It's My Party and I'll Complain If I Want To Complaint Thread

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  • frank0314frank0314 Posts: 14,713
    DanaTA said:
    frank0314 said:

    I make my own calenders every yr. It has big enough blocks that I can actually write it appointments

    I use the calendar in Outlook for my appointments.  It has the advantage of popping up a reminder at a specified time before the appointment.  A paper calendar does not do that.

    Dana

    I also put them in my iPhone. I get notified the day before and then an hour before

  • DanaTADanaTA Posts: 13,337
    frank0314 said:
    DanaTA said:
    frank0314 said:

    I make my own calenders every yr. It has big enough blocks that I can actually write it appointments

    I use the calendar in Outlook for my appointments.  It has the advantage of popping up a reminder at a specified time before the appointment.  A paper calendar does not do that.

    Dana

    I also put them in my iPhone. I get notified the day before and then an hour before

    Sometimes I put something in the calendar in my Samsung Galaxy J3 phone.  Mostly when I'm not home, like when I'm with mom and she's making a new doctor appointment.  Most of the time, I'm at home, though.  And even when I have an appointment, I bring the card in my wallet and enter the info in Outlook when I get home.

    Dana

  • TJohnTJohn Posts: 11,339
    edited July 2018
    McGyver said:

    Complaint:

    You ever have one of those days?

    This morning I had a kidney stone attack... I get them and it sucks... This one went (mostly) away after a few hours I have no idea if it moved or went away but it has mostly faded.

    To keep my mind off of the knife in my right side and being that doing any real thinking work is out of the question, I decided to just do some mindless outdoor chores that involve a lot of walking.

    So I decided to pick up some branches and leaves that were lying around out back and dump them on a mulch pile out in the woods... Apparently unbeknownst to me a giant wasp nest was installed in the path to the mulch... I got over a dozen stings, but three are really annoying... One on my stomach, one on my neck and the other next to my achilles tendon.  I can't fully express how much I hate wasps in the first place, let alone how angry that got got me... Not only did they sting me, they continued to go after me over two hundred feet from their nest... They actively were searching for me.

    If they had just stung me and stayed by their nest, I'd have let it go and made it a point to avoid the spot... But being so aggressive to actually continue going after me long after I completely left the area was a bad mistake... There is now a crater where their nest was.

    Then after all that nonsense, I gashed open my thumb on one of my ladders...

    I decided to just call it a day... I'm sitting here in such a foul mood... A dull ache in my side, my thumb is throbbing and I've got a bunch of burning little needles pokes still aggravating me (the one on my leg is really pissing me off).

    Electrical shocks, robots and wasp stings... They just trip my angry adrenaline monster so badly.

    Well... Complaint done... I hope everyone else is having a better day.

    I don't know how anyone could hate wasps...they're so cute..well, not so much that I guess...they give us..nothing really. But when they sting you - hey you know... I hate 'em too! 

    Sorry I spoke before thinking things through. I've been doing that a lot lately. I'm still waiting for that wisdom stuff that's supposed to come with age. indecision

    Post edited by TJohn on
  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,098
    edited July 2018

    I still use the calendar in "Microsoft Live Mail-12" on my Windows7 system. I have oodles of events (both recurring or unique) programmed into it.  It's the last in a long line of Microsoft mail programs that I've had to  evolve into over the years.  Unfortunately, despite keeping my dates and letting me request reminders, it no longer keeps its promise to remind me. sad  Which means that I have to (gasp) actually check it manually every day! no  I've researched the Web about this and it seems to be a known problem. cheeky  I've tried downloading and installing a new copy of it but that didn't work and now I can't even find an official version of it online anymore. frown  Lately I've even considered biting the bullet and getting a copy of Microsoft Outlook ($$$). surprise Any suggestions? indecision

    Post edited by LeatherGryphon on
  • atticanneatticanne Posts: 3,009
    frank0314 said:
    atticanne said:
    kyoto kid said:
    kyoto kid said:
    ...without stepping across TOS lines, the "bottom line" is electric heating is just not as efficient as gas, oil, or *gasp* even coal. I grew up in a home that had an old coal fired furnace and we never froze in winter. We later transitioned to gas and it was even cheaper than coal plus was always there when needed. Every place I lived in that was all electric cost a lot more per month to heat and didn't heat the actual volume of air so there were "cold spots" in many areas.

    Electric works just fine to heat the air directly.  But you do have to crank up the voltage, and learn to dodge the bolts of lightning, and not grab onto any water pipes. devil

    ...or hope the curtains or nearby furniture doesn't catch fire and the place burns down.

    Always been my fear with electric in-wall and baseboard heaters, particularly in those cheaply built wood frame and particle board apartment buildings like we have out in the burbs.

     

    kyoto kid said:
    kyoto kid said:
    ...without stepping across TOS lines, the "bottom line" is electric heating is just not as efficient as gas, oil, or *gasp* even coal. I grew up in a home that had an old coal fired furnace and we never froze in winter. We later transitioned to gas and it was even cheaper than coal plus was always there when needed. Every place I lived in that was all electric cost a lot more per month to heat and didn't heat the actual volume of air so there were "cold spots" in many areas.

    Electric works just fine to heat the air directly.  But you do have to crank up the voltage, and learn to dodge the bolts of lightning, and not grab onto any water pipes. devil

    ...or hope the curtains or nearby furniture doesn't catch fire and the place burns down.

    Always been my fear with electric in-wall and baseboard heaters, particularly in those cheaply built wood frame and particle board apartment buildings like we have out in the burbs.

    I now worry about that too.  The wash repairman was here Friday.  I was right; timer needs to be replaced.  I can't afford the $300 for that.  Most upsetting is that he discovered the wall plug is arcing.  This house has aluminum wiring and it really needs a complete rewiring.  Now to find a reputable electrician and sell everything in the house so I can pay him.

     

    Aluminum wiring. surprisenoangry   Complete rewiring would be best but at the very least, your electrician should clean each connection in the whole system and make sure the proper aluminum-compatible switches and outlets are being used (if the proper type are even still available)  frown

    It's also going to cost a small fortune to rewire a full house.

    Just cash in a few CDs.  Or sell a yacht or two and just buy a new house in a better neighborhood. indecision  What!??? That's not an option? surprise  How odd.

    laughlaugh

  • atticanneatticanne Posts: 3,009
    McGyver said:
    atticanne said:
    kyoto kid said:
    kyoto kid said:
    ...without stepping across TOS lines, the "bottom line" is electric heating is just not as efficient as gas, oil, or *gasp* even coal. I grew up in a home that had an old coal fired furnace and we never froze in winter. We later transitioned to gas and it was even cheaper than coal plus was always there when needed. Every place I lived in that was all electric cost a lot more per month to heat and didn't heat the actual volume of air so there were "cold spots" in many areas.

    Electric works just fine to heat the air directly.  But you do have to crank up the voltage, and learn to dodge the bolts of lightning, and not grab onto any water pipes. devil

    ...or hope the curtains or nearby furniture doesn't catch fire and the place burns down.

    Always been my fear with electric in-wall and baseboard heaters, particularly in those cheaply built wood frame and particle board apartment buildings like we have out in the burbs.

     

    kyoto kid said:
    kyoto kid said:
    ...without stepping across TOS lines, the "bottom line" is electric heating is just not as efficient as gas, oil, or *gasp* even coal. I grew up in a home that had an old coal fired furnace and we never froze in winter. We later transitioned to gas and it was even cheaper than coal plus was always there when needed. Every place I lived in that was all electric cost a lot more per month to heat and didn't heat the actual volume of air so there were "cold spots" in many areas.

    Electric works just fine to heat the air directly.  But you do have to crank up the voltage, and learn to dodge the bolts of lightning, and not grab onto any water pipes. devil

    ...or hope the curtains or nearby furniture doesn't catch fire and the place burns down.

    Always been my fear with electric in-wall and baseboard heaters, particularly in those cheaply built wood frame and particle board apartment buildings like we have out in the burbs.

    This house has aluminum wiring and it really needs a complete rewiring.

    Ugh, Aluminum wiring... That sucks.

    Around here it was used a bit in the early 70s... It's actually illegal to repair it now, you have to replace it with copper if it's found.

    My house is over a hundred years old now, when it was new it actually had gas lighting... Last summer I found a section of wire, probably done in the twenties or very early thirties that was routed though the gas pipe... It had cloth insulation on the wires.

    Scary... I've been good with replacing anything that looks questionable, but that was by far the worst I've seen.

    Good luck with your rewiring.

     

    This house was uilt in 1972. These houses also came with deadly breaker boxes that were banned nationwide.  Luckily my son discovered it over ten years ago and we replaced it.  

  • atticanneatticanne Posts: 3,009
    Chohole said:
    carrie58 said:
    McGyver said:

    Complaint:

    You ever have one of those days?

    This morning I had a kidney stone attack... I get them and it sucks... This one went (mostly) away after a few hours I have no idea if it moved or went away but it has mostly faded.

    To keep my mind off of the knife in my right side and being that doing any real thinking work is out of the question, I decided to just do some mindless outdoor chores that involve a lot of walking.

    So I decided to pick up some branches and leaves that were lying around out back and dump them on a mulch pile out in the woods... Apparently unbeknownst to me a giant wasp nest was installed in the path to the mulch... I got over a dozen stings, but three are really annoying... One on my stomach, one on my neck and the other next to my achilles tendon.  I can't fully express how much I hate wasps in the first place, let alone how angry that got got me... Not only did they sting me, they continued to go after me over two hundred feet from their nest... They actively were searching for me.

    If they had just stung me and stayed by their nest, I'd have let it go and made it a point to avoid the spot... But being so aggressive to actually continue going after me long after I completely left the area was a bad mistake... There is now a crater where their nest was.

    Then after all that nonsense, I gashed open my thumb on one of my ladders...

    I decided to just call it a day... I'm sitting here in such a foul mood... A dull ache in my side, my thumb is throbbing and I've got a bunch of burning little needles pokes still aggravating me (the one on my leg is really pissing me off).

    Electrical shocks, robots and wasp stings... They just trip my angry adrenaline monster so badly.

    Well... Complaint done... I hope everyone else is having a better day.

     

    @McGyver do you have any powdered meat tenderizer? put some in a spoon with a couple of drops of water then put that on the wasp stings and let it dry ,it will help break down the poisen of the sting

     

    Hmm,   that doesn't sound very logical to me. What chemicals are in a powdered meat tenderiser?   I was always taught to use vinegar or lemon juice, as Wasp stings are alkaline     Bee stings are acidic so they should be treated with baking soda.

    I use laundry bluing for insect stings.  Works like a charm.

  • ChoholeChohole Posts: 33,604
    DanaTA said:
    kyoto kid said:
    McGyver said:

    Complaint:

    You ever have one of those days?

    This morning I had a kidney stone attack... I get them and it sucks... This one went (mostly) away after a few hours I have no idea if it moved or went away but it has mostly faded.

    To keep my mind off of the knife in my right side and being that doing any real thinking work is out of the question, I decided to just do some mindless outdoor chores that involve a lot of walking.

    So I decided to pick up some branches and leaves that were lying around out back and dump them on a mulch pile out in the woods... Apparently unbeknownst to me a giant wasp nest was installed in the path to the mulch... I got over a dozen stings, but three are really annoying... One on my stomach, one on my neck and the other next to my achilles tendon.  I can't fully express how much I hate wasps in the first place, let alone how angry that got got me... Not only did they sting me, they continued to go after me over two hundred feet from their nest... They actively were searching for me.

    If they had just stung me and stayed by their nest, I'd have let it go and made it a point to avoid the spot... But being so aggressive to actually continue going after me long after I completely left the area was a bad mistake... There is now a crater where their nest was.

    Then after all that nonsense, I gashed open my thumb on one of my ladders...

    I decided to just call it a day... I'm sitting here in such a foul mood... A dull ache in my side, my thumb is throbbing and I've got a bunch of burning little needles pokes still aggravating me (the one on my leg is really pissing me off).

    Electrical shocks, robots and wasp stings... They just trip my angry adrenaline monster so badly.

    Well... Complaint done... I hope everyone else is having a better day.

    ...crikey sounds like a bad day all right.

    Well at least it wasn't enough to trigger the "Lou Ferrigno" effect where you turn green and all muscular then say, grab parked car and throw it at the wasps' nest (also never understood how the Hulk's shirt, socks, and shoes all shredded but never his pants or BVDs).

    However, am curious about how the area where the wasps' nest was became a crater.

    Me, too!   smiley 

    Dana

    make that 3

     

  • Richard HaseltineRichard Haseltine Posts: 108,091
    Tjohn said:
    McGyver said:

    Complaint:

    You ever have one of those days?

    This morning I had a kidney stone attack... I get them and it sucks... This one went (mostly) away after a few hours I have no idea if it moved or went away but it has mostly faded.

    To keep my mind off of the knife in my right side and being that doing any real thinking work is out of the question, I decided to just do some mindless outdoor chores that involve a lot of walking.

    So I decided to pick up some branches and leaves that were lying around out back and dump them on a mulch pile out in the woods... Apparently unbeknownst to me a giant wasp nest was installed in the path to the mulch... I got over a dozen stings, but three are really annoying... One on my stomach, one on my neck and the other next to my achilles tendon.  I can't fully express how much I hate wasps in the first place, let alone how angry that got got me... Not only did they sting me, they continued to go after me over two hundred feet from their nest... They actively were searching for me.

    If they had just stung me and stayed by their nest, I'd have let it go and made it a point to avoid the spot... But being so aggressive to actually continue going after me long after I completely left the area was a bad mistake... There is now a crater where their nest was.

    Then after all that nonsense, I gashed open my thumb on one of my ladders...

    I decided to just call it a day... I'm sitting here in such a foul mood... A dull ache in my side, my thumb is throbbing and I've got a bunch of burning little needles pokes still aggravating me (the one on my leg is really pissing me off).

    Electrical shocks, robots and wasp stings... They just trip my angry adrenaline monster so badly.

    Well... Complaint done... I hope everyone else is having a better day.

    I don't know how anyone could hate wasps...they're so cute..well, not so much that I guess...they give us..nothing really. But when they sting you - hey you know... I hate 'em too! 

    Sorry I spoke before thinking things through. I've been doing that a lot lately. I'm still waiting for that wisdom stuff that's supposed to come with age. indecision

    They do kill a lot of garden pests, though.

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,098
    edited July 2018

    Complaint:  Arghhh.... still two weeks to go before "payday" and I'm already eviscerating next payday's budget. frown

    And there are a couple of concerts at Chautauqua that I'd like to attend before the summer season is over.  Tonight (7/31) will be "The Enigma Variations" by Elgar. yes Then tomorrow night (8/1) will be the "L'arlésienne Suite #1" by Bizet. Debussy's "Afternoon of a Faun", and Ravel's "Daphnis et Chloé Suite #2" heart  then on Aug 10th the cellist Yo-Yo Ma will be here for  recital. cool Then on the 18th it's Rossini's "William Tell Overture" and Mendelssohn's 4th symphony ("The Italian"). smiley Then the season finale on the 21st is Chabrier's "España";  de Falla's "Three Cornered Hat suites 1 & 2";  Rimsky-Korsakov's "Capriccio Espagnol" yes and even some Flamenco dancers https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3AAmd0VYZ2s performing to the overture to Chapi's "La Revoltosa" surprise  (*Sigh, decisions, decisions.  Do I feed my body or my brain?. frown)

     

    For the curious:

    Rossini: William Tell Overture https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7uPuXoDHSM4  (Lone Ranger theme at 8:00)

    Mendelssohn: Symphony #4 "The Italian" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mj30-qklx6M

    Bizet: L'arlésienne Suite #1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HaaHJ6yA03s (Meh... OK, but suite #2 is the famous one https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zrZRNbcITgY)

    Elgar: Enigma Variations https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SvA6FtN8-n0 (variation #9 "Nimrod" at 12:49)

    Debussy: Afternoon of a Faun https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kR5OWN_ydIY smiley

    Ravel: Daphnis et Chloé Suite #2  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnvv89Nd2pg heart

    Chabrier: España https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-v3_WOCsbLw (I changed the link.  Found a better video)

    de Falla: Three Cornered Hat suites 1 & 2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qSbMhiUFNV0

    Rimsky-Korsakov: Cappricio Espagnol: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lh6mDL-VwYw (gets fun at 11:35)

    Chapi: Overture to La Revoltosa https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EMbeAduw0rk

     

     

    Post edited by LeatherGryphon on
  • ChoholeChohole Posts: 33,604

    I have an especial fondness for the Enigma variations  but for somewhat strange reasons.

  • atticanneatticanne Posts: 3,009

    I think I am going to have spaghetti for breakfast.  I am not hungry enough right now to eat it but I will eat it for breakfast.  I had 4 worms for a snack.  Forgot which brand but I got them from the dollar tree candy isle.  I like dollar tree, I think.  Or maybe it is also because my Mum likes dollar tree and we go there a lot.  I think yesterday we went to two dollar trees.  Yep yesterday we went to two dollar trees. I bought a bunch of stuff at one but could not find the item I really wanted there and mum wanted something she could not find at the first one so we went to a second one.  I was going to get a calendar but decided to get the two items I was looking for maybe months or half a year or something.

    My youngest grandson loves going to Dollar Tree, especially with me.  We even got fairy wings to wear to the fairy tea party last year. 

  • atticanneatticanne Posts: 3,009
    DanaTA said:
    frank0314 said:

    I make my own calenders every yr. It has big enough blocks that I can actually write it appointments

    I use the calendar in Outlook for my appointments.  It has the advantage of popping up a reminder at a specified time before the appointment.  A paper calendar does not do that.

    Dana

    I'm seriously considering painting an entire with chalkboard paint.  I keep losing the little scraps of paper I jot things down on.

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,098
    edited July 2018
    Chohole said:

    I have an especial fondness for the Enigma variations  but for somewhat strange reasons.

    surprise  Well, don't leave us hanging. sad  I like strange.

    Post edited by LeatherGryphon on
  • atticanneatticanne Posts: 3,009

    Can you tell I'm procrastinating?  I got Ed's super computer out of the shop and will start setting it up today. He said it was payment for rent.  Hmmm, utility company dpesn't take computers as payment.  He didn't give me the password, so took it to a tech. First I have to get dressed.  Then walk up the hill for cigs.  Maybe a handy 6 of Shiner. That's all I need to set up a computer, right?

  • ChoholeChohole Posts: 33,604
    edited July 2018
    Chohole said:

    I have an especial fondness for the Enigma variations  but for somewhat strange reasons.

    surprise  Well, don't leave us hanging. sad  I like strange.

    Well   I was the typical teenager,  Folk and rock and roll music etc was all,   Classical stuff was boring, stuffy and only for grown ups.   Then the christmas I was about 14 or 15 we went to my Dad's eldest brother's for Boxing day.  My Uncle was some 12 years older than my Dad, but he was younger at heart.  He was a Electronics whizz kid,  and I am not sure to this day whether it was the swanky HD Stereo music player he had built himself, his choice of music rather than my Dad's tendency to play stuff I couldn't bear, or even maybe that I had been allowed a glass of wine with  the meal for the first time. But I sat their listening to the enigma variations on an LP,  lost in an absolute trance, and only came too when the record finsiehd and all the adults and my big brother were laughing at me.    I still have the LP that I received from My Aunt and Uncle for my 15th birthday. BTW   And my elder brother (who was an apprentice electronics whizz kid in those days) built me my very own record player.
    BTW Uncles Music System was unusual because he built it around 1958. Not a lot of people had stereos in them days  He hadn't been allowed to join the army when War broke out in 1939, as he was involved in research stuff that led to things being invented to use during the war, He worked under the Official Secrets Act, and worked with a guy called Alan Blumlein amongst others.

    Post edited by Chohole on
  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,098
    Chohole said:
    Chohole said:

    I have an especial fondness for the Enigma variations  but for somewhat strange reasons.

    surprise  Well, don't leave us hanging. sad  I like strange.

    Well   I was the typical teenager,  Folk and rock and roll music etc was all,   Classical stuff was boring, stuffy and only for grown ups.   Then the christmas I was about 14 or 15 we went to my Dad's eldest brother's for Boxing day.  My Uncle was some 12 years older than my Dad, but he was younger at heart.  He was a Electronics whizz kid,  and I am not sure to this day whether it was the swanky HD Stereo music player he had built himself, his choice of music rather than my Dad's tendency to play stuff I couldn't bear, or even maybe that I had been allowed a glass of wine with  the meal for the first time. But I sat their listening to the enigma variations on an LP,  lost in an absolute trance, and only came too when the record finsiehd and all the adults and my big brother were laughing at me.    I still have the LP that I received from My Aunt and Uncle for my 15th birthday. BTW   And my elder brother (who was an apprentice electronics whizz kid in those days) built me my very own record player.
    BTW Uncles Music System was unusual because he built it around 1958. Not a lot of people had stereos in them days  He hadn't been allowed to join the army when War broke out in 1939, as he was involved in research stuff that led to things being invented to use during the war, He worked under the Official Secrets Act, and worked with a guy called Alan Blumlein amongst others.

    Cool story!

    Alan Blumlein: This guy? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Blumlein

  • ChoholeChohole Posts: 33,604
    Chohole said:
    Chohole said:

    I have an especial fondness for the Enigma variations  but for somewhat strange reasons.

    surprise  Well, don't leave us hanging. sad  I like strange.

    Well   I was the typical teenager,  Folk and rock and roll music etc was all,   Classical stuff was boring, stuffy and only for grown ups.   Then the christmas I was about 14 or 15 we went to my Dad's eldest brother's for Boxing day.  My Uncle was some 12 years older than my Dad, but he was younger at heart.  He was a Electronics whizz kid,  and I am not sure to this day whether it was the swanky HD Stereo music player he had built himself, his choice of music rather than my Dad's tendency to play stuff I couldn't bear, or even maybe that I had been allowed a glass of wine with  the meal for the first time. But I sat their listening to the enigma variations on an LP,  lost in an absolute trance, and only came too when the record finsiehd and all the adults and my big brother were laughing at me.    I still have the LP that I received from My Aunt and Uncle for my 15th birthday. BTW   And my elder brother (who was an apprentice electronics whizz kid in those days) built me my very own record player.
    BTW Uncles Music System was unusual because he built it around 1958. Not a lot of people had stereos in them days  He hadn't been allowed to join the army when War broke out in 1939, as he was involved in research stuff that led to things being invented to use during the war, He worked under the Official Secrets Act, and worked with a guy called Alan Blumlein amongst others.

    Cool story!

    Alan Blumlein: This guy? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Blumlein

    That's the guy.   My Uncle died fairly young, in 1979, so before Secrets act limitations were lifted,  so we never di know exactly what he was working on,  but we can make some educated guesses, especially given the Stereo music system that only my uncle could fix.  Nobody else understood it.

  • MistaraMistara Posts: 38,675

    is it time to go yet?

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,098

    I think I've made up my mind.  If weather permits I'll go tomorrow night for the Debussy and Ravel then after "payday" I'll go to the Spanish night finale on the 21st.  Both nights should be great listening.  Unfortunately, Chautauqua seems to have done away with their "Community Appreciation Night" 50% off ticket prices this year.  So, no $20 concerts. sad

  • MistaraMistara Posts: 38,675

    I think I've made up my mind.  If weather permits I'll go tomorrow night for the Debussy and Ravel then after "payday" I'll go to the Spanish night finale on the 21st.  Both nights should be great listening.  Unfortunately, Chautauqua seems to have done away with their "Community Appreciation Night" 50% off ticket prices this year.  So, no $20 concerts. sad

     

    dont forget the parking pass  smiley

  • MistaraMistara Posts: 38,675

    robo call from hart bus says my pick up is 1:51   next call tells me 15 minutes please be ready.  is not alway true.

    retina specialist, prolly wants to sting my eyes again with stingy drops

    prolly shouldnt do a shot of yummi stuff right now

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,098
    Mistara said:

    I think I've made up my mind.  If weather permits I'll go tomorrow night for the Debussy and Ravel then after "payday" I'll go to the Spanish night finale on the 21st.  Both nights should be great listening.  Unfortunately, Chautauqua seems to have done away with their "Community Appreciation Night" 50% off ticket prices this year.  So, no $20 concerts. sad

     

    dont forget the parking pass  smiley

    + Parking pass $9 indecision  If I had a rowboat and a friend with a lakeside cabin & dock I'd row over to Chautauqua to avoid the entry fee and parking,  if I could survive rowing. frown

  • LeatherGryphonLeatherGryphon Posts: 12,098
    edited July 2018

    Arghhh..., I checked the local "Penny Saver" advertising circular and discovered its a really busy weekend this weekend.  Ellington Town Picnic, Gerry Rodeo, Cataraugus County Fair, Sherman Days, and about 5 excellent looking household sales or auctions all within a 15 mile radius. smileyfrown

    Edited to add:  Oh, I forgot the two biggest event in this area.  The Lucille Ball Festival and the grand opening of the National Comedy Center in Jamestown, NY.  I drove by it this afternoon and the building and grounds are finally finished.  The front of the new building has a grand entrance.  And flush on both sides of the entrance are large billboard sized color digital displays advertising the upcoming events.  I probably won't make it to any of the official opening events but I'll go sometime after the hub-bub dies down. 

    Post edited by LeatherGryphon on
  • TSasha SmithTSasha Smith Posts: 27,268

    I keep leaving my stuff everywhere.  I came home and noticed I do not have my water bottle.  I called GameStop and asked if I left my water bottle there and the friendly Doug said I did.  now I have to remember picking it up tomorrow when I go to work.

  • MistaraMistara Posts: 38,675

    well, doctor said im legally blind. wasnt a surprise.  i can still render,sitting very close to monitor
    she had some sample stuff she injected my left eye, she said it should save me from totally seeing eye dog  blind.
    she said there might even be an improvement
    treatment is monthly inj in each eye.
    the medicine alone is 2k per eye.  they checking if charities will cover what my insurance wont.

    was lots of tehie stuff at the place. scanners, taking pictures.  
    1st optho guy i saw had none of the gizmos. he didnt take pics or scans of my macca somethin
    it's true you really need 2nd opinions on some stuff.

    yellow dye leaving my body, colorfull side effect lol

  • TSasha SmithTSasha Smith Posts: 27,268

    Something seems wrong with Chrome on this computer.  Waterfox is working fine but not Chrome. o.0

  • MistaraMistara Posts: 38,675

    waterfox?  

     

  • DanaTADanaTA Posts: 13,337

    I still use the calendar in "Microsoft Live Mail-12" on my Windows7 system. I have oodles of events (both recurring or unique) programmed into it.  It's the last in a long line of Microsoft mail programs that I've had to  evolve into over the years.  Unfortunately, despite keeping my dates and letting me request reminders, it no longer keeps its promise to remind me. sad  Which means that I have to (gasp) actually check it manually every day! no  I've researched the Web about this and it seems to be a known problem. cheeky  I've tried downloading and installing a new copy of it but that didn't work and now I can't even find an official version of it online anymore. frown  Lately I've even considered biting the bullet and getting a copy of Microsoft Outlook ($$$). surprise Any suggestions? indecision

    I'm still using MS Office 2007.  Couldn't afford updates anymore.  You could try the Open Office or Libre Office, whatever they're calling it these days.

    Dana

  • TSasha SmithTSasha Smith Posts: 27,268
    Mistara said:

    waterfox?  

     

    It is a 64 bit browser based on the old firefox technology.

This discussion has been closed.