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As with anything else: it depends…
Looks like you’re in the US., so it’ll depend on what state you’re in, how much you have in assets, and how old you are.
If you’re 65 you’ll need to apply for Medicare.
If you have no assets and are under 65 you may be able to get Medicaid.
When I retired, I was under 65 and had too much in retirement savings to qualify for Medicaid, so I had to go to the healthcare exchange for my state. If your state doesn’t have it’s own exchange, then you’ll need to go to the Federal site.
In my case, if I had ‘some’ income (a low amount) the state would pay part of the premium. So I draw a minimal amount from my retirement account to show some income.
Again, it all depends.
Good luck. It’s complicated.
Time is the differentiation of eternity devised by man to measure the passage of human events.
- Manly P. Hall
Mark
Just another cog in the wheel
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The exchanges are all ObamaCare. You will be bled dry.
Start with Liberty Health Share and see if it is available in your state.
Then do a search for "alternatives to Liberty Health Share". That should get you going.
Agree on going overseas for non emergency care.
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I don't have any on purpose. I find it far easier to maintain a high level of health and fitness, and any pop-up issues can be paid out of pocket for less than a month's premium. I wish I could get a health savings account without also buying a policy, but that was only a dream even before the ACA ruined everything.
It's interesting to note that all medical procedures not generally covered by insurance (laser eye and plastic surgery) diminish in cost until they reach what the market will naturally bear, but when a third party pays costs soar because that market bears far higher price tags well in excess of actual cost or benefit.
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So I've been bitching lately about BSODs and Microsoft and what have you. I have in the works a book about debugging problems. Chapter 1 is "Your assumptions are wrong."
I'm a big proponent of calling a turd a turd. Not to belittle anyone, but if you want to solve a problem you have to be honest. Own it. Your code is crap? Own it. you got lazy? own it. It's not personal it's reality. Part of that reality is admitting when you're an idiot.
I'm an idiot. JSOP go away.
I have worked on a high end laptop for almost 5 years. It's had heat issues, random crashes (careful with drivers), high cpu at times etc. When I bought it, I purchased the minimum RAM because oems always jack up the upgrades on order. So I ordered 2 32 GB SODIMMs, popped them in and 4+ years later support told me they were incompatible. In fact, I have 32GB under my keyboard that I never knew about.
Correct memory on order, we'll see what happens. if you want a good laptop with NA first person support, check out Eluktronics.
Jeesh, read the manual.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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That is copywrited now. By me.
so many issues go way too long because of assumptions.
Chapter 2: "It's not personal, you're wrong."
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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charlieg wrote: Chapter 2: "It's not personal, you're wrong."
This is the book that The World needs now!
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charlieg wrote: if you want to solve a problem you have to be honest. Own it.
Absolutely! If you don't acknowledge your mistake, you can't prevent it happening next time. Everybody makes mistakes: the measure of a person (or a company) is how you deal with it.
But having said that ... in development, the hardest lesson I had to learn was "this is not going to work, throw it away". The urge to tinker with almost working code is ... considerable. It very hard to admit "this whole idea was a mistake" and go back to what you had before. Microsoft has never, ever learned this lesson, which colours every product they produce.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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charlieg wrote: "Your assumptions are wrong."
I have to work with a credit card processor outfit whose track history is not very good. Recently I blamed them for something, turned out it was my code. Time to reset the prejudice, lol. Not all the way, mind you, but I do need to tone it down a bit, if only for the sake of not embarrassing myself!
And yes, I owned my mistake, apologizing to all involved.
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At the risk of jinxing myself, my laptop has now been up for over 2 days with the correct and new memory. Helps to know your system.
Now, just out of curiosity, I'm sending the 4+ yo sticks back to Crucial for warranty replacement. Wish me luck.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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And I jinxed myself. 53 minutes after posting I have a UNEXPECTED_KERNEL_MODE_TRAP.
We'll see what the BSOD analyzers say. I smell driver issues or possibly a dying motherboard. I cannot suffer any more like this. I have way too much work to do.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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I Know an ISA Port when I see one!
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What's an ISA port? I can't even recognize a SCSI port.
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But do you know a EISA port when you see one -- and...
Do you remember when EISA was used in PS/2[^] (which is not a playstation 2 device made by Sony, but a computer made by IBM)?
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ISA and EISA, sure, but not as ports, as connectors on the motherboard.
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PIEBALDconsult wrote: but not as ports, as connectors on the motherboard
Yeah, I guess port isn't the exact best word.
Here are some wordnik defs which probably describe port as an ok choice:
noun A porthole.
noun Archaic A cover for a porthole.
noun An opening, as in a cylinder or valve face, for the passage of steam or fluid.
noun A hole in an armored vehicle or a fortified structure for viewing or for firing weapons.
noun An entrance to or exit from a data network.
noun A connection point for a peripheral device.
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A "header" then.
FDD header, ISA header, EISA header.
A motherboard may have an internal "USB header", but rarely an internal USB port.
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Yeah, header is probably better term.
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Isn't that the new docking ring on the ISS?
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I know a Vintage Port when I drink one.
[Today's is 2007, sometimes you just have to take what life throws at you]
veni bibi saltavi
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Any port in a storm....
(I seem to remember that gin was your poison)
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Would it not be more accurate to say ISA socket / ISA card (depending to which you are referring)? What was that small one "only designed for modems" apparently that suddenly appeared on mobos?
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It's due to the fact I took off the side and Newbe's saw it and went 'whats that?'...
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