@gtwilson Vengeance is sweet!
@matigo "Connor," I had thought, not "Duncan," although traditionally Duncan is a Scots name & Connor is Irish.
// @tomas @jws
Limped into a supermarket on my way home from a meeting tonight. Majorly sore lower back was helped by use of a cane. Bugger! Completely forgot what I'd gone there for. Stomped & clomped grumpily about the place and went home empty-handed. Still can't recall why I went there.
The mostly excellent Sygic navigation app on WP10 needs attention. I had set it to warn me of approaching railway crossings but it can't differentiate between those and tram routes. And trams ? are a major part of Melbourne traffic. I have deselected that setting.
@streakmachine We have ULP at 91, intermediate at 95, premium ULP at 98 & E85 for Flex-fuel engines, that's 107 octane.
Back in the 90s, in Europe the Ford Mondeo & Opel Vectra were competing for the same market share, both used the European base level fuel of 95 octane and the Mondeo offered better performance.
When they went on sale in Australia, only the Vectra was modified for 91 octane, meaning that, on the standard, base-level fuel, the Vectra outperformed the Mondeo. And there's usually 4c per litre price difference between 91 & 95-octane, unless you use 95-octane E10, which is a few cents per litre cheaper than the 91.
I had to refuel yesterday sometime, so when I stumbled upon a fuel outlet selling 91 RON (base octane) petrol at a 10% discount I filled up there.
Windows Phone 10 is weird in some ways. I had the choice of Edge browser or the old WP 8.1 version of a PDF reader to open a PDF. I chose the reader. A notification on to of the screen suggested Edge was a better choice & had a hyperlink reading "why?"
So I tapped it. The notification then said the PDF reader was no longer supported, yet it had effectively opened the file.
@matigo I'd used the wrong process, which I didn't know until my phone call. Wasn't mentioned anywhere on their website that a simple phone call could get it done in minutes.
I had just ended the call to the carrier to port my mobile phone number from the old micro-SIM card to the new nano-SIM card when all cellular connection died.
So I turned on the flip-phone I had put the new card into (with a spacer adaptor) and found the number working on that phone.
I then swapped the SIM cards over. All done, all good.