• Re: What is slowing down my WIndows PC & what can I do to kill it now

    From Rink@3:633/10 to All on Fri Nov 21 20:06:21 2025
    Op 11-10-2025 om 21:06 schreef Stan Brown:
    On 11 Oct 2025 17:20:39 GMT, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    So we probably should have a poll on whether there is *any* country
    *other* than the US, which calls the ground floor the first floor.


    Reminds me of a 1981 Isaac Asimov essay, where in a footnote he said
    that the two most powerful countries not on the metric system were
    the United States and Liberia. And I believe Liberia has gone metric
    since then.



    O ?

    Since when has the UK gone metric?
    Miles, inches, Pints, Ounches, etc, all gone?

    Rink

    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.1
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)
  • From Rink@3:633/10 to All on Fri Nov 21 20:10:10 2025
    Op 12-10-2025 om 10:58 schreef Daniel70:
    On 12/10/2025 12:04 am, Chris wrote:
    JJ <jj4public@gmail.com> wrote:
    On Fri, 10 Oct 2025 00:40:02 +0100, J. P. Gilliver wrote:
    On 2025/10/10 0:34:47, JJ wrote:
    On Wed, 8 Oct 2025 11:48:06 +0100, J. P. Gilliver wrote:
    On 2025/10/8 9:35:15, Anton Shepelev wrote:

    Throw it out from the second or higher floor.

    Is that a UK second or a US second?>

    Wait, what? Aren't both the same?

    Not when it comes to floors (storeys)! In British English, the ground
    floor is called the ground floor, and the first floor is upstairs (with >>>> the second floor, if there is one, above that, and so on); in American >>>> English, the ground floor is the first floor, upstairs is the second
    floor, and so on.

    Didn't know that, since I'm in Asia. So, thanks.

    Which one or do both still superstitious on having 13th floor?

    Both. It's a common western phobia.

    I've not seen it in buildings - in the UK buildings with more than 13
    floors aren't that common - but many airlines don't have a row 13.


    Not a "common western phobia".
    Probably a UK + US thing.

    We have 13th floors with offices or houses in The Netherlands.
    People live there, people work there.

    Rink

    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.1
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)
  • From Chris@3:633/10 to All on Fri Nov 21 21:05:44 2025
    Rink <rink.hof.haalditmaarweg@planet.nl> wrote:
    Op 11-10-2025 om 21:06 schreef Stan Brown:
    On 11 Oct 2025 17:20:39 GMT, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    So we probably should have a poll on whether there is *any* country
    *other* than the US, which calls the ground floor the first floor.


    Reminds me of a 1981 Isaac Asimov essay, where in a footnote he said
    that the two most powerful countries not on the metric system were
    the United States and Liberia. And I believe Liberia has gone metric
    since then.



    O ?

    Since when has the UK gone metric?
    Miles, inches, Pints, Ounches, etc, all gone?

    Officially everything in the UK is metric except pints of beer, road speed
    and distance. Pints of milk might still be a thing, but are labelled as 568
    ml.




    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.1
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)
  • From Jim the Geordie@3:633/10 to All on Sat Nov 22 00:53:33 2025
    On 21/11/2025 19:06, Rink wrote:
    Op 11-10-2025 om 21:06 schreef Stan Brown:
    On 11 Oct 2025 17:20:39 GMT, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    ÿÿ So we probably should have a poll on whether there is *any* country
    *other* than the US, which calls the ground floor the first floor.


    Reminds me of a 1981 Isaac Asimov essay, where in a footnote he said
    that the two most powerful countries not on the metric system were
    the United States and Liberia. And I believe Liberia has gone metric
    since then.



    O ?

    Since when has the UK gone metric?
    Miles, inches, Pints, Ounches, etc, all gone?

    Rink

    Yep ~1960 except for mph and the memories of old folks

    --
    Jim the Geordie

    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.1
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)
  • From J. P. Gilliver@3:633/10 to All on Sat Nov 22 01:48:45 2025
    On 2025/11/21 21:5:44, Chris wrote:
    Rink <rink.hof.haalditmaarweg@planet.nl> wrote:
    Op 11-10-2025 om 21:06 schreef Stan Brown:
    On 11 Oct 2025 17:20:39 GMT, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    So we probably should have a poll on whether there is *any* country
    *other* than the US, which calls the ground floor the first floor.


    Reminds me of a 1981 Isaac Asimov essay, where in a footnote he said
    that the two most powerful countries not on the metric system were
    the United States and Liberia. And I believe Liberia has gone metric
    since then.



    O ?

    Since when has the UK gone metric?
    Miles, inches, Pints, Ounches, etc, all gone?

    Officially everything in the UK is metric except pints of beer, road speed and distance. Pints of milk might still be a thing, but are labelled as 568 ml.



    Still there, but legally all but pints in pubs must be given in metric,
    though the standard sizes tend to remain as the packaging machinery
    wasn't changed, so you get 454g jars - gradually changing as I presume
    things wear out. Petrol and Diesel are shown as per litre on station
    signs; schools have taught metric for decades. Milk is an odd one:
    standard milk is sold in 1, 2, and 4 pint bottles (usually the squarish
    plastic ones), though they are labelled as "2.xxx litres/4 pints", but
    anything unusual, e. g. "filtered", "organic", etc. are in e. g. 2 litre bottles (so if you buy a "fancy" milk, you're being stung twice - you
    pay extra for the fancy claim, _and_ you're getting slightly less of
    it). Some things are still traditionally _reported_ in the older units -
    e. g. the weights of newborn babies in pounds and ounces, people's
    heights in feet and inches, but the medical profession will be using kg
    and m to _record_ any such measurements. (Weight is an odd one - again, especially for older folk, it will use stones and pounds [it was never
    in pounds only in the UK, except possibly for wrestlers/boxers/etc.],
    but the medical records will be in kg.) Road distances and speeds remain
    in miles, presumably because it would be a major exercise to change all
    the signs. Fuel consumption (we don't use the term "mileage") is still
    given in miles per gallon in popular literature (that's one of _our_
    gallons by the way, about 4.55 l), though would probably be in l/100km
    for scientific measurements.

    Oh, and we favour the French rather than the German spelling for litre
    and metre, though (kilo)gramme is increasingly losing its trailing -me
    these days.

    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()ALIS-Ch++(p)Ar++T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    Our thorny national debate about Brexit could turn out to be irrelevant.
    Sooner or later the EU as we know it may no longer be there for us to
    leave. - Katya Adler, BBC Europe editor (RT, 2017/2/4-10)

    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.1
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)
  • From Chris@3:633/10 to All on Sat Nov 22 10:42:47 2025
    J. P. Gilliver <G6JPG@255soft.uk> wrote:
    On 2025/11/21 21:5:44, Chris wrote:
    Rink <rink.hof.haalditmaarweg@planet.nl> wrote:
    Op 11-10-2025 om 21:06 schreef Stan Brown:
    On 11 Oct 2025 17:20:39 GMT, Frank Slootweg wrote:
    So we probably should have a poll on whether there is *any* country
    *other* than the US, which calls the ground floor the first floor.


    Reminds me of a 1981 Isaac Asimov essay, where in a footnote he said
    that the two most powerful countries not on the metric system were
    the United States and Liberia. And I believe Liberia has gone metric
    since then.



    O ?

    Since when has the UK gone metric?
    Miles, inches, Pints, Ounches, etc, all gone?

    Officially everything in the UK is metric except pints of beer, road speed >> and distance. Pints of milk might still be a thing, but are labelled as 568 >> ml.



    Still there, but legally all but pints in pubs must be given in metric, though the standard sizes tend to remain as the packaging machinery
    wasn't changed, so you get 454g jars - gradually changing as I presume
    things wear out. Petrol and Diesel are shown as per litre on station
    signs; schools have taught metric for decades. Milk is an odd one:
    standard milk is sold in 1, 2, and 4 pint bottles (usually the squarish plastic ones), though they are labelled as "2.xxx litres/4 pints", but anything unusual, e. g. "filtered", "organic", etc. are in e. g. 2 litre bottles (so if you buy a "fancy" milk, you're being stung twice

    Yeah, noticed that too. I don't buy fancy milk but have seen some 4 pinters being 2 litres. I think it might be local dairies rather than the big supermarkets, to try and look cost similar.


    --- PyGate Linux v1.5.1
    * Origin: Dragon's Lair, PyGate NNTP<>Fido Gate (3:633/10)