Unless it doesn't work for you, it's yours. I sent you a PM.
Shane_McGoomy
Probably like most people here, I just got more and more fed up with Windows. I tried Ubuntu a few times in the past, but it never really stuck, and at the time Windows wasn’t quite as bad (I quite liked Windows 7 in all honesty). But as time went on with Win10, it kept moving in a direction I didn’t want and I kept trying to customize it to my liking, and an update would just mess a bunch of stuff up and just make the whole experience worst. Recently it started having issues with my multiple monitors, shutdown and sleep/hibernate were basically broken, Bluetooth would randomly stop working, it was just a lot of aggravation.
I’m only a few weeks into my grand Linux adventure, but I’ve got almost all of the functionality that I need from Windows with none of the frustrations, and it’s way faster on top of that. Right now I can’t see myself going back.
I can’t believe there are other Win2000 fans out there, I may have to look at this Chicago95 stuff.
At the risk of looking like a corporate shill, I going to say the new green building standards are painfully strict. And while yes, that's ultimately a good thing for the environment, it is a stick in the wheel to fixing the housing crisis.
I don't have the numbers for all of Canada, but in Quebec the private sector supposedly builds about 50 000 to 60 000 homes per year, and to "stabilize prices" - not sure what that means, but I know it doesn't mean reducing prices - would involve building about 150 000 units per year, FOR TEN YEARS. The govt usually pats itself on the back for building a few thousand units in a year, so we're still basically short a hundred thousand units. I get that the govt should just step in a build, but let's be real, it's not going to happen. Even if it wanted to, the workforce would have to be about 3 times the size it currently is, which is another nightmare to deal with.
On a personal level, as a person who works in the industry, I'm not looking forward to the new standards. The new energy-saving stuff often require solutions that involve proprietary systems from large companies that are a pain to work with. Developers aren't really going to be taking a cut anyway, they'll just charge more, or starve the market until it's profitable enough to build again. And then those propriety systems corpos are going to cash in, too.
I wish the govt would just put its pants on and build tons of affordable housing.