Tulkitsen aina tuon reaktiopaneelin kommenttilinkeiksi
Tulkitsen aina tuon reaktiopaneelin kommenttilinkeiksi ja klikkaan siitä jotain randomina kuvitellen avaavani kommentit.
Tulkitsen aina tuon reaktiopaneelin kommenttilinkeiksi ja klikkaan siitä jotain randomina kuvitellen avaavani kommentit.
The image of you consoling your mother is strangely contradictory with the feelings you describe about your family. Is the purpose of doing so to prevent something even more catastrophic from happening, or do you still care enough about how your mother feels to want to make her feel better? I mean, with all the anger and resentment that you describe feeling towards them, I’d expect *you* to be the one leaving them to deal with it by themselves. What keeps you from doing so?
Diagnoosin tarkoitus ei ole hoitaa, diagnoosi on väline jonka avulla hoidetaan. Hoito voi olla tehotonta tai jopa vaarallista jos ei tiedetä mitä hoidetaan. Esimerkiksi juuri bipolaarin mielialan hoito pelkillä masennuslääkkeillä voi olla potilaalle haitallista.
Lisäksi sillä, että saisit diagnoosin (olitpa sitten bipo tai et), pääsisit siitä että joudut vatuloimaan sitä itseksesi, jos se kerta tuntuu rasittavalta. Voisit sitten nojata siihen mitä tutkimuksista selviää, olipa se mitä tahansa.
Vastaa viestiin sen kontekstissa (Suklaahirviön mässymaailma)
I have vivid memories of this happening a few times, usually during an intense gaming session: the screen would become all garbled and the game would no longer react to input. I’d power down, then power back up again, expecting to get the BASIC prompt, and instead get the garbled image back there on the screen! And yet the C64 didn’t have the type of nonvolatile memory that surviving a powerdown in such a way would imply. The computer would eventually, after a long-enough powerdown, come back to its senses.
As a kid I just attributed this to some advanced sorcery. As an adult the best I’ve been able to theorize is that the crash wasn’t caused by software failure but by the circuitry going awry due to overheating. This misfunctional state would persist even power-off, until the circuitry was again cool enough to function properly. Is this how it happened, or did the C64 actually have hidden nonvolatile memory capabilities far beyond its time?
The video was good in explaining everything else but déjà vu. It was the part from 2.36 to 3.10 that was supposed to, but it ended in a joke (”It’s already happened, I thought, which… what”) that left the point completely in the blind for me. Alright, there’s a brain glitch of some sort, but that’s not an explanation.
What steps will reproduce the problem?
1. Have a touchscreenless phone
2. Run touchcomic, open comic, zoom in
3. Try panning horizontally
What is the expected output? What do you see instead?
Without touchscreen there’s no way to pan horizontally: though the ’up’ and ’down’ keys do pan vertically, the ’left’ and ’right’ keys navigate between pages.
What version of the product are you using? On what operating system?
TouchComic V1.81 on S60 3rd FP2 (on a Nokia 6220 Classic)
Please provide any additional information below.
I know it’s contrary to the app’s name, but it’d be awesome to be able to use it on this phone too. The number keys don’t seem to do anything; how about utilizing them for simulating panning via touchscreen?
Jou, jokos me ollaan FB-kavereita? Jos ei olla niin haluaisitko? Linkkaan sivuni tuohon osoitekenttään, lisää jos siltä tuntuu. Pelejä tosin en siellä pelaa ollenkaan.
Koiraongelmasta tuli mieleen sitruunapannat. Omakohtaista kokemusta mulla ei ole, mutta netistä löytyy kyllä näkemyksiä puolesta ja vastaan (niin kuin mistä tahansa).
Vastaa viestiin sen kontekstissa (Pikku Hiiri nakertaa häntäänsä)
Suosittelen Iain McGilchristin The Divided Brain -puhetta. Animaatio on paikoin häiritsevän sekava, mutta puhe on mielenkiintoinen.
Onneksi siihen Facebook-sivuun ei jutussa linkitetty, antaa ihmisten hakea vaan.