Dunno about that. Last time I went there my elbow exploded. I was hospitalised for 6 days, on IV antibiotics for 5 of those days. The infection had to be flushed out with ½ a gallon of iodine antiseptic after the wound area was cut open. It's all OK now though.

Experimental dessert: oatmeal, hot water, whole milk, cream & honey mixed in a bowl & left in the fridge to combine & set.

Wot? You got Tiny-Trump hands like mine?

// @kdfrawg

I had some leftover Xmas ham and some tasty heritage tomatoes unused in my fridge so I brought out my electric deli slicer and sliced the ham to 1 mm & the tomatoes to 5 mm. Yesterday the Men's Shed had its monthly BBQ lunch so in addition to the regular hash browns I also cooked up the ham & tomatoes on the sandwich press.
The fellows expressed their delight in the extra bits supplied.

@kdfrawg I have no problems, but I don't have sausage fingers.

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Ørk!

During the 1997-2009 drought that halved the available water supply to this state's capital city & surrounding areas, it was decided to build a reverse-osmosis seawater desalination plant with an 85 km pipeline to connect to the existing water supply infrastructure. Plus on the other sude of the state a windfarm would be built to supply the power needed.

This all happened with significant cost over-runs & much environmental protest. The plant can make 150 gigalitres of water annually, boosting the city's supply by a 25% factor. It was completed in 2012 and has sat idle for four years. The government directed the company to supply 50 gigalitres by Jume 2017 so they planned on firing it up last month & start production at the end of this month.

Didn't quite work that way. A big circuit breaker blew out when it was activated. Spare breakers are available (one would certainly hope so!) but until the investigation into why it blew are finished, the new breaker won't be fitted. Production has been delayed by at least 6 weeks.

In two weeks our Men's Shed group will be doing a coach tour of the desalination plant, followed by lunch at a social club and a visit to a Vietnam Veterans museum on the way back. There might even be time to visit a chocolate factory nearby.

Just been checking Mactracker app. My last iBook was a used 2004 14-inch with 1.33 GHz/1.25 GB RAM & an 80 GB HD. I gave it to a friend as I'd replaced it with a 2009 13-in MBP & he'd helped me a lot with renovations. It's still in use for basic email, internet & photos work. He loves it.

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Early MacBook airs used IDE SSDs. A 64 GB one like that would work wonders for such a device. OWC still make such things, I believe.
I can offer some sort of evidence of my assertion. I have a faulty G3 'Pismo" PowerBook which was given to me by a friend. It will not start from it's internal drive, so I bought a Firewire 400 CompactFlash card reader & a cheap, not very fast CF card of 32 GB. I used my G5 PowerMac to install Tiger & OS 9 onto that CF card. It's of greater capacity than the original 20 GB HDD & faster to boot up as well.

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Exactly the same thing can be said of Fartbook: horrid & you can't delete your account.

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