Unfortunately, Thunderbird is an incredibly buggy and sometimes inoperable application, in which long-term bugs never get fixed and frequently it fails to work correctly at all.
If only the developers would spend some serious time getting it working right, it would be awesome.
You could always donate. Seems that the Thunderbird developers have their hands full just chasing Firefox (mostly the same code base) and keeping it building.
Can be a tax is more accurate. I very occasionally gamble, well aware that I'm not going to win anything much, it can be fun and occasionally I come out a dollar or two ahead
Well it would be nice to have some non-biased studies. Judging by your rant, you could be a lot better informed along with most people. This is due to years of biased studies put out to push a pre-concieved answer, namely that drugs are bad. It's true, some drugs are killers. Aspirin killing thousands a year, Tylenol always being one of the top causes of death for young children, and a horrible way to die as well (total liver failure). Then there's the drugs that are unregulated and often tainted.
As someone born in Aug of 1928 that has never had an accident, I think this is unfair. I first got my divers license in 1942 when I was 14, I have never even gotten a speeding ticket. I know I'm a safer driver than millennials.
So you take the test and pass and continue driving until time to repeat the test. You're either still capable or not.
I'm not sure how revoking a dementia patient's license is going to help, it's not like they're going to know they aren't supposed to drive.
I've known a few people who lost their license due to dementia. None were so far gone that they didn't understand and most got rid of their cars. Here in BC, you start having to be retested at 70 or so depending when the license expires IIRC.
There were massive wars in Europe over which brand of Christianity was correct up until the 18th century and this included burning people alive, often on the flimsiest of evidence with torture used to extract confessions. Then there is the violence against Jews and Romi which, especially in the case of the Romi is still being perpetrated, and various forms of cultural and real genocide practiced by various Christians in the America's against the natives.
I thought right from the discovery there were people arguing that the albedo was high and Pluto was small though perhaps I'm mis-remembering as I can't find any references.
Really, because they were looking for a planet (something that was big enough to perturb Neptune's orbit), they found a planet. Even Uranus was briefly considered a comet as that is what Herschel was looking for.
It would still be Linux as that is what the kernel is. In theory the BSD user land should be a drop in replacement for most everything, in practice, the GNU stuff usually has extensions that may be being used and of course bash only scripts. Usually making stuff portable is easy, I've had patches accepted for portability, things like using = instead of == in scripts so [pdk]sh or ash is happy,
Can't most of the GNU tools be replaced by BSD tools along with rewriting some scripts to be portable? For many uses, I'd say X is the big one that is hard to replace. For other uses, it might be something like Apache.
I lived in a house where electricity came out of the tap, actually the shower head. Turned out to be a bad connection where the power came into the house, lose return line so all the power was going to earth through the pipes and the metal shower stalls drain was a better conductor then the water pipes. Luckily it was mostly a low voltage buzz rather then a killer shock.
Surprised it even started as that usually fucks up the neutral safety switch first. I had a stick shift come out of the transmission once, fun driving 20 miles stuck in first.
There's usually a switch to prevent starting in any gear besides P or N. Even manuals usually have a switch hooked up to the clutch pedal to prevent starting in gear. It's actually more common (or was) for that switch to screw up and prevent starting.
Actually the brakes are usually 2 systems as well. I lost my back brakes once, pedal went down a lot further but the truck stopped just about as well and after I crimped the rear brake line, I carefully drove home. Another time the idler pulley for the serpentine belt seized up as I was making a turn, if there had been traffic, I would have hit it as unexpected heavy steering meant swinging wide. Couldn't believe how hard that was to drive the last mile on a winding road home.
I'll add that with the foot activated parking brake, I'd hate to try to stop with it.
Even if he was forced to resign or impeached, the next President will pardon him, just like happened with Nixon. These people all stick together, shit after Trump leaves office, he'll be best friends with Hillary again, which isn't surprising as they're birds of a feather.
Orbit by itself doesn't matter that much, it is when combined with small object it may make a difference. Planet is a human invention without a real clear cut definition besides the original wandering object in the fixed sky or whatever it was whereas Moon is the name of the Earths satellite and satellite is simply an object orbiting another object, so Titan is a satellite of Neptune and Neptune is a Satellite of the Sun. As for the size thing, well at one point when asteroids were being discovered, it was decided that instead of all being planets, they were something else, otherwise we'd have so many planets as to be unmanageable. Same now with Pluto, which seems to be just another member of a class of lots of objects about the same size. We could expand the meaning of planet to include trans-Neptune objects as well as asteroids, but it is kind of like expanding the meaning of trees to include bushes.
On the other hand, I've had cheques rejected for minor typos, had a flurry of it happening at one point, figured it was a new person checking the cheques. Cashing other peoples cheques meanwhile never triggered anything, probably only if the other person complained would it matter. It's like how under common law you can use any name you like, as long as it isn't for fraudulent purposes.
We don't count the atmosphere of the Earth otherwise we'd be arguing where the atmosphere ends and therefore what the radius of the Earth is and Jupiter is mostly atmosphere with an unknown core. Same with Saturn.
Ceres may have an underground ocean, not that that means anything. Ceres shows signs of volcano-ism and has few craters which shows the surface has been reworked. And where do you get the idea that Ceres is evaporating any more then any planet that is close enough to the Sun for solar affects?
Most of your arguments would say that Mercury is not a planet.
It has been suggested that a remnant layer of liquid water (or muddy ocean) may have survived to the present under a layer of ice.[7][9] Measurements taken by Dawn confirm that Ceres is both differentiated and has a shape consistent with hydrostatic equilibrium,[10] which makes Ceres the smallest object confirmed to be in hydrostatic equilibrium, being 600 km smaller than and less than half the mass of Saturn's moon Rhea, the next smallest such object.
Well I must admit that I've never heard botany described as not science, especially because some botanists use genetics. I guess astrophysics isn't a thing because it is fuzzy between stars and brown dwarfs as well. English is just fuzzy at times.
Should be pointed out that SeaMonkey and Thunderbird share a lot of code to do with mail and newsgroups and are actually similar.
Unfortunately, Thunderbird is an incredibly buggy and sometimes inoperable application, in which long-term bugs never get fixed and frequently it fails to work correctly at all.
If only the developers would spend some serious time getting it working right, it would be awesome.
You could always donate. Seems that the Thunderbird developers have their hands full just chasing Firefox (mostly the same code base) and keeping it building.
Better comparison would be phones, computers or even slashdot, though slashdot at least is cheap.
Can be a tax is more accurate. I very occasionally gamble, well aware that I'm not going to win anything much, it can be fun and occasionally I come out a dollar or two ahead
Well it would be nice to have some non-biased studies. Judging by your rant, you could be a lot better informed along with most people. This is due to years of biased studies put out to push a pre-concieved answer, namely that drugs are bad.
It's true, some drugs are killers. Aspirin killing thousands a year, Tylenol always being one of the top causes of death for young children, and a horrible way to die as well (total liver failure). Then there's the drugs that are unregulated and often tainted.
As someone born in Aug of 1928 that has never had an accident, I think this is unfair. I first got my divers license in 1942 when I was 14, I have never even gotten a speeding ticket. I know I'm a safer driver than millennials.
So you take the test and pass and continue driving until time to repeat the test. You're either still capable or not.
I'm not sure how revoking a dementia patient's license is going to help, it's not like they're going to know they aren't supposed to drive.
I've known a few people who lost their license due to dementia. None were so far gone that they didn't understand and most got rid of their cars.
Here in BC, you start having to be retested at 70 or so depending when the license expires IIRC.
There were massive wars in Europe over which brand of Christianity was correct up until the 18th century and this included burning people alive, often on the flimsiest of evidence with torture used to extract confessions.
Then there is the violence against Jews and Romi which, especially in the case of the Romi is still being perpetrated, and various forms of cultural and real genocide practiced by various Christians in the America's against the natives.
I thought right from the discovery there were people arguing that the albedo was high and Pluto was small though perhaps I'm mis-remembering as I can't find any references.
Really, because they were looking for a planet (something that was big enough to perturb Neptune's orbit), they found a planet. Even Uranus was briefly considered a comet as that is what Herschel was looking for.
It would still be Linux as that is what the kernel is. In theory the BSD user land should be a drop in replacement for most everything, in practice, the GNU stuff usually has extensions that may be being used and of course bash only scripts.
Usually making stuff portable is easy, I've had patches accepted for portability, things like using = instead of == in scripts so [pdk]sh or ash is happy,
Of course the modern BSD license is compatible with the GPL.
Can't most of the GNU tools be replaced by BSD tools along with rewriting some scripts to be portable?
For many uses, I'd say X is the big one that is hard to replace. For other uses, it might be something like Apache.
I lived in a house where electricity came out of the tap, actually the shower head. Turned out to be a bad connection where the power came into the house, lose return line so all the power was going to earth through the pipes and the metal shower stalls drain was a better conductor then the water pipes.
Luckily it was mostly a low voltage buzz rather then a killer shock.
Surprised it even started as that usually fucks up the neutral safety switch first.
I had a stick shift come out of the transmission once, fun driving 20 miles stuck in first.
There's usually a switch to prevent starting in any gear besides P or N. Even manuals usually have a switch hooked up to the clutch pedal to prevent starting in gear.
It's actually more common (or was) for that switch to screw up and prevent starting.
How would a car with corroded brake lines or a rusty handbrake cable pass inspection?
By living somewhere where there are no inspections.
Actually the brakes are usually 2 systems as well. I lost my back brakes once, pedal went down a lot further but the truck stopped just about as well and after I crimped the rear brake line, I carefully drove home.
Another time the idler pulley for the serpentine belt seized up as I was making a turn, if there had been traffic, I would have hit it as unexpected heavy steering meant swinging wide. Couldn't believe how hard that was to drive the last mile on a winding road home.
I'll add that with the foot activated parking brake, I'd hate to try to stop with it.
Even if he was forced to resign or impeached, the next President will pardon him, just like happened with Nixon.
These people all stick together, shit after Trump leaves office, he'll be best friends with Hillary again, which isn't surprising as they're birds of a feather.
Orbit by itself doesn't matter that much, it is when combined with small object it may make a difference. Planet is a human invention without a real clear cut definition besides the original wandering object in the fixed sky or whatever it was whereas Moon is the name of the Earths satellite and satellite is simply an object orbiting another object, so Titan is a satellite of Neptune and Neptune is a Satellite of the Sun.
As for the size thing, well at one point when asteroids were being discovered, it was decided that instead of all being planets, they were something else, otherwise we'd have so many planets as to be unmanageable. Same now with Pluto, which seems to be just another member of a class of lots of objects about the same size. We could expand the meaning of planet to include trans-Neptune objects as well as asteroids, but it is kind of like expanding the meaning of trees to include bushes.
On the other hand, I've had cheques rejected for minor typos, had a flurry of it happening at one point, figured it was a new person checking the cheques.
Cashing other peoples cheques meanwhile never triggered anything, probably only if the other person complained would it matter. It's like how under common law you can use any name you like, as long as it isn't for fraudulent purposes.
We don't count the atmosphere of the Earth otherwise we'd be arguing where the atmosphere ends and therefore what the radius of the Earth is and Jupiter is mostly atmosphere with an unknown core. Same with Saturn.
Ceres may have an underground ocean, not that that means anything. Ceres shows signs of volcano-ism and has few craters which shows the surface has been reworked. And where do you get the idea that Ceres is evaporating any more then any planet that is close enough to the Sun for solar affects?
Most of your arguments would say that Mercury is not a planet.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
And also from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Well I must admit that I've never heard botany described as not science, especially because some botanists use genetics.
I guess astrophysics isn't a thing because it is fuzzy between stars and brown dwarfs as well. English is just fuzzy at times.
The AC posted what I would have.
Not really, more like saying a plant is a shrub rather then a tree based on its size and number of stems. It's fuzzy.