My dad kept taking mom’s large 12” x 24” heating pad, so we got him one, too. They used them for years past their 90’s.
That and a lap blanket, and you all should be much more comfortable.
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I hid the spare key to my car, on myself. I can't remember where I put it. I keep having dreams where I swear I know where I put it, only to get up and look and it's not there. Fack, I'm getting old. Every night I go asleep hoping to have that successful magical dream, but every morning it's pure annoyance.
You're just "getting old"; in order to be truly old you need to have forgotten that you no longer own a car.
I always do this , but was on a few road trips and grabbed it from the messy tangle of spares back in August.
In a good news update, right before I woke up this morning they appeared to me in a dream. Got up went to my reading glasses case, unzipped it, and voila! Brain revenge on brain! So happy. Now I can have more frivolous, not productive, dreams again.
Recently, the US Army has been getting on my nerves. Specifically, the tanks at Ft Hood doing target practice at 3AM. My new house is about 20 miles away, but apparently directly down range. Last night there must have been at least 30 deep booms loud enough to rattle windows and start dogs barking.
Yeah, I know, the sound of freedom. Shit, I’d hate to be on the receiving end of that if they were actually trying to hit me.
People who don’t ask questions, often for things that have implications that are critical or at least deeply inconvenient. If you don’t know a thing, ask google and if google doesn’t know, google somebody who might. And call them. And ask the question.
I'm into the waiting period for the 2 hour window when they say the cable guy/gal is going to be here. What annoys me is that I know exactly how this is going to end. I live in a place that has never had cable, yet they say they can provide this fast new cheap internet to my address. They sent me the cable box with instructions on how to plug it in and get started. I just fished around the 2 pages of paperwork to find the support number to schedule a tech to come out. Now, I have no idea how they are planning on hooking this box up. They have to run a line from somewhere. Is this going to take a D8 and helicopter? What I do know is that they will probably kill my dsl connection in the meantime and probably drill a bunch of holes in the wall, and are basically going to wreck my life for many days. They say I have to be here the whole time. I'll probably even have to wear a mask. I am not going to be able to get shit done. I'm already annoyed before I'm really annoyed.
It has been my repeated experience that getting mad about bad things that you anticipate will happen is rarely fruitful. You're probably right though.
But what if a miracle occurs?!?
My neighbor started mowing last night at 9pm. He’s got one of those zero turn riding mowers for his quarter acre suburban lot. He went over the whole yard 5-6x getting up leaves. And while he was dumping the leaves the mower loped in idle even louder. At 10pm he started lapping the driveway to get up leaves.
The noise ordinance kicks in at 10pm. So at 10:01, I’m crossing the street, shirtless and barefoot and fuming. Coward just drove to the backyard put the mower away and went inside.
It went exactly as expected, but the guy ran a new line, drilled through the wall, and set it up very efficiently.
It did. The guy was a contractor from Utah. Super nice guy, and a DJ too. I started following him on Twitch. And I'm experiencing the internet in 21st ways. It's like upgrading from dial up.
The key was actually in my reading glasses case. Probably a note to myself that, can't find something ---> better get glasses.
That's true until Century Link has fiber.
Then CL absolutely destroys Comcast.
I'm on a 1000Mb/s (1Gb/s) symmetrical (same speed up as down) connection for $65.00 per month, including all the fees, taxes, etc. Comcast is nowhere close to matching that. Tested connections are routinely 800+Mb/s throughput - and upstream is often faster than downstream.
[It's funny; It's now just as fast (or nearly so) over a wireguard [VPN tunnel] link to a remote network that also has GbE as it is to most of the devices on my local gigabit network.]
And Century Link fiber has been incredibly stable. Far, far, far more stable and reliable than Comcast. (As noted across a bunch of comcast/frontier/ziply/CL connections that I monitor.)
Comcast wants, I think, upward of $400 a month for that level of connection. Plus there's the "boat payment recovery fee," and a zillion other charges, so it's another 15% on top of the already big bill.
What annoys me the most?
Why the hell do we as a country allow the carrier to own the "road?"
Communities that own their own fiber infrastructure really kill it for their citizens. [See Sandy or Ashland OR]
The municipality owns the fiber and maintains it. If Comcast wants to sell their internet, they buy transit on the fiber loop. Everyone gets equal access.
Consumers win.
Comcast and other entrenched carriers cry.
And anything that makes the entrenched monopolists cry brings me joy. :)
Where I live, centurylink can't even provide the minimum speed for folks who qualify for lifeline to use it.
This is just my opinion, but I'd rather be at the mercy of CenturyLink (now Lumen, FFS) than Comcast.
Comcast is IMO, actively looking for any way to screw any customer for the maximum amount possible.
Century Link - yeah, they're big and uncaring. They're stupid and bumbling. But I'll take sloth and neglect over active malign intent, every single time.
One first hand example.
Had a client move a few months ago.
Comcast was called to verify that service existed in the new location. They were prompted multiple times to really double and triple check that they really DID have service in the new location. (Without going into too much detail - there were potential complications in the new location, and we wanted to be really, REALLY, sure we'd have service.) Comcast continuously verifies that "Yup, totally got service there. Here's what you'll get, here's the cost." We sign a contract.
We setup the new service to overlap the old by about a week. A few days prior to install, I try to contact Comcast to add some notes to the install ticket.
They can't find the install order.
4-6 hours of my time later, they finally find something.
Turns out they decided they couldn't provide service to the new location after all.
They'd known this for, as best I can tell, two weeks.
And, you ask, who'd they tell? No one outside Comcast, that's for sure.
So, my client who is going to move into this new location in a few days is now against the wall. They won't have internet or any phones. Nothing.
Turns out that Comcast only has fiber into that location, and they want the big bucks for a fiber install. So, instead of letting the client know and work out some details, they just cancel the install... And since no-one has the guts to tell the business customer, and take the heat, no one does.
It takes several days to get any answers about what our options are now...
For a 20Mb/s connection (barely better than DSL speeds) they want in excess of $300, and no matter how hard we push or how high we go, they refuse to do any better - never mind that they promised a connection that was 5x faster for less than half the price. (Oh, and to add insult to injury, it's a minimum 3 year contract, and it will take in excess of 30 days [perhaps way more] before they could even provide service, no matter how hard they try.)
So, tell me [better yet, this client of mine] how Comcast is getting its shit together.