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That's what she said.
or if you are British
Said the actress to the bishop.
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I quite like the dulled sound effect in Windows 11.. it's very subdued and doesn't distract me too much from what I am doing
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My Windows 10 sounds don't distract at all! They are turned off! Highly recommended!
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This.
It's been part of my bullet-point list of items I do on every new system I put together.
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I've never had problems with Windows sounds. I turn them all off.
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I just found an RTX 2080Ti from a private seller for $500. I hope he's willing to hang to it because I blew my money this month.
Wish me luck. What a find!
Real programmers use butterflies
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RTX 2080Ti is so powerful. what would you use it for?
diligent hands rule....
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Playing Fallout 4 at 4k
Real programmers use butterflies
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That is a find.
I've been looking for the RTX3080 and when found they are ridiculously priced...I'll wait.
The less you need, the more you have.
Even a blind squirrel gets a nut...occasionally.
JaxCoder.com
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Right? I told a client of mine that I'd like to start on some work I was putting off (for reasons) if he was ready to pull the trigger, and I told him why. He offered to advance me the money, and I'm tempted. I don't want to lose this deal. I can pay that off in a day or two of work, so it's really tempting, despite me normally not liking to operate that way. It's a tough call for me to make.
Real programmers use butterflies
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I never took advance money, always figured that if something could go wrong it would if I decided to tempt it. But I was really tempted at times.
I would take a partial payment up front for materials or whatever but never more than 20%.
The less you need, the more you have.
Even a blind squirrel gets a nut...occasionally.
JaxCoder.com
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Yeah, you sound like me. In any case, he's got some coldfusion stuff he needs help with. I've never used coldfusion before but I just need to turn what he's doing in CF into a JOIN in the database to speed up the code.
I told him throw it my way, and forget the advance. So it worked out. I feel so lucky right now.
Real programmers use butterflies
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Awesome, good luck!
The less you need, the more you have.
Even a blind squirrel gets a nut...occasionally.
JaxCoder.com
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Hey,
You could buy a Xbox Series X with $500+tax and have an entertainment appliance instead of buying a RTX 2080Ti. It's got a RDNA 2[^] and can do nearly as many teraflops as the 2080Ti. Plus it would be easy to locate potential friends on the XBL network. Would be easy to locate me just by searching for my gamer tag "David Delaune". Just don't be afraid of the employee badge, I am no longer on the Microsoft XBox team.
It might be difficult to find a Series X this time of year... there is a huge scalping problem in the market right now. Some people are paying $1000 to scalpers, it's such an ugly situation.
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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The $500 card I can flip for $1200 on ebay right now if I wanted to, as is.
I don't know if I'd get that kind of value from an XBox.
Besides, I make mods, and I use F4SE, which doesn't work on XBox.
Real programmers use butterflies
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I recently upgraded my Norton AV to the latest version.
Since then every couple of hours it starts a system scan, Full System scan.
It never seems to finish.
Has anyone else experienced this? Do you know what it is about. I looked in help but didn't find anything.
ed
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Windows Defender is now good enough that you can toss these products. One of the first things I'll do, when my new laptop arrives, is to uninstall McAfee. They shouldn't bundle it any longer; it's just bloatware. I do use Malwarebytes, however, because my understanding is that it catches other things.
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Quote: Windows Defender is now good enough that you can toss these products. One of the first things I'll do, when my new laptop arrives, is to uninstall McAfee.
I so totally agree with you! I am eagerly awaiting a new desktop. My first task will be to use Diskpart to totally clean the system drive and then to do a clean install of Windows 11. I believe it's the best way to get rid of bloatware, including McAfee that Dell ships with new systems.
Defender is totally all virus protection I need!
Get me coffee and no one gets hurt!
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Greg Utas wrote: uninstall McAfee
And then use the "McAfee Consumer Product Removal Tool" to actually uninstall McAfee.
Because making an "uninstall" option that actually uninstalls the product is apparently too hard.
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Thanks for reminding me. I did it once before but had forgotten about that.
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Greg Utas wrote: I do use Malwarebytes, however, because my understanding is that it catches other things
Well...has it?
If it hasn't, then I don't see any reason to hang on to it as well.
From my perspective, if a system gets infected and Defender can't clean it up, that's when I'll consider using Malwarebytes...but so far it hasn't happened yet.
Or perhaps more accurately, the only time I've used it is when someone brought me a system that was so badly infected that, in the end, Malwarebytes couldn't figure it out either. So I have a hard time recommending it over anything else.
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Malwarebytes has caught other things, like trojans. Maybe Windows Defender would catch them as well, and it's just that Malwarebytes is first in line for intercepts. I'm not an expert in this, and it's hard to get trustworthy information because some review sites are owned by software vendors.
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I haven't used Norton AV since the last millennia.
But yes, I recognize the symptoms.
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I must admit: I am totally ignorant about quantum computers.
The only essential thing I have managed to pick up is that it has very little to do with traditional digital computers. Maybe as different from digital computers as the analog computers 40-50 years ago, those that you programmed by setting up a circuit on a plugboard, using Lego-like bricks that were integrators, derivators, adders, amplifiers/multipliers, ...
I guess that I will never get in touch with a real quantum computer. Yet I'd like to know what they are, at a far deeper level than provided by a single article. More like a college level textbook. One that doesn't require you to know in advance what it is, before you start reading. (I am not specifically referring to the Wikipedia article .) I am curious about how you analyze a problem suitable for a quantum machine, and how you transfer that problem to a 'program' (if that is the term used with quantum computers). I'd like to learn which problems are suitable for quantum machines and which are not (and why they are not).
Does anyone know of a textbook on the subject, suitable for a reader with fairly thorough insight into traditional digital computers, but totally without a clue about quantum computers? Is quantum computing taught at tech universities as an engineering discipline? What textbooks do they use?
Or should I wait for another five or ten years before asking such questions?
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Have you turned it off-and-on ?
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