I like the generous portion of olives. Nothing worse than getting a Greek salad or something and only finding like 3 olives.
CountVon
Same for my father in law. If he were a US citizen he'd probably be bankrupt right now, or more likely just still be in pain because he couldn't afford the surgery in the first place.
It depends who you're comparing. For the average US or Canadian citizen, I'm sure you're correct. If you look at income levels I bet it's a different story. The poor and middle class (whatever's left of it) have to wait, the rich have the option of paying out of pocket. If I wanted to have a whole-body MRI scan done, I could get one next week for $3200. Wouldn't even need to be sick! Requires a referral, but you can "obtain one virtually from (their) physician partners" and you know their "physician partners," aren't going to turn away business.
As a Canadian, I'll be the first to say that our system isn't perfect. If you've got a chronic but not life-threatening condition, like a need for knee or hip surgery, you could spend a long time on a waiting list. There are certainly lots of affluent Canadians who opt to step out of that line to get treatment at private for-profit clinics, both domestically and abroad. There's always a shortage of something. Qualified doctors, nurses, family practitioners, CT or MRI machines, etc.
That being said, if you do have a life-threatening condition, the Canadian healthcare system can work pretty well. My step father had pneumonia Nov./Dec. last year, chest xray revealed something concerning beyond the pneumonia, by early January biopsies has been done, by February he'd started radiation, six or so weeks of that, then monitoring for a while and now he's in remission. Everything moved fast, because he had a time-critical condition. Total cost to my family: zero dollars (setting aside costs for gas, parking, snacks for stress-eating, etc.). I couldn't imagine a family going through the same situation in the US.
From https://www.githubstatus.com/ (emphasis mine):
We suspect the impact is due to a database infrastructure related change that we are working on rolling back.
If you fuck up the database, you fuck up errythang.
The issue is that I have a 4k monitor and my current card can barely handle my desktop, never mind a game.
Try running games at 1080p (1920 x 1080), which is exactly 1/4 of 4K UHD (3840 x 2160). Your graphics card will only need to do 25% of the work but you shouldn't get any resolution scaling blurriness because everything divides evenly. This isn't so much for your current card, which probably just can't keep up with newer titles. What you can do is look at 1080p performance of current cards, decide how much performance you need and how much you're willing to spend, and that'll narrow down the selection a lot.
Coming from a GTX 760, almost anything current gen or current gen minus 1 is going to be a massive upgrade. It's hard to recommend a specific card without some info on your budget. For example if you had a budget of $300 US I'd recommend an Nvidia RTX 4060 since it has the best 1080p performance within that budget, or alternately a Radeon RX 7600 if you'd prefer not Nvidia (e.g. if you're on Linux, the Radeon driver story is a bit better).
I've always felt that "have more babies but also fuck you for ever having sex" was a bit of wildly contradictory policy stance.
I bet those are insanely comfie.
Bet they wanted a Shapiro VP pick so bad. It would've been antisemitic space laser conspiracy theory bullshit 24/7 until the vote. Now all they've got is "how dare this man ensure school children have full bellies and necessary sanitary supplies every day."
They smell like plastic, metal, complex hydrocarbons, and death.
It's likely CentOS 7.9, which was released in Nov. 2020 and shipped with kernel version 3.10.0-1160. It's not completely ridiculous for a one year old POS systems to have a four year old OS. Design for those systems probably started a few years ago, when CentOS 7.9 was relatively recent. For an embedded system the bias would have been toward an established and mature OS, and CentOS 8.x was likely considered "too new" at the time they were speccing these systems. Remotely upgrading between major releases would not be advisable in an embedded system. The RHEL/CentOS in-place upgrade story is... not great. There was zero support for in-place upgrade until RHEL/CentOS 7, and it's still considered "at your own risk" (source).
I'd argue that Molyneux from the 80s and 90s was a great game designer. Populous, Theme Park and Dungeon Keeper were all critically praised at launch and sold well, and in all the sources I've seen he's credited as the main designer on those game. This was mostly pre-internet, so if he was over promising features in those games that hype wouldn't typically reach the game-buying public.
The rise of Internet game journalism is what really fueled the self-destruction of his legacy. Black and White was the first Molyneux game where I can recall seeing tons of prelaunch hype, with many of the hyped features absent from the finished product. Game journalists have consistently given Molyneux a platform, initially because of his early hits but later because he's reliable clickbait. They don't care that he's full of shit, they know it'll drive engagement, and negative engagement is just as good as positive for their bottom line.
Even with all the over promising and under delivering he's done since 2000, there are still plenty of people who love the Fable and Black and White series. I think if the man had ever learned to keep his mouth shut before features were locked, he might have a markedly different legacy. But he just couldn't do that, so now I keep a Polaroid of him pinned on my corkboard with "don't believe his lies" written on the bottom in permanent marker.