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It might be using your IP to locate you.
Check out my IoT graphics library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx
And my IoT UI/User Experience library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/uix
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I'm okay with sites knowing what country I'm in (or province). So far all locators have been able to tell me is what city my ISP operates from (which is hundreds of miles away).
It's the (automatic) choice of language that bothers me.
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I hate when they do that. I use Starlink, and all of their addresses point to Los Angeles. As a result, all the ads I get are Mexican language.
Will Rogers never met me.
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There are almost 300 languages spoken in Mexico, about 150 of them in Oaxaca alone. You may have to be more specific.
Check out my IoT graphics library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx
And my IoT UI/User Experience library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/uix
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Interesting, I did not know that - I've always made the assumption that "speaking Mexican" is actually a misnomer for speaking Spanish (there's no such thing as a language called "Mexican").
In the same vein, it's my understanding that there's no such thing as "speaking Chinese" - it's either Mandarin or, to a lesser extent, Cantonese.
It's only when I was an adult that I was even made aware of these sorts of distinctions, when someone asked me if I spoke "Canadian"...always making the assumption that nobody would make the mistake of naming a language after a country, unless there was, explicitly, such a thing...
Languages are fascinating. Programming languages, even more so.
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dandy72 wrote: Languages are fascinating. Programming languages, even more so.
Agreed. I married a polyglot who, while not a linguist by profession has presented at a cultural and language preservation conference at the University of Honolulu. Big linguist convention they hold every so many years.
The reason is he speaks a language only spoken by a handful of non native speakers in the world. Mixtec, specifically Western Juxtlahuaca Mixtec out of Oaxaca Mexico, and has authored a dictionary for the language. He's done years of fieldwork, and studied in Mexico.
Check out my IoT graphics library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx
And my IoT UI/User Experience library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/uix
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So you're both language experts in your own rights, but still in completely different fields.
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With ccleaner you can select which cookies you want to keep.
Take the CCleaner - Slim version (does not install ads)
CCleaner - Slim
CCleaner - Download Builds[^]
But that does not help if they follow your ip.
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Settings / Cookies and site permissions / See all cookies and site data
Search: Youtube
Delete as you see fit.
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Not quite exact route to get there, but I did find it:
Settings
Cookies and site permissions
Manage and delete cookies and site data
See all cookies and site data
Thanks for that! This looks promising.
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On prend le contrôle du monde entier!!!
CI/CD = Continuous Impediment/Continuous Despair
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Ouais, entre moi et toi, bonne chance avec ca, Legault ne vient meme pas a bout de s'entendre avec Trudeau sur l'autonomie de sa propre province, je pense pas qu'ils vont prendre le controle du monde de si tot.
(Alright, this blatantly violates the no political discussion rule...but it could hardly be more à propos and I do see the irony of using a French expression here).
modified 2hrs 10mins ago.
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Une fois que nous vous avons trouvé, impossible de vous débarasser de nous ... gnark gnark...
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Today's Daily News highlighted a post about a home project with 10,000 of hours invested. I'm so happy to hear that other people put thousands of hours into home computer projects. I've certainly had a few over the years. Lots of small computer projects, but a few that raised to the 1000's of hours level. Since I retired a few years ago, its home built telescope mounts controlled by Arduino's, Raspberry Pi's and phones. Way too much fun. I'm several thousand hours in, with no signs of letting up. I have to be diligent to avoid spending an unhealthy amount of time at it. My approach is to make sure I get some exercise (yard work, bike ride, dog walk,...), do something productive (bills, groceries, home maintenance, help Mom, ...), and do something fun (play with computer, ...) every day. I'm interested an anyone else's approach to maintaining some balance and not spending too much time at this stuff.
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I don't know what I'm looking at. Maybe two sub woofers on the floor? Tube amp in the middle. That's a big guess. Where do you plug in the guitar? Looks like fun.
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I like your daily goals, and plan to adopt a similar approach when I retire. I've less than a year to go.
Before I built software for a living I did it as a hobby, but not since. There is one major coding project I have in mind, but most of my fun time will be spent creating music and stained glass, and while I can maintain enough mobility and stamina, exploring more new caves.
There are no solutions, only trade-offs. - Thomas Sowell
A day can really slip by when you're deliberately avoiding what you're supposed to do. - Calvin (Bill Watterson, Calvin & Hobbes)
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I like your plan too. I've also invested 1000's of hours into learning to play music, but never really reached a desired comfort level. Closest on claw hammer banjo these days. My favorite music partner passed away, and that hobby is kind of in a lull at the moment. It could work its way back to the top at anytime. Fortunately being retired, we have time to do all these things. Retirement is great - hope you enjoy it as much as I do!
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If you're retired, and your hobby isn't detrimental to your health, why would you try to avoid spending "too much time" at it? Isn't that the point of retirement? Do things you enjoy?
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The only limit is the health hazard of spending too many sedentary hours in front of computer. Hopefully the daily exercise goal addresses that risk. Otherwise, agree completely - do things you enjoy!
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BBar2 wrote: Lots of small computer projects, but a few that raised to the 1000's of hours level. I commend you for such an accomplishment. Regardless of what it may be, dedicating your time to something for thousands of hours is a difficult thing to do.
BBar2 wrote: Since I retired a few years ago, its home built telescope mounts controlled by Arduino's, Raspberry Pi's and phones. That is awesome!
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Thanks - The astronomy projects came from reading about a simple home made device to follow the moving night sky, called a Barn-Door-Tracker. I thought if the simple Barn-Door approach worked, then a stepper motor and some cheap gears could do wonders. It worked, and I learned a lot, but exposed the limits of cheap gears. Now I'm on version 2 of that project using higher quality gears, and I have a new astronomy hobby on top of it all. It's easy to spend time on it, because I really enjoy every aspect. Playing with computers. Coding. Building little devices. Now the astronomy element. Too much fun. That's why I have to work on the life balance element. I get lost in this stuff.
p.s. Your post got me going this morning. I tried out your link. That looks like a fun project. I know you can put serious hours into building something like that. I wish more environments embraced that clear menu based format. I miss that in modern software.
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Greetings Kind Regards
I have been unable to submit Visual Studio "Report a Problem" due to authentication failure since VS updated w/ a new better authentication method. The only mode of communication which does not result so is "Provide more info" and "Submit a comment" to a previously submitted problem report. Having done so fully describing my authentication fail complete w/ video the response by the Microsoft engineer is "And for issue ‘authentication fails’, please open new feedbacks for it, thanks!"
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Send me your credentials and I'll check on my side.
CI/CD = Continuous Impediment/Continuous Despair
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