Avatar of Captain Jordan
  • Last Seen: 1 yr ago
  • Old Guild Username: Captain Jordan
  • Joined: 11 yrs ago
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    1. Captain Jordan 11 yrs ago
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Recent Statuses

10 yrs ago
Current My life has been reduced to 200 measley characters, and I can't even seem to make use of every one.
10 yrs ago
Now I want a trophy.
10 yrs ago
Having trouble waking up today.

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Most Recent Posts

Griever said
I liked this episode, I just wish they condensed it into less than an hour and showed us a little bit of Stannis and Lady Stoneheart.


I'm fairly sure DB&DW are saving Lady Stoneheart's entrance for next week. Should be epic, though.

Also, are we not even bothering to spoiler things anymore? Poor non-bookreading folks.

Regarding the episode itself, I was honestly not looking forward to this. I usually like Jon and Sam's scenes, but this season I've felt that they've been too tiring. Maybe it's because it seems like the show has run out of book material (without borrowing heavily against its own future) and its invented scenes are less interesting.
What's your degree in?
Please don't link to the site.

For you own health, you may want to forget you even have the link yourself. People like those you interacted with, small-minded and sad individuals, are just going to be like that. You won't change them, unfortunately.

If the site's admins are that sort, you could report that user for their comment. I consider that kind of statement highly offensive, even though I'm not transgender. If not, don't waste your time, leave and don't look back.

Your mental health is worth more than their satisfaction.
Nursle said
Linux can be really fun.It can also be a total pain in the ass, the most fun distro I've found for a non-tech savvy end-user is Ubuntu, but if you have a lot of experience with programming, and want to ditz around in the Kernel, you could always get gnome.


Sorry, but you really have no idea what you're talking about. Gnome has absolutely nothing to do with the kernel, GNOME is a window manager for Linux, the kernel essentially IS Linux. You don't have to be a programmer to use Linux, and even programmers don't necessarily mess around in the kernel.

Changing window managers, such as from Unity to GNOME in Ubuntu, is as easy as a few clicks these days. Most widgets and extensions you'd want are already out there in the wild, ready to be downloaded and installed like any other applications. A normal user can go about their day without needing to understand programming in order to use these window managers just fine.
1. Download a Live CD of a Linux distro (some good ones to start are Ubuntu, Linux Mint, openSUSE, Fedora) and boot your computer with the disk in your computer. It will let you boot into Linux and run it off of RAM, it doesn't make any changes to your computer. (You can also do this with a USB drive if your computer doesn't have a CD tray.)

2. Use VirtualBox or VMWare to create a virtual version of Linux running inside Windows. This will let you try out Linux non-destructively without having to reboot your computer or step outside of Windows. You can try as little or as much of it as you want this way.

3. Create a dual-boot setup with Windows and a Linux partition. This will give you hands-on experience with a Linux OS on your hardware, so you can see how files/applications/settings work in Linux. This will make changes to your computer, so I recommend trying the above first.

4. Wipe an old computer and put Linux on there. This gives you the advantage of having a dedicated machine to Linux, so you might try it out on a machine you don't rely on for day-to-day work. Make sure you make a system image backup before you install if you ever want to return the computer to Windows.

After you choose a method (you can graduate, too, try methods 1 or 2 and then move on to 3 or 4), Google some linux help articles/videos. Look up Bash commands, this will be helpful when using the terminal. Make sure you understand the architecture of your distribution, distros like Ubuntu and Linux Mint are Debian-based, and some applications have compiled .deb versions that will work automatically. Likewise, Fedora and openSUSE can make use of .rpm versions of applications, and have a different structure than Debian-based versions. There's other bases for Linux distros, too, you'll hear about Slackware and Arch at some point.

There's also a difference between OS, or Linux Distro, and Window Manager. You may hear about Unity, Gnome, KDE, Enlightenment, Cinnamon, XFCE or MATE. These, and several others, are Windows Managers, they control the look and feel of your desktop (as opposed to the innards, the structure and architecture underneath that makes stuff run). In Windows, Aero/Modern UI is the Windows Manager, while NT is the architecture. It's similar with Linux, but users can choose which Window Manager they want to use with which distro. If you like lots of options and customization, start with something like Unity, Gnome or KDE, if you like minimalism start with Enlightenment or XFCE.

Last bit, go slow. Don't try to learn everything at once, or try everything at once. You will likely screw up, and you may wind up reinstalling the OS a few times until you learn how to fix it. Don't give up, it's a marathon not a sprint.

And most of all, have fun. Tinkering with stuff like this is all about finding what fits YOU. Other people have their opinions, and some with argue with you about it, but the beauty of Linux is that anyone can customize it and build it the way they want. The way that fits them. Enjoy.
Sorry guys, a friend called and wanted to hang out. I'll try to put something together after work tomorrow.
Dedonus said
I'll try to get a post up either tonight or sometime tomorrow.


Ditto this.
Blitzkrieg said



I know, I loved Daario's original actor. Apart from the beard (which even the new one doesn't do right), he fit perfectly. I thought I was the only one who liked him.
The only time I've done this for work is when I worked retail, and the store managers were never decent at scheduling anyway. There were plenty of issues with overstaffing one area while understaffing another, and despite some of those areas being neighbors, the respective departments would refuse to share workloads. There were times when I would request days off, only to be scheduled then anyways. I'm sure the managers were well aware of what I was doing when I called in sick, but I didn't care because they didn't take the time to care for me.

I did it a few times in high school to catch up on work, mostly because I'm a terrible procrastinator. I've never faked a sick day in college, although most of my professors wouldn't even blink if their entire class wound up skipping.

As far as a full-time job, I don't think I'd ever do this, as others have mentioned it unfairly balances the workload. There are times when it might be unavoidable in life to take sick days, but don't just fake it because you're lazy or don't feel like it.
Kaga said
Eh. Not really what I was expecting. I feel like the questions didn't really do a good job of testing me, since there were so many to which I thought "Yeah, ..." and I feel like the way I thought of my answers wasn't really what the test intended a lot of them to mean.


And that's why the test is only a guide, not a factual statement about your personality. Besides, we're all human, we don't always follow programming every time in every aspect. Otherwise we'd be robots.
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