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Re: still waiting

 

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I’m still feeling vague guilt about the price of my 16in MacBook Pro but, as Harvey always says to me, “You can’t take it with you”!! ? :D
Best
Susan

On 15 Jul 2021, at 07:19, Judith Hall <glenit,dol@...> wrote:

Month has passed since I ordered iPad. Rang Apple this morning checking on how things were going as theres no progress beyond "processing" on the Apple site and my husband was saying perhaps I should vancel the order....but then I'd be on the end of the queue again. :-) ?But girl assures me it is on track -- and remarked I had ordered the most popular model the iPad Pro.

So we wait ..... they haven't taken the money out anyway....that'll be a clue if the money suddenly zaps out of the account :-)?


Jude


Re: The unexplainables

 

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:D
I survived because I did not understand it at all! ?
Best
Susan


On 15 Jul 2021, at 10:53, zuiko <ftog@...> wrote:

Oh dear! ?I’m really sorry to disappoint you, John, but my brain started boiling almost in the first sentence . . . ;-)

Chris

On 15 Jul 2021, at 06:05, John Miller via <johnmiller051118@...> wrote:

I did think think Chris would get 10 to 25 & 10 to 50instantly, because he is such a skilled pilot, engineer & scientist. But here’s the thing, I’m sure Chris Harvey have heard of the Youngs slit experiment were several photons/electrons demonstrate a wave like interference pattern. BUT you send one photon through at a time and you still get the interference pattern. How does the single photon, know the other slit is there???
An absolutely brilliant Northern Irish Physicist, John Bell, theorised what Einstein, Podolsky, Rosen called “spooky action at a distance”??was a thought experiment, which Einstein didn’t like: “I don’t believe God throws dice!”
But a brilliant French Physicist, Alain Aspect showed by experiment this was TRUE?
Two particles can interact instantaneously, faster than the speed of light, but they can’t carry information. How inexplicable is that?
I started out doing quantum mechanics, before I turned to making new medicines for mankind
John



Re: Can Boris Johnson Bridge The Gap Between The Tories And The England Team?

 

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Our MP, Simon Jupp, is also a Tory yes-man. ?So depressing.
Best
Susan\

On 15 Jul 2021, at 06:48, zuiko <ftog@...> wrote:

Yes. ?And in my less incisive way, Johnson is a seriously useless twat, dangerously useless for the UK.

Furthermore, the Tories, for having elected His Prime Uselessness to be their leader are almost all equally useless. ?I met several of the Tories about eight years ago when I attended a graduation dinner for the Armed Forces Parliamentary Scheme in the Speaker’s House (in one of the large towers of the Palace of Westminster). ?I thought them boorish, over-bearing and arrogant (they were merely there for the do, I thought, not to graduate or anything useful); the Duke of Edinburgh was the Presenting Officer and was wonderful.

I have a MP who votes with the Government, come what may, it seems. ?He therefore is utterly useless as a tool for improving the UK’s standing in world from the depths that she has plumbed.

Chris

Desperate in Dorset . . .

On 15 Jul 21, at 00:19, John Miller via <johnmiller051118@...> wrote:

Not sure I remember how I came across this site. Huffpost seems very incisive

Begin forwarded message:

From: Paul Waugh <info@...>
Subject: Can Boris Johnson Bridge The Gap Between The Tories And The England Team?
Date: 14 July 2021 at 23:16:08 BST
Reply-To: waugh.zone@...

Alternate text
By Paul Waugh. HuffPost UK. Wednesday July 14
First Up
??
Mind the gap
It was Wednesday, just after noon and, in an imposing building overlooking the Thames in Westminster, the questions on football and racism were coming thick and fast.?

But the venue was not the House of Commons and the speaker was not the prime minister. In the fortified bowels of MI5’s Thames House HQ, director general (aka the ‘DG’) Ken McCallum was answering queries from the media, including yours truly.?

Whereas PMQs thrives off the bearpit jeers and cheers, DGQs is an altogether more sober affair, befitting its annual rather than weekly schedule. Yet when McCallum was asked about the problems of online extremism and the impact on young black men in the national team, he sounded more eloquent than many politicians.

At almost exactly the same moment that Boris Johnson was squirming under Keir Starmer’s prosecutorial glare, the domestic spymaster was unambiguously praising the England football team for their conduct over the past few weeks.

And he explicitly compared his own behind-the-scenes team with the one that performed on Europe’s biggest stage last weekend. “As I watched the penalty shootout on Sunday night,” he said, “I was very aware that I’ve got experience, MI5 has got experience, of watching capable, brave young people of all races, giving their all for their country.”

He went on to say that racism was strongly associated with extreme right wing terror groups whose activity has in recent years become a daily, significant part of his agency’s work. And he clearly meant it when he declared: “I’m proud of many of the people in MI5 today, working to deal with the terrorist threat that is fuelled in important ways by toxic racism”.

Even the most determined culture warrior would find it difficult to argue that McCallum, the youngest DG in the agency’s history, is some kind of “woke” Marxist. The Security Service, just like the England football team, benefits from diversity in a very practical sense as well as a symbolic sense. Looking like the nation it serves is a necessity, not ‘PC gone mad’.

But the contrast between the ease with which McCallum spoke about race, and the discomfort of the PM on the same topic just a few hundred yards away, could not have been more stark.?

As Starmer marshalled the evidence of senior ministers’ mixed messaging on booing players who ‘take the knee’, Johnson could tell his usual “vaccines-vaccillation-remoaner” distraction technique wouldn't work.

With Priti Patel having said booing the team was “a choice”, with No10 having said the PM “fully respects” the right of those booing to “make their feelings known”, even the later U-turn was too late to use as a defence. The real problem was that Johnson resembled the wonky trolley of Dominic Cummings’ image.

Drawing a culture war dividing line only works if you don’t keep hopscotching over it yourself. Put another way, “wedge” issues (as the Americans call them) are a bit pointless if they end up giving the instigator a political wedgie (as we British would call it). If they noticed at all, the minority of voters who think booing is ok may have been simply been confused by the PM’s shifting stance.

He did have one concrete policy announcement in his back pocket, namely extending football ground banning orders to be triggered by online as well as offline offences. Yet even that welcome development was obscured by the bigger row over the gulf between the Tory party and the England team.

And when a Tory MP heckled that footballer Tyrone Mings was a “Labour party member” they managed to undermine rather than help the PM’s case (“I do not want to engage in a political culture war of any kind”). Aside from anything else, failing to praise working class black and white kids who go on to become self-made millionaires sounds a strangely un-Tory thing to do.

With key ministers attacking footballers for “gesture politics”, why would any player want to take part in the real gesture politics of visiting No.10 in future? If the whole booing issue and taking the knee issue had not been weaponised by some ministers, Johnson could even have said his own cabinet team mirrored the diversity of the England team and was stronger as a result.

Perhaps the most revealing remark of the week however came not in PMQs but in Tory backbencher Natalie Elphicke’s private message to colleagues: “They lost - would it be ungenerous to suggest Rashford should have spent more time perfecting his game and less time playing politics."

Note that Elphicke didn’t say “we lost”, she said “they lost”. Despite her subsequent apology, that word “they” was possibly as damaging to the Tory brand as any explicit racist epithet could have been. It exposed a gap between some in her party and the national team in a brutal fashion, just when any normal politician would want to celebrate their achievement.

It’s that gap, which is implicitly also a gap between a party and the public, that worries some Conservatives dismayed by the culture war rhetoric. It’s also why any future visit to No.10 of the England team (to promote our World Cup bid, for example) is now freighted with tension. At least they know they'll get a warmer reception down the road in MI5.

?

On The Record
“Hate will never win. To all the young people who have received similar abuse, hold your heads up high and keep chasing the dream.”

England footballer?Jadon Sancho?

?

Cheat Sheet
Boris Johnson will promise on Thursday that the government will not make the "rich parts" of the UK poorer as it pursues its "levelling up" programme.

The UK has reported 42,302 new coronavirus cases and 49 more deaths in the latest 24-hour period, the highest figures since January.

Six Labour metro mayors signalled they wanted passengers to keep wearing masks from Monday.

MPs who refuse to wear a face mask should be banned from the Commons chamber, a group of unions has said.

Green Party co-leader Sian Berry has announced she will stand down this autumn, blaming "inconsistency" among party figures over transgender rights.

?

What I'm Reading
?- Martin Kettle
Got A Tip?
Send tips, stories, quotes, pics, plugs or gossip to?waugh.zone@....?
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Each week, the HuffPost UK Politics team unpack the biggest stories from Westminster and beyond. Search for?wherever you listen to podcasts and subscribe.
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Re: Hi

 

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John dear, some of your adventures, even if only by proxy, seem to me to be better not experienced! ?;)
Best
Susan


On 14 Jul 2021, at 13:55, John Miller via <johnmiller051118@...> wrote:

Not sure if I told you this, but I had A very dirty 1L round bottommed flask. I tried everything on it!?,?. Then I got bleach and sulphuric acid. Well it sat their a while, & I put my hand against it, to see if it was getting warm, but it was cool. 5 Seconds later it EXPLODED!. It was a good job the toilet was 100 yds away. I didn’t stop shaking until I’d downed a litre bottle of Jack Daniels. The flask was BLOODY CLEAN! Albeit at the 6 corners of the fume cupboard!
In case you think I’m making it up, one of my Professors, lost is left arm to Fluorine Chemistry:

Darryl D Desmarteau?Clemson

Still played golf better than I ever could & drive Raleigh Cars, with a Prosthesis
Professor Percy had a Fluorine fire at Birmingham University. Well what do you put it out with, water? Forms hydrofluoric acid. Just let it burn itself out with a concrete fire.
The only thing I can think of worse is Chernobyl!
John


Re: Flight simulator

 

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Ah, thanks for that, Chris. ?So what’s my excuse now…? ?Possibly that some stuff I like won’t run on it? ?At least, if I succumb, it will stop the nagging, if only temporarily.
Best
Susan


On 14 Jul 2021, at 07:33, zuiko <ftog@...> wrote:

I don’t have a problem with CCC and Big Sur, Susan. ?I use CCC three times a week to supplement my Time Machine backups – three different disks have CCC backups of my photos.

Chris

On 13 Jul 21, at 23:00, Purler <susan.platter@...> wrote:

I’m fending off Big Sur, since I read that Carbon Copy Cloner doesn’t like it. Maybe it will be more welcome later on.
Best
Susan



Re: Flight simulator

 

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I’m convinced these updates are out to get me! ?:D
Best
Susan\

On 13 Jul 2021, at 23:51, Judith Hall <glenidol@...> wrote:

I’ve been resisting too but when I get new M1 iPad in my clutches might get hard to resist Big Sur - but will see. You always have to do a bit of research on what works what doesn’t. Seem to lose something or everything every time they make these moves. But trying to keep up :-)

Jude


On 14 Jul 2021, at 8:02 am, Purler <susan.platter@...> wrote:

?I’m looking at buying The Sinking City for my Windows laptop, as it’s a Steam game with, apparently, a strong HP Lovecraft flavour and is on special offer for a couple of days more. ?
Best
Susan


On 13 Jul 2021, at 16:11, John Miller via <johnmiller051118@...> wrote:

Oh, what was the name of the game please?

On 13 Jul 2021, at 16:10, John Miller via??<johnmiller051118@...> wrote:

In the words of “Hong Kong Phooey” Could be (Microsoft)
They say Monterrey (coming out Autumn) should be compatible with my iMac Pro, but I figure I’ll let someone else do the gamma testing. There have been a helluva lot of not just Dr’s, but Professors questioning the wisdom of July19th. I’m going out once a week ( at most) with a mask. Depending on how the figures go maybe NBC. We’ll know in 4-6 weeks.
Had 3 seizures on Tuesday 6th, so the clock starts again until I can drive.
Regards John

On 13 Jul 2021, at 15:56, zuiko <ftog@...> wrote:

Hi John

I don’t have it, but isn’t it Microsoft?

Big Sur should be fully compatible with Intel Macs, and I’m not looking forward to the whole transition again. ?I remember that Power PC to Intel was a bit of a pain . . .

Cheers

Chris

On 13 Jul 2021, at 15:00, John Miller via??<johnmiller051118@...> wrote:

Dear Chris,
When my Mac crashed I had backed up alien isolation, Tyranny Gold & my 3D Human anatomy atlas. I hadn’t backed up the flight simulator. Could you tell me the supplier again, so (hopefully) I can get it back.
I don’t know why it crashed, maybe because I’ve got an Intel based processor & Big Sur is a halfway house between Intel & Apple’s M1 chips
John






Re: Hi

 

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I find that I can’t always get off to sleep quickly enough, so it’s as well we are retired and don’t need to shoot off to work at 5.30 am or something equally unearthly. ?In the last few days, I’ve been bitten or stung in several places by I don’t know what and this results in horribly sleep-disturbing itching. ?Ho-hum….
Best
Susan


On 14 Jul 2021, at 07:37, zuiko <ftog@...> wrote:

Well done, Jude, both physically and intellectually :-)

I would try to improve your sleep, though. ?I treasure my sleep as to lose it increases my chances of losing my brain function in some way in later life.

“In later life”! ?I’m 67 now and still writing as if I were younger . . . :-)

Chris

On 14 Jul 21, at 00:19, Judith Hall <glenidol@...> wrote:

I don’t know about brilliant. Wasn’t a brilliant experience for me ?at the time. ?But I went from first time ever Grand Mal seizure (1am in sleep) late in life to where I am now - and recently had carotid surgery without incident. I had two seizures in 2 weeks in that initial incident - both really serious.?

Two ambulances, paramedic, and first responders turned up each time. Meantime my husband had to get me on the floor and do CPR till they arrived and we live in the bush. I frightened everybody except me.?

I told my neurologist when I finally got to him that I knew it sounded odd but I had determined I was not going to worry and he said not odd but that was good. So I embraced what he had to say and followed instructions and it’s worked for me pleased to say.?

But the meds in between were soul destroying prescribed by a random neuro at hospital using out of the ark knowledge frankly. And on discharge took little interest in my case. So you learn quick you have to do battle for yourself.?

I shall find my neurologist’s YouTube chats about the importance of sleep for John ?- I’ve had the lectures about sleep ??

My sleep has been rather disturbed following surgery but I fit sleep in where I can and I don’t worry about when and I’m getting myself back to a better pattern. I just float over it all and do my best. Can’t be rigid about it. Attitude is half the battle.?

I set out to teach myself something new computer wise daily and keep the mind busy - hence the new iPad coming and I might go do a course.?

Just did a great set of slides for an important conference in Windsor (uk) that went well. Was also being shown USA. Chairman of the conference came up to friend who presented that set and said her presentation was far better than his :-) I do laugh at myself sometimes.?


Jude


On 14 Jul 2021, at 7:58 am, Purler <susan.platter@...> wrote:

?Ye gods, Jude, that is so brilliant that you can really tell it like it is to John and encourage him. ?I do hope he is in a state to take notice.
Best
Susan


On 11 Jul 2021, at 08:34, Judith Hall <glenidol@...> wrote:

From my limited experience John I would say you are not on the right path.?

I found initially I was prescribed 1500 mg of absolutely ghastly med, and then it got changed for an equally ghastly med, and then for just as ghastly med. I’m normally a bright and cheerful optimistic person and I went from that to a total weeping mess not able to get out of bed or off the lounge chair - I wept from one end of the day to the end. My husband would confirm the state I was in. I ?felt pretty desperate and I talked about ditching the meds altogether as it was worse than the seizure in my opinion.?

What I did discover is under the health system here you have to go through all the cheap crap meds before they give you the decent stuff which is more expensive.

I approached my GP and said get me the best neurologist in town because I cannot and will not go on like this.?
Scans had showed nothing at all. Didn’t think they would frankly.

But GP got me in front of a good man and he was totally aghast at what had been done to me. ?I had all the testing at his office — you know stuff stuck all over my head and strobe lighting and all the things they do….. nothing. ?Could not reproduce the nocturnal seizure whatsoever.

So I ended up on a child’s dose of Keppra - couldn’t drive for 18 months (thats the law here) and my neuro said he appreciated that I hadn’t hassled him to give me clearance to drive - and when I could I bought myself the red Alfa on the premise if I was back driving I should drive something that tickled my fancy.

Now I know not every case is the same and there’s lots of variables. But you need to get in front of a decent neuro who knows what he’s doing and have the meds reassessed before they kill you. ?

One of the top footballers here Wally Lewis when he retired and went into TV commentary started having seizures to the point he couldn’t work and they did that procedure where they put needles into the trouble spots in the brain and zapped them with laser and he’s been as right as rain ever since. ?Might be worth asking the questions of the right neuro.?

?I still take the meds as a precaution and at last appointment in February he said he doesn’t want to see me for two years and as far as he’s concerned I’m cured.?


Jude?








On 11 Jul 2021, at 5:06 am, John Miller via??<johnmiller051118@...> wrote:

Hi,
I’m not sure entirely what to say. I had 3 seizures, 6th July 04.30. That was the best (?). I had an aura of 3-4 seconds made it to my bed. Gripped my bed like it was SUSIE!. 0930, no aura. My left leg would have kicked every male here into orbit. Then 10 minutes later another one.
Took me to local hospital. I was prescribed anti-epileptic medicine at set hours, then as “I needed it. Nurse said “well I’ll end my shift in 30 minutes, so who gives a damn. Well it was hopeless, got dressed, matron helped me. Next day orderly said you can’t stay in bed. So with 3 Degrees & an NIH Postdoctoral fellowship. I was left to look at 4 square walls for 48 hours.?
At this stage I gave up: “I’ve had enough, I just want go. Where I do not care










Things definitely going in the right direction :-)

 

I don't know if my phone calls to Apple about progress on my order which was more than a month ago has paid off .....not only has online morphed to shipping to the store (along with Apple Asia docket in email) ....but its now morphed from 27th to 20th !! So I might be picking up my new iPad Pro on Monday. I shall have to get husband to check if they have zapped the money out of the Visa account.?

Exciting. Ooooh I have an unboxing come up. Won't smell like a new Mac though. Love the smell of unboxing a new Mac.


:-) ?Happy Jude


Hi

 

I guess it was a strange place to find this quote. A Dennis Wheatley novel. The Devil Rides out.
“”Only those who love without desire, will be given strength in the darkest hour”
Love is the strongest force. Just wish I could make new medicines as was my vocation
John


Re: Indestructible knowledge

 

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Nasty nasty people! ?That must have been very traumatic for the chap.

Chris

On 16 Jul 2021, at 15:16, John Miller via <johnmiller051118@...> wrote:

One of my colleagues son was in the SAS in the former youglslavia. He was tort by ?by seeing children torturted to death. But what got me was an SAS bird spotter who saw a carrion vulture circling. Then he realised the birds where going after two men crucified men on a bard dawn.
I was watching “Behind Enemy lines”. True sto9ry


Indestructible knowledge

 

One of my colleagues son was in the SAS in the former youglslavia. He was tort by by seeing children torturted to death. But what got me was an SAS bird spotter who saw a carrion vulture circling. Then he realised the birds where going after two men crucified men on a bard dawn.
I was watching “Behind Enemy lines”. True sto9ry


There are some truly great views there

 

I’ll have to get some eyesores of where I live. Still I’m reasonably happy. The drug dealers are a fair bit away. It provides work for the police
John


Re: The struggle is real :-)

 

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Yes, we feel very fortunate to have found this place. ?My wife’s father was born and brought up in the town of Beaminster, a few miles south, as was his father before him. ?There’s a hill, Beaminster Down between Corscombe and Beaminster, which divides the weather many times in year, it appears. ?We’ve been here only since March, but apparently the village is quite frequently snowbound; I have a 4x4 (well, a BMW X3 ;-)) so we should be OK, even though the lanes to the south are quite steep. Our house is on the hillside so there’s a downslope to negotiate as well in slippery weather, at the bottom of which is the local pub (The Fox, owned by celeb chef Mark Hix), but then it’s level ground to Yeovil in the north. ?We’re not out in the bundu as you are, but it’s very pleasantly secluded.

We feel for those poor people in the Eifel and Rhineland of Germany. ?It can’t have been many years ago that much of central Europe was under water; we’re going to have to be ready for these extreme weather events.

Chris



On 16 Jul 21, at 04:29, Judith Hall <glenidol@...> wrote:

Lovely view. Does the soul good doesn't it. ?I like an outlook myself which is why the search for a place to move to has been never ending and difficult because I am used to 360deg view and lots of trees and scenery and wildlife. How did you fare in winter as regards snow etc. Were roads trafficable in bad weather. ?We get cut off when our bridges go under at creek crossing occasionally but those of us who have lived here a while always have a plan B and provisions.?

Jude


Re: The struggle is real :-)

 

Lovely view. Does the soul good doesn't it. ?I like an outlook myself which is why the search for a place to move to has been never ending and difficult because I am used to 360deg view and lots of trees and scenery and wildlife. How did you fare in winter as regards snow etc. Were roads trafficable in bad weather. ?We get cut off when our bridges go under at creek crossing occasionally but those of us who have lived here a while always have a plan B and provisions.?

Jude


Re: still waiting

 

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The Covid thing is just making things frustratingly difficult + Brexit here. Thank Goodness we have the A-Team on the job! As Boris would say: “I love it when a plan comes together!"

On 15 Jul 2021, at 11:19, Judith Hall <glenidol@...> wrote:

My husband was urging me to cancel — and the girl at Apple said she realised how long I had been waiting — but I think I will stick it out — but beyond the 27th ?? ?Thinking about it.?


Jude

On 15 Jul 2021, at 4:39 pm, zuiko <ftog@...> wrote:

It’s not like Apple to over-promise and under-deliver. I hope that it comes soon, Jude.?

Chris

C M I Barker |?Corscombe | GB


On 15 Jul 2021, at 07:19, Judith Hall <glenidol@...> wrote:

?Month has passed since I ordered iPad. Rang Apple this morning checking on how things were going as theres no progress beyond "processing" on the Apple site and my husband was saying perhaps I should vancel the order....but then I'd be on the end of the queue again. :-) ?But girl assures me it is on track -- and remarked I had ordered the most popular model the iPad Pro.

So we wait ..... they haven't taken the money out anyway....that'll be a clue if the money suddenly zaps out of the account :-)?


Jude



Re: The struggle is real :-)

 

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Yes, people in the UK, particularly down south, have been desperate to buy and some are sight unseen as well. ?We paid over the odds for this house, but we weren’t going to find anywhere at a reasonable price in the frantic rush for houses – the Stamp Duty “holiday” had a lot to do with it as well.

In fact we had only two twenty-minute visits, in the evening and the morning, when it wasn’t fully light, before we had to head home. ?So when we arrived to move in it was a real pleasure to see the views: we can see all the way to the Mendips from this location in West Dorset.

Here’s a view towards our village at sunrise, looking from Beaminster Down:??— click on the small thumbnail lower down. ?My car is halfway up the lane while I flew a drone for the view.

The photo attached is the view north towards Yeovil and the Mendips further north.

Chris



On 15 Jul 2021, at 14:31, Judith Hall <glenidol@...> wrote:

It is very beautiful here but the mountains work against us an difficult terrain. The joke up here was roads just wound round trees and cart tracks.?

?Down the road right opposite the Telstra rim cabinet one family there get a download speed of 2…. I’m a couple of klms further and I get 15 or even a tick better if I’m lucky. I have the reputation of being “you know that woman with the marvellous speeds on Cedar Ck Rd” :-)

When we came here there was a box on the wall and we turned a handle and someone answered up at the exchange on Telegraph Hill as the locals call it - and we had two digit oh numbers. Internet was non existant back then.?

But you’re right these days it’s becoming a question you have to ask if it’s important to you. Newer residents obviously never asked or were promised something that never happened. Unfortunately in covid people are buying out in these areas even sight unseen. ??♀??

Jude

<image.jpg>


On 15 Jul 2021, at 10:09 pm, zuiko <ftog@...> wrote:

?Not good! ?One of our criteria when we were looking for houses in Dorset last autumn and winter was good Internet. ?The house that we’ve bought has the fibre cabinet about 30m away, so my Internet is as fast as it can get in most parts of the UK – 73 Mbps download, 20Mbps upload.

But that looks like a beautiful part of the world.

Chris

On 15 Jul 2021, at 12:45, Judith Hall <glenidol@...> wrote:

Tonight Current Affair ?Chnl 9 program featured locals talking about our struggles re phone and internet in our area...... it gives you a look at the sort of area we live in.

I had a part as rent a crowd last week on another channel and got spotted and one of our local club members tracked me down via good old white pages to ask me some Mac questions he wanted sorted :-)?



Re: The struggle is real :-)

 

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It is very beautiful here but the mountains work against us an difficult terrain. The joke up here was roads just wound round trees and cart tracks.?

?Down the road right opposite the Telstra rim cabinet one family there get a download speed of 2…. I’m a couple of klms further and I get 15 or even a tick better if I’m lucky. I have the reputation of being “you know that woman with the marvellous speeds on Cedar Ck Rd” :-)

When we came here there was a box on the wall and we turned a handle and someone answered up at the exchange on Telegraph Hill as the locals call it - and we had two digit oh numbers. Internet was non existant back then.?

But you’re right these days it’s becoming a question you have to ask if it’s important to you. Newer residents obviously never asked or were promised something that never happened. Unfortunately in covid people are buying out in these areas even sight unseen. ??♀??

Jude




On 15 Jul 2021, at 10:09 pm, zuiko <ftog@...> wrote:

?Not good! ?One of our criteria when we were looking for houses in Dorset last autumn and winter was good Internet. ?The house that we’ve bought has the fibre cabinet about 30m away, so my Internet is as fast as it can get in most parts of the UK – 73 Mbps download, 20Mbps upload.

But that looks like a beautiful part of the world.

Chris

On 15 Jul 2021, at 12:45, Judith Hall <glenidol@...> wrote:

Tonight Current Affair ?Chnl 9 program featured locals talking about our struggles re phone and internet in our area...... it gives you a look at the sort of area we live in.

I had a part as rent a crowd last week on another channel and got spotted and one of our local club members tracked me down via good old white pages to ask me some Mac questions he wanted sorted :-)?


Re: The struggle is real :-)

 

开云体育

Not good! ?One of our criteria when we were looking for houses in Dorset last autumn and winter was good Internet. ?The house that we’ve bought has the fibre cabinet about 30m away, so my Internet is as fast as it can get in most parts of the UK – 73 Mbps download, 20Mbps upload.

But that looks like a beautiful part of the world.

Chris

On 15 Jul 2021, at 12:45, Judith Hall <glenidol@...> wrote:

Tonight Current Affair ?Chnl 9 program featured locals talking about our struggles re phone and internet in our area...... it gives you a look at the sort of area we live in.

I had a part as rent a crowd last week on another channel and got spotted and one of our local club members tracked me down via good old white pages to ask me some Mac questions he wanted sorted :-)?


The struggle is real :-)

 

Tonight Current Affair ?Chnl 9 program featured locals talking about our struggles re phone and internet in our area...... it gives you a look at the sort of area we live in.

I had a part as rent a crowd last week on another channel and got spotted and one of our local club members tracked me down via good old white pages to ask me some Mac questions he wanted sorted :-)?

Jude


Re: The unexplainables

 

开云体育

Chris, we love one another. Thats what gives us strength. Always keep that in mind

On 15 Jul 2021, at 10:53, zuiko <ftog@...> wrote:

Oh dear! ?I’m really sorry to disappoint you, John, but my brain started boiling almost in the first sentence . . . ;-)

Chris

On 15 Jul 2021, at 06:05, John Miller via <johnmiller051118@...> wrote:

I did think think Chris would get 10 to 25 & 10 to 50instantly, because he is such a skilled pilot, engineer & scientist. But here’s the thing, I’m sure Chris Harvey have heard of the Youngs slit experiment were several photons/electrons demonstrate a wave like interference pattern. BUT you send one photon through at a time and you still get the interference pattern. How does the single photon, know the other slit is there???
An absolutely brilliant Northern Irish Physicist, John Bell, theorised what Einstein, Podolsky, Rosen called “spooky action at a distance”??was a thought experiment, which Einstein didn’t like: “I don’t believe God throws dice!”
But a brilliant French Physicist, Alain Aspect showed by experiment this was TRUE?
Two particles can interact instantaneously, faster than the speed of light, but they can’t carry information. How inexplicable is that?
I started out doing quantum mechanics, before I turned to making new medicines for mankind
John