That's cute.Eno wrote:GPU reaching 60ºC while idle, CPU near 45ºC. Breaks my heart.
My laptop's running at 60*C as I type at 4:58PM. My i3 was running at 45*C before the PSU blew up on Christmas Eve. An average temperature in Darwin, Australia.
That's cute.Eno wrote:GPU reaching 60ºC while idle, CPU near 45ºC. Breaks my heart.
I'd encourage you to blame the unions. I don't understand it, but they value paid holidays over wage increases. One of the very few instances of beneficial myopia.spl wrote:Businesses that are closed for extended periods during the holiday season.
If it's not a public holiday - it is a regular business day! If you want to take holidays yourself please ensure you hire staff to run the place in the mean time!
Moniker wrote:I'd encourage you to blame the unions. I don't understand it, but they value paid holidays over wage increases. One of the very few instances of beneficial myopia.spl wrote:Businesses that are closed for extended periods during the holiday season.
If it's not a public holiday - it is a regular business day! If you want to take holidays yourself please ensure you hire staff to run the place in the mean time!
Oh I so enjoyed waking up at 6 (minimal transportation service during holidays) to go to the office right after x-mas, while my boss and his friend managers went to spend the benefits of a year of our hard work to save the company from bankruptcy... in one of the most expensive ski resorts ever. Makes sense.BulletMagnet wrote:And on the other end you've got the McDonald's and Wal-Marts of the world who refuse to give most of their employees a day off for most anything, not only holidays but weather conditions, sickness, family emergencies, and so forth - and they still don't make enough to come within spitting distance of the middle class. Worse, the mindset is spreading.
Strikers1945guy wrote:"Do we....eat chicken balls?!"
I wonder about that at times.quash wrote:If Japan is so concerned about public health, why do the restrooms at train stations have no soap?
I think that's correct.hecheff wrote:I wonder about that at times.quash wrote:If Japan is so concerned about public health, why do the restrooms at train stations have no soap?
On the other hand, there may be some hidden culture thing involving people carrying personal supplies of soap around with them...?
When I was packing for an exchange program in Taiwan, I was advised to prepare for "Crouching Toilet, Hidden Paper." That advice served me well. And I totally didn't accidentally crap on my backpack during a bus trip and pretend nothing happened. And I totally didn't participate in the abduction and defilement of the program's chief asshole's favorite ballcap by pissing and shitting on it whilst drunk on cheap vodka, and then surreptitiously returning it, whereupon he wore it as if nothing happened.SuperGrafx wrote:I think that's correct.hecheff wrote:I wonder about that at times.quash wrote:If Japan is so concerned about public health, why do the restrooms at train stations have no soap?
On the other hand, there may be some hidden culture thing involving people carrying personal supplies of soap around with them...?
I have a book about "living abroad in Japan" and one of the first things it notes to bring (on your fact-finding trip) is your own package of tissues/toilet paper and soap since it's never seemingly in stock in the public restrooms.
BryanM wrote:You're trapped in a haunted house. There's a ghost. It wants to eat your friends and have sex with your cat. When forced to decide between the lives of your friends and the chastity of your kitty, you choose the cat.
I'm in the Philippines for vacation and bathrooms have a similar issue. At best (e.g. the ten million shopping malls in the Metro Manila area), you get soap, alongside toilet paper for paper towels and/or a crappy-quality hand dryer. (I'm surprised I saw a Mitsubishi-brand Dyson knockoff today, after so many terrible dryers.) At worst (e.g. restrooms at places of worship in the mountains) you don't even get soap.SuperGrafx wrote:I think that's correct.hecheff wrote:I wonder about that at times.quash wrote:If Japan is so concerned about public health, why do the restrooms at train stations have no soap?
On the other hand, there may be some hidden culture thing involving people carrying personal supplies of soap around with them...?
I have a book about "living abroad in Japan" and one of the first things it notes to bring (on your fact-finding trip) is your own package of tissues/toilet paper and soap since it's never seemingly in stock in the public restrooms.
Speaking of vacation and lewdness: Having nowhere to *ahem*. Which means if I develop any lewd thoughts, I get to hold them off until I get home about 5 days from now. (I've been here since Christmas.)Lord Satori wrote:When you have a sexual dream about an unwanted person (won't go into any further detail)
When I finished masturbating, for no reason the song "It's off to work we go" (or whatever the name is) from Snow White pops into my head.
Random boners.
BIL wrote: "Small sack, LOTS OF CUM" - Nikola Tesla
When the knockoff label gets misattributed by reversing the actual situation.gs68 wrote:(I'm surprised I saw a Mitsubishi-brand Dyson knockoff today, after so many terrible dryers.)
Strikers1945guy wrote:"Do we....eat chicken balls?!"
Oh, I'd love to buy from within Europe, if what I wanted was available there.Xyga wrote:Well it is meant to dissuade specific customers from buying stuff outside Europe after all.
Strikers1945guy wrote:"Do we....eat chicken balls?!"
Isn't it the other way around now, tho'?Xyga wrote:"OMG European commies ! Block their contact/IP and report to NSA ! NOW !" kind of treatment.
Nope, Orwell was wrong anyway, people BUY cameras and WANT to be seen/spied on.Ji-L87 wrote:Isn't it the other way around now, tho'?
OMG US GOODS! It must surely be bugged with NSA backdoors! NO NO NO!![]()
/off-topic
Strikers1945guy wrote:"Do we....eat chicken balls?!"
Well, okay, maybe that's not exactly the right message."Mining is a treadmill," said Dave McClain, account manager at Butterfly Labs. "You've got to be reinvesting money into more hardware and the latest hardware. It's like the lottery; the more tickets you buy, the better your chances."
This reminds me of my money-saving habits during the time I was living in Tokyo.drauch wrote:Neglected electronics. I work at an electronic recycling center. Some guys did a load from a local hospital, mostly CRTs, then dumped them outside in the snow. So many casualties.