
Or "we need to stimulate the economy", dragging consumption forward instead of saving (which translates into investing) for a rainy day, while simultaneously fooling businesses into thinking that actual demand exists when it is only transient and artificial.
There are countless other examples, but suffice it to say that most economic analysis, often from so-called professionals, is either superficial or outright lying to justify immoral practices.
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Amarnath S wrote: This is concerning:
"We should get used to news of this kind," said Associate Professor Volodymyr Bilotkach, a lecturer in air transport management at the Singapore Institute of Technology. "We'll see more airlines go under."
go under ?
- under water ?
- under ground ??
- under pants
pestilence [ pes-tl-uh ns ] noun
1. a deadly or virulent epidemic disease. especially bubonic plague.
2. something that is considered harmful, destructive, or evil.
Synonyms: pest, plague, CCP
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I'm pretty sure that going under means going out of business.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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Well it is an Australian airline, couldn't "Going under" be a marketing slogan?
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It's not just your countrymen. It's humans in general.
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