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  Car Not Starting Noise
Posted by: piroska - 09-08-2023, 09:05 AM - Forum: PC World Chat - Replies (10)

It cranks, it turns over but there is that, um, farting kind of noise? Puh Puh sort of thing.
What does that mean?

Not my car BTW.
Eventually, after ages,so it has a damn good battery,  it will go but then back to that again next time round.

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Thumbs Down BlackRock climate fund
Posted by: C_T_Russell - 08-08-2023, 10:32 PM - Forum: Opinion and Politics - Replies (3)

I've warned people about Blackrock for years now and what I said would happen is happening.
We will be sold out and held mercy to this evil corporation.
They will be coming after your water assets next.

www.newshub.co.nz/home/politics/2023/08/government-teams-up-with-us-investment-giant-blackrock-to-deliver-new-climate-fund.html

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Thumbs Up great interview here with Jordan B Peterson
Posted by: C_T_Russell - 08-08-2023, 10:30 PM - Forum: Opinion and Politics - Replies (3)

Sums everything up nicely.

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  The Amazon; carbon credits, tipping point
Posted by: Lilith7 - 08-08-2023, 03:02 PM - Forum: Opinion and Politics - Replies (18)

Said last year to be reaching the tipping point, the Amazon may be used as a means of gaining carbon credits in a land grab.





https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-60650415


[b]"The Amazon rainforest is moving towards a "tipping point" where trees may die off en masse, say researchers.[/b]
A study suggests the world's largest rainforest is losing its ability to bounce back from damage caused by droughts, fires and deforestation.
Large swathes could become sparsely forested savannah, which is much less efficient than tropical forest at sucking carbon dioxide from the air.


The giant forest traps carbon that would otherwise add to global warming.


But previous studies have shown that parts of the Amazon are now emitting more carbon dioxide than can be absorbed.
"The trees are losing health and could be approaching a tipping point - basically, a mass loss of trees," said Dr Chris Boulton of the University of Exeter.


The findings, based on three decades of satellite data, show alarming trends in the "health" of the Amazon rainforest.


There are signs of a loss of resilience in more than 75% of the forest, with trees taking longer to recover from the effects of droughts largely driven by climate change as well as human impacts such as deforestation and fires.
A vicious cycle of damage could trigger "dieback", the scientists said."



https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-66435166


[b]"This week, delegates arriving in Bel├®m's international airport are being welcomed with a lively "Boi de mascara" folkloric dance routine. In fact, the whole city is celebrating being in the spotlight, playing host to the Amazon Summit.[/b]

It also feels like a bit of a warm-up for 2025 when the city hosts COP30. These two events are a big deal for this part of Brazil - a region that often feels forgotten. Bel├®m's well-placed too, as the capital of Par├í, the most deforested state in all of Brazil.

President Lula da Silva called this summit to bring together the eight South American countries who share a slice of the Amazon.

It's the first time in 45 years that there's been a meeting like this, ensuring a regional response to combat crime and deforestation as well as climate change.

"I think the world needs to look at this meeting in Bel├®m as a milestone," Lula told the BBC last week.

"I've participated in several meetings and many times they talk, talk, talk, approve a document and nothing happens. This meeting is the first great opportunity for people to show the world what we want to do."



President Lula da Silva has promised to reverse rising deforestation seen under his predecessor Jair Bolsonaro. In July this year, deforestation fell 66% compared with 2022 and Lula's committed to zero deforestation by 2030.

"You have no idea how much pressure there was in our community from the Bolsonaro government," says Robson Gonçalves Machado, who lives on the banks of the River Acangatá. "Landowners circling in planes, soya farmers wanting to buy the land to deforest it."





While Pará is well-known as the epicentre of Brazil's deforestation, more recently it's also become an appealing prospect for another burgeoning forest industry - carbon credits.

The way it works is this: an organisation that pollutes can buy a credit which is worth one tonne of carbon dioxide - so for every tonne of CO2 emitted, the credit represents a tonne of CO2 that was captured.

Those credits are bought and sold and their prices are determined like any other market. With the World Bank estimating the carbon credit market in the forest is worth $210bn (£165bn) a year, there's huge potential.



Carbon credit companies operating in Ilha do Maraj├│ have been accused of harassing people into contracts, pressuring people to be a part of their projects, without actually giving them much detail.

Pará's public prosecutor has since got involved to halt projects that have caused concern. The market still remains unregulated although Lula has promised to address this."

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Smile Small manual oil extractor pump
Posted by: Galaxy01 - 08-08-2023, 01:01 PM - Forum: PC World Chat - Replies (2)

Looking for a small & affordable manual oil extractor pump for DIY mower oil change.

Any suggestions?   Smile

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  Hi Google
Posted by: driftwood - 08-08-2023, 11:16 AM - Forum: PC World Chat - Replies (16)

My Sister-in-law was given a device to use as an active picture display.
I haven't had a good look at it but it appears to be a small android tablet.
It currently has the Hi Google assistant activated, so you can talk to it.
I was wondering what would happen if you were within range of it and were discussing ways of assassinating the president.

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  Excess deaths
Posted by: harm_less - 07-08-2023, 05:20 PM - Forum: Covid-19 - Replies (15)

According to this NZ did exceptionally well in its COVID response https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2023-...omparison/

Hard to contest these statistics.

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  Suspected poisonings in Gippsland, Australia
Posted by: Lilith7 - 07-08-2023, 03:31 PM - Forum: News and Current Affairs - Replies (16)

Perhaps there should be a place you can take any mushrooms picked in the wild to be checked before eating them. In France they can take to the chemist to be checked first so maybe something similar just to be sure - & safe.


https://www.9news.com.au/national/suspec...25faa83539



"A regional community in Victoria's east is in mourning after three people died from eating poisonous wild mushrooms at a lunch with friends.
A fourth person, Reverend Ian Wilkinson, who is a pastor at Korumburra Baptist Church in Victoria's Gippsland region, is fighting for life in hospital after also eating the mushrooms with them.
The poisoning is being investigated by the Homicide Squad."We have had a significant loss to the Korumburra community this week," he said.
"Many people in our community are grieving the loss of three very important, much-loved and very well-respected people in our community


Reverend Ian Wilkinson's wife, Heather, a local teacher; her sister, Gail Patterson; and husband Don Patterson, died after eating toxic wild mushrooms at lunch with friends, according to police.
Police say the two couples were dining at a home in Leongatha, almost two hours south-east of Melbourne, last Saturday.


´╗┐They became sick the following day and went to hospital thinking it was gastro, but their conditions deteriorated.
Wilkinson, 66, and her 70-year-old sister, Gail, died during the week and Patterson died on Saturday night.
Wilkinson and another friend remain in hospital while other guests from the lunch have since been discharged.

The Homicide Squad raided a house in Leongatha [b]on Saturday[/b] and detectives questioned a 48 year-old local woman."






The Victorian Health Department released a warning about death cap and yellow staining mushrooms in April, reporting a spike in the state due to cool and wet conditions.

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  Convert an Acer Chromebook 317 [CB317-1H] , to Linux Mint.
Posted by: Mzee - 07-08-2023, 03:12 PM - Forum: PressF1 - Replies (5)

I have just converted an Acer Chromebook 317 [CB317-1H] , Magpie JasperLake to Linux Mint XFce 21.2. The following may help someone:-

The original ChromeOS was pathetic! Nothing worked smoothly, mouse scrolling was erratic, as was the touchpad. It had Linux Debian 11 running in a VM. The idea was that you could use a Linux app, but you had to have a cup of coffee while the VM woke up and the app loaded. The Linux apps were crippled, you couldn't keep them on top. The average CPU temperature was 66c. There is no way that ChromeOS could do justice to a computer with 8GB RAM, 4 core CPU, & 128GB SSD.

I installed MrChrombox's RW_LEGACY Firmware. I used this one because I didn't need to disable the write protection, which was good because the guarantee was still valid, and I can restore it to chromeos at any time. I used Mint xfce as it is lighter on resources than Cinnamon. I won't go into the details of the installation which was quite straightforward.
Note: Whatever you do. NEVER touch the space bar during the process, as it
will restore ChromeOS!

Mint xfce works very well. The mouse & touchpad are excellent. The Volume control works, but no sound, Brightness control works, & the keyboard backlighting also, but there were some problems:-
The main problem is the lack of a sound driver. I have no doubt that someone will create one some day. Meanwhile I use a $37 USB sound card for the earphones.
There is no way to use Capital Lock (the Key is now Search), & also no Numlock for the Numeric key pad. Both have the same solution. Open the virtual keyboard "onboard' in Menu, place a shortcut on the panel. Go to start up in the settings menu & tick "onboard" in the start up menu. Right click on the panel icon & select "show onboard". Click on "numlock" the numbers will show. For Upper case select Capital Lock. This does not affect the Numeric keypad setting. Click on the X to hide the virtual keyboard.
If you wish to control the touchpad install "touchpad-indicator".

An interesting thing is that the average CPU temp over several hours was 38c with a maximum of 41c. So much for Google's bull about the efficiency of their OS! A big plus is that you can use MACRIUM REFLEX to make a full image of the drive in 4 minutes!

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  Govt warned to close youth facility
Posted by: Lilith7 - 07-08-2023, 11:48 AM - Forum: News and Current Affairs - Replies (5)

It would be nice to think that any future govt could learn from this report & take up the recommendations.


https://www.thepost.co.nz/a/politics/350...uff_skybox



"The Government was last year told to shut down┬áa controversial youth justice residence┬áÔÇô where boys were forced to fight and offenders later staged a rooftop stand-off.
A report by former police commissioner Mike Bush ÔÇô kept secret until now ÔÇô paints a horrifying picture of staff and culture inside┬áSouth Auckland centre Korowai Manaaki, saying it was a ÔÇ£near miracleÔÇØ no-one had been hurt or killed.
The review points to ÔÇ£under-qualified and under-preparedÔÇØ workforce that was casualised, and not trained to deal with high-needs teenagers housed there.
ÔÇ£We consider it a near miracle that death or serious injury have not occurred to date,ÔÇØ the report, written in July 2022, said.
It also criticised ÔÇ£a male-dominated and cliquey leadership ethosÔÇØ and ÔÇ£an old-fashioned, command and control model of management.ÔÇØA year after Ministry for Children Oranga Tamariki, which runs the centres, received the report into Korowai Manaaki, five teenagers escaped onto the roof, causing significant damage during a 40-hour standoff.
A sickening video then emerged just a few days later, showing a fight between two children. A staff member had filmed the video and another appeared to egg on the violence.


ÔÇØEffective leadership, professionalism, an outcomes focus, a safe, inclusive culture and a sense of calm must replace crisis, ad hoc reactivity and the current exclusive and disengaged internal culture,ÔÇØ his report recommended.
Teenagers are sent to the facilities whilst facing serious charges in the Youth Court or if sentenced to three to six months in custody. The centres are supposed to have a heavy focus on rehabilitation, with schooling, sports and cultural activities, and cooking.

But the Korowai Manaaki reviewers, which included investigator Debbie Francis and former police senior sergeant Mike Paki, found the kitchen and art studio had not been used for ÔÇ£many monthsÔÇØ and other developmental, or anti-recidivism programmes were shut down during the Covid-19 pandemic."

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