One of the side effects of shopping hungry: I bought a steak for the first time in next to forever.
Willow of course just wished she could have my food instead of waiting for her own food, lol
An orange in an apple orchard
One of the side effects of shopping hungry: I bought a steak for the first time in next to forever.
Willow of course just wished she could have my food instead of waiting for her own food, lol
Faced with the clock telling me that I should cook dinner, and a disposition that feels more like going Barny Gumble on an Espresso machine: I opted for a plot involving fried rice.
The dogs of course are always interested in food: but they love their extra special treat even more.
I find it interesting how readily Misty manages to find such napping accommodations on her own.
Willow, whose aptitude for reshaping her environment in the name of comfy is only exceeded by humans, of course plots down on top.
Various sad and comical things.
Decided to try an old SSD in my spare enclosure. But I found while my Linux machine blows away just fine on I/O performance: my NT partition maxes out at about 30 MB/s on Crystal Disk Mark and 11 MB/s on Windows time.
In fact every fracken’ thing I plug into my USB 3.0 port maxes out at that speed.
So decided to do a little poking around. My NT install comes from Microsoft, not from Dell, so there’s a minimal of their things tacked on. Looking for updated drivers, I was kind of just glad to see W10 well represented given the age of my Latitude.
Found a BIOS update and dared to do it. Going from A00 to A20 (2018) was a lot of versions.A001 I think was dated 2012, and the oldest available. Mostly it’s fixes and security updates. But low and behold upgrading my BIOS a terrifying number of versions forward: my USB 3.0 is working right.
That is to say, Crystal Disk Mark basically jumps from ~30 MB/s to 250 MB/s, and Explorer reports much more appropriate speeds itself.
Amusing to me, one of the features I kind of missed was the option of Secure Boot. Which was added in one of the many updates. Ironically, a cyber security report from the NSA actually has better descriptions of the new UEFI settings on my system than Googling them ^_^.
While the timing worked out well, I had to go pick up Misty’s prescription: so may as well do the shopping. I do think that the photos show the dangers of being so hungry you’re ready to drop, and finding yourself in the grocery store. Something like that, yadda, yadda.
The salad kit was probably a mistake, but speed was essential. The fried chicken will also last three or four meals if I have filler. Not to mention it’s shareable with the dogs.
Typically I’m too cheap to buy parfaits at the grocery store, and rarely have enough fresh fruit to make one. On sale for $2, I said screw it.
When I think back over the past fifteen years and the various systems I’ve used, I think a table of Bluetooth problems would look like this:
While I tend to take an easy going attitude, I have to admit there are days when I feel like Deadpool with only twelve bullets left.
Especially that part at the end.
Sometimes it’s hard to gauge whether he’ll hath frozen over a few more degrees, or if I should be hopeful.
Crunchyroll’s Fire TV app has been upgraded to “2.0”, making an experience more like what their iPad app has been like for quite a while now. Even more so than the redone Xbox One app from a while back, but that’s probably because Android and iOS have more in common.
Being less useful to me, I don’t use the iPad app much unless I’m working around bugs in the old Fire TV app, like how it would like to only list partial data; like showing several European dub and omitting the English sub version from the UI.
Thus far the new app doesn’t seem to have any obvious bugs, and brings the more useful data set the iPad app does. Somewhat slow, but hey, at least the fucker works. I’m usually just glad if their (often crappy) apps work without death by buggy crash happy software.
Of course my test of the app? KonoSuba!!!
Well, that’s kind of neat. Windows Defender can run Edge in a Hyper-V session as part of “Application Guard.”
Considering that browsing the world wide web is pretty much a living definition of remote code execution, it’s probably about time someone tried to make a standard feature of isolating the browser. If WSL2 is any indication, Hyper-V also offers great performance if your machine doesn’t suck.