I just discovered that Firefox allows web sites to store megbytes of stuff on your hard drive. This is not those little old cookies, which were in the 100 byte class. This Cached Web Content is megabytes. I found I had a whole gigabyte of "stuff" stored on disk courtesy of Firefox. You can free up a gigabyte of disk. From within Firefox click on the nameless button with three horizontal stripes, far right on the task bar. Click on Options. Click on Privacy & Security. Click on Cookies and Site Data. Click on Clear Data. Clear the check mark for Cookies and Site Data unless you want to have to log into all your favorite websites (can you find your passwords). Leave the checkmark in Cached Web Content and click on clear. It's worth doing this before running anti virus to speed up the scanning. If anyone knows how to shut down Cached Web Content I would love to hear about it.
I figured it was time to run antivirus on new desktop, SmallBox by name. I downloaded the free Malwarebytes V 3.7.1. The default scan option is quick, a minute or two but doesn't check your disk files. The "Custom Scan" option does do disk files. That took an hour. A lotta time spent scanning the gigabyte of Cashed Web Content, courtesy of Firefox. and even more time scanning a gigantic new Windows folder at C:Window\Services\LCU. The LCU folder is so huge that I googled on the name just to see what it was. What little info turned up indicates that people know about it. None of posts explained what it was, and whether I could delete it or not. It's huge. Any info would be welcome.
Malwarebytes tagged a profile folder to Firefox as malware. I didn't agree with that call, and told Malwarebytes to leave that file alone. It did find some seven registry keys and three other files as malware. I let Malwarebytes quarantine them all.
This blog posts about aviation, automobiles, electronics, programming, politics and such other subjects as catch my interest. The blog is based in northern New Hampshire, USA
Sunday, May 5, 2019
Wednesday, May 1, 2019
More doings in the NH Senate
Ed Committee hearing, 30 April. Light day.
We heard just one bill, HB 631, establishing a deaf child’s bill of
rights. It had a lot of supporters. The
language is vague and wimpy. Twelve
clauses begin with “Deaf or hard of hearing children have a right to” this that
and the other, all vague nice sounding ideas.
No sentences with words like “The school committee shall” of “The dept
of Education shall”. I asked about this,
and was told that the language was copied from a bill in some other state and
the “no state mandates on cities and towns” law prevented stronger language. Far as I can see all this bill does is give
parents the right to sue, at their own expense, should they come to believe
that their deaf child is not getting a fair shake. We had a lot of witnesses testify in sign
language. In executive session we did a
lightweight amendment and voted it Ought To Pass. This bill, with or without amendments is reasonably harmless to my way of
thinking.
Then I attended the
hearing in the Transportation Committee on HB 591, the anti off road vehicle
(ATV) bill. If passed it would close
most roads to ATV’s even crossing them, let alone going into town to buy
dinner, and make it difficult to establish more ATV trails. I testified that ATV users are bringing real
money to the North Country and should be encouraged. We
need their money. And that I would vote
against this bill when it gets to the Senate floor.
Tuesday, April 30, 2019
Words of the Weasel Part 56.
How to Weaponize an Existential Threat. The title of a piece in the Wall St Journal
Op-Ed page. The author, Joseph Epstein
is out to trash a lot of vague words, popular with newsies and pols, which have
been creeping into English. He mentions
focus, issue (bland word for bug or problem), charisma, prioritize, weaponize,
incentivize. Word for Window spell check
chokes up on weaponize and incentivize
The author finishes
off with “existential threat”. A
threat is a threat, when you are on the receiving end of a threat you have to
either knuckle under, or get ready to fight.
The existential part is a fancy way of making the threat sound more
dangerous. Me, I will stick with “deadly
threat”.
Mr. Epstein doesn’t
mention “holistic”, a general purpose sounds good but means nothing word. When I hear or read “holistic” I know I am
wasting my time with this person or article.
Monday, April 29, 2019
Star Wars The Force Awakens 2015
The Force Awakens.
Following up on my Stars Wars refresher, getting ready for the coming
Christmas new Star Wars movie, I popped my DVD of The Force Awakens into the
player last night. I’m getting them out
of order, The Force Awakens came out for Christmas 2015, and Rogue One came out
the next Christmas 2016.
They had a better
sound man in Force. All the dialog was
audible. And I picked up on a few of the
new character’s names. Rey, Finn, Poe,
BB-8. Never did catch a name for Darth
Vader, Jr. And everybody knows Han Solo,
Leia Organa, and Luke Skywalker by sight. In this movie they kill off Han Solo. He will be missed.
Camera man was into
the dark look, he turned out the lights in a lot of scenes. Not quite as annoying as Rogue One camera
work, but annoying. Even out door scenes
in broad daylight were dim. Indoor
scenes were black.
We have a plot of
sorts. Poe has a star map showing where
the long lost Luke Skywalker is hiding/meditating. It is programmed into his droid, BB-8, smaller
and cuter than R2D2. They need to get
the map to the Resistance, who then launches a one person search party (Rey) to
find Skywalker. Rey is pretty good; we
meet her on desert planer Jakku where she is making bare living scavenging
wrecks out in the desert. Rey has a
vehicle nearly as cool as the air car from the first Star Wars flick. It floats a bit higher off the ground and
looks like a John Deere farm tractor without the wheels. Noisy and smoky internal combustion engine
(still surviving in the high tech Star Wars universe?). Rey is
lean and tough, fast on her feet, and a natural born pilot. She and Finn escape Jakku in the good old
Millennium Falcon which they find and steal right off the planetary boss’s back
yard. With Rey in the pilot’s seat and
Finn manning the guns, we see a lot of low level flying with TIE fighters in
pursuit. Millennium Falcon is built
tough in this flick; we see her scraping the ground and crashing thru trees,
and still airborne. I found these scenes
a little jarring, in the Air Force, touching the plane to the ground, even
lightly, was a crash, excepting touched the landing gear to the runway. And, they can kick in the hyper drive and go
faster than light before even getting clear of the hanger.
Sunday, April 28, 2019
Swap the keyboard and Control-C, Control-V and Delete work again
This is Win 10 Pro, running on a reconditioned (used) Dell Optiplex 990. Changing out the Dell USB keyboard for the old Compaq keyboard with the old PS2 connector and everything works!! I was unable to find anything useful on the net to fix the problem. Youngest son was up for the weekend and he suggested trying a PS2 keyboard. That did the trick. I'm still looking for info to get the new USB keyboard to work, it has a nicer keyfeel than the aging Compaq keyboard.
I think this is a Win 10 or a driver problem. The PS2 keyboard uses a different driver. I don't think the problem is defective hardware, 'cause both Control AND Delete were broke on the USB keyboard. That's an unlikely hardware failure.
Strange that I could not find anyone else on the net complaining about the problem.
I think this is a Win 10 or a driver problem. The PS2 keyboard uses a different driver. I don't think the problem is defective hardware, 'cause both Control AND Delete were broke on the USB keyboard. That's an unlikely hardware failure.
Strange that I could not find anyone else on the net complaining about the problem.
Beat the Press.
Chuck Todd had the day off, some newshen I don't know filled in for him this Sunday morning. All they talked about was the Mueller report. Apparently nothing interesting has happened anywhere else in the world. A lot of grieving on air that the Mueller report failed to nuke Trump. More opining about impeaching Trump. Not a word about the horrible massacre of Christians in Sre Lanka (Ceylon it used to be called). Not a word about the engine explosion on the Space-X crew capsule. Stick with the Drudge Report, you will gt some real news, rather than NBC longing to nuke Trump.
NH Senate doings week of 22-26 April 2019
Ed Committee Hearing.
23 April. Five bills were
heard. We started off with HB 383
“Relative to the prohibition on unlawful discrimination in public and
non-public schools”. Couple of
interesting phrases in that title.
“Unlawful discrimination”, is there any other kind? Does “lawful discrimination” really
exist? And “non-public schools”. In plain English those are called private
schools. I asked the representative
introducing the bill if “discrimination” included preventing boys from using
girl’s restrooms, locker rooms and showers.
She said it did. She also said
preventing boys from competing in girl’s sports would be discrimination. I plan to speak against and vote against this
bill when it reaches the Senate floor.
Can you say stealth transgender?
The bill makes no attempt to define
discrimination, which means it could be anything.
Now for HB 435,
this is a harmless paperwork bill, changes a few names, but otherwise
harmless.
And HB 447
“Relative to school calendar days”. This
bill merely states that local school boards can set the school calendar as they
please just so long as they squeeze in 180 school days. This is what the law is today. This bill is
to kill off a Senate bill passed earlier, that required all schools to start AFTER
Labor Day. Most NH schools now start in August.
Administrators and teachers like that.
Personally, I feel that starting school before Labor Day is child abuse. But that’s just me.
And HB 448 another
harmless paperwork bill of no consequence.
And finally, HB 652
which would require two hours of suicide prevention training for everyone,
teachers, administrators, bus drivers, secretaries, everybody except
coaches. No funding was provided. Training could be merely watching some
instructional video on the Internet. No
requirement for training students to recognize suicidal thoughts in their
friends, or what to do should they feel a friend might be suicidal.
Short Senate session today.
Started at the usual time, 10 AM and we had all the business on the
calendar done by 11 AM. Opened the show with the Fast Track (consent)
calendar. Ten bills were Fast
Tracked. All of them were harmless and
no account. One was amusing and makes
you wonder how anyone does business in New Hampshire. That was HB 259 that now requires that
building inspectors writing up a building or job must quote chapter and verse
of the fire code that has been violated when they write up a violation. Dunno how we have gotten along without that
all these years. Anyhow one quick voice
vote and ten more bills, already passed by the House, are passed by the Senate
and off for the Governor’s signature.
Now for the regular
calendar. We killed (Inexpedient to
Legislate, ITL in legitative speak) HB 309 which made complicated changes to
the procedures about foreclosing a mortgage.
We passed HB 511 which subjected vaping to the same controls as ordinary
cigarette smoking. No vaping on school property,
no vaping in no smoking areas. Seemed
reasonable to me. Did not get into
taxing vaping stuff as hard as we tax cigarettes. And we voice voted HB 684, concerning rent
disputes about “manufactured housing: Ought To Pass (OTP). I asked the bill’s sponsor if “manufactured
housing” was what ordinary people call house trailers. He conceded that it was. I then asked him why rent disputes over house
trailer rentals deserved special protections at law that ordinary landlord
tenant disputes don’t get. Answer was so
vague as to be no answer at all.
And then HP 663
concerning some obscure language changes about the definition of agriculture
and agricultural land use. We used to
call that farming and farms. Dunno what
the lawyers dreamed up to complicate life and raise their billable hours.
And HB 118 which
would require notifying a child’s doctor of reports of abuse. This could be a little touchy. Down in Massachusetts
they have a lot of doctors reporting ordinary child accident injury from falls
and such as child abuse. Anyhow HB 118
passed on a voice vote. Zap.
And HB 396 requiring the bureaucracy to get
the lead out and respond to right to know requests within 5 days. OTP
voice vote.
And HB 427 made
some opaque change to the law about filing protective orders on behalf of minor
children. OTP voice vote.
And HB 437
concerning “family alienation” was tabled on a voice vote. This bill would have allowed divorced parents
to sue each other for bad mouthing each other in front of the children. Let’s leave it on the table forever.
And a weird one, HB
518 which allows the state to recover the costs of imprisoning someone from
that someone. Apparently we have a
wealthy prisoner in slam right now and we want to sock it to him harder. Senator Lou D’Alessandro spoke in favor of
this. I never heard of this before. We send a guy to jail, he serves his
sentence, or is a good little boy and gets parole, and he is out. I never heard of a state dunning such a person
for room and board in the big house before.
And we closed by
passing HB 700 concerning taxes on utilities.
I did not understand just what the deal was in HB 700. I do know New Hampshire
utility rates are totally unreasonable, partly due to taxes on utilities, RGGI,
another hidden utility tax and more such.
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