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User: ejr

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  1. As once was all will be. on Spotify Data Shows How Music Preferences Change With Latitude · · Score: 1

    "Changes in latitude
    changes in attitude
    nothing remains quite the same
    through all of the islands and all of the highlands
    if we couldn't laugh we would all go insane." -- Jimmy Buffet, "Changes in Latitude, Changes in Attitude"

  2. Y'all are listening to the wrong stations. on Traditional Radio Faces a Grim Future, New Study Says (variety.com) · · Score: 1

    Community and college radio continues to introduce people to new music, old music they do not know, and all sorts of cool stuff. Listen to KALX, WWOZ, KFJC, and others. Online, mostly, given how few are left physically available. But as younger people grow older, they'll find less time to futz with their playlists and appreciate the DJs who guide them well.

  3. Also, there is an absurd amount of wasted space in urban environments, often the same areas that have convenient access only to "dollar stores" and gas stations.

    More growers locally means (ideally) more food available without having to spend hours on a bus. The next step is education. Many people quite honestly do not know the difference between cheezy poofs and actual food. They never have had easy access to actual food. It's different, so it is met with some trepidation. Here appealing to the elderly is HUGE. They remember eating from victory gardens. And they can lay on the guilt...

  4. Re:RMS needs to get over the GPL on LLVM & GCC Compiler Developers To Begin Collaborating · · Score: 2

    No, Chris Latner started clang while at UIUC. Apple hired him to continue.

    On the flip side, there would be *no* free Objective C compiler had gcc used a non-copyleft license. Apple (well, NeXT, now better considered Apple-in-exile) tried to run around the GNU GPL but failed. They were forced to release the source, leading to gobjc. Note that gobjc has not been able to keep up with Apple's Objective C and C++ changes *because* of Apple's switch to an LLVM-based system. Also, note that previous Apple animosity against the GPL was not entirely technical.

  5. Re:it breaks easily on Sony X505/SP Notebook Review · · Score: 1
    On the flip side, I recently sent in my Thinkpad T21 for service. The keyboard bevel broke within two weeks of receiving the laptop originally, but that wasn't why I sent it in. The screen has been accumulating dead pixels, the connector between the screen and the unit is loose, and the laptop won't boot unless it's squeezed the right way.

    IBM's first-line folks were fine. They sent out a box for my laptop immediately. But then the tech folks declared it to be "liquid spillage" and not under warrantee. I was told they would send me the photos proving it later that afternoon. Calling back a few days later, I was told they would send me the photos that afternoon. A week later, they would send me the photos that afternoon. A few days later... Finally I gave in (after many escalations) and had them return the laptop. This all took about a month.

    Since it was no longer under warrantee (the "liquid spillage" excuse), I took it apart myself. There was a nice glob of thermal grease in the keyboard connector that was not there when I sent it in. (I sometimes removed the keyboard to dust it. The manual detailing how is available on-line.) I had different memory modules installed. Same capacity, but now they had "certified used" stickers on them. I also found thermal grease on the motherboard in a few places, and some interesting fingerprints etched in the metal around the screw holes.

    I tightened some connectors, cleaned the board as best I could, and reassembled. The dead pixels are still there, but it boots reliably now and the screen connector doesn't go dead.

    And they'll still be sending me the images showing that it's liquid damage this afternoon. I no longer trust IBM's thinkpad support. If this were a commercial account, I would have gone through the sales rep, and they would have dealt with everything. But the personal support I encountered was definitely not trustworthy.

    End-user service is always a crap shoot. You may get great service, you may get lousy service, all from the same company. That's why businesses will pay more to go through sales reps. The sales rep will deal with it. Oh well.

    Jason