Well, imagine someone opening the door if the water hasn't fully drained out and the ensuing mess. If you're wondering if someone is stupid enough to do that, then the answer is unequivocally yes. There is a reason the door locks for that amount of time - so somebody doesn't brain fart, open the door, and flood the laundry room.
housepanther
It's shenanigans like this that make me never want to buy a Canon or HP product. If I need a high end inkjet for printing photographs, it's Epson all day. For anything else, I swear by a good used bulletproof Brother.
That's a really good word! I had to look it up and I consider to be learned myself. I am filing this one under, "Today I learned ...." 😸
To be fair, that's not just boomer love but anybody that's wealthy and heavily invested in Big Oil/Gas.
I am fine with people being less traditionally intelligent than myself. I know intelligence has many forms. What really annoys me is when people try to sound intelligent by misusing big words. That makes people sound stupid.
The single life isn't so bad really.
You could simply gut it, keep the case and power supply, and put modern components in it.
Nothing in my instance logs are showing anything out of the ordinary.
I am reminded of the old saying:
A lie oft repeated takes on a truth of its own.
I am single by choice because I am going through mental health relapse. That's never a good time to have a relationship, as much as I would like to have one. For the time being, I realize that the single life is easier and makes the most amount of sense.
This frustrates the shit out of me but I have a feeling it has everything to do with mindshare. Windows just has the majority of the mindshare and a lot of decisions about information technology are not necessarily made by technically savvy people. Even technically savvy people make poor choices. I had a director once tell me that he prefers proprietary software to open source because it gives him somebody to sue if the software fails. Obviously he is neither a lawyer nor much of a reader because the terms of use and conditions basically indemnify the software company.
Linux and BSD are superior in almost every way. You could literally run an entire organization on Linux Mint as the desktop. Even before Linux Mint was a thing, I had a contract job supporting a rollout of CentOS to the desktop at a small publishing company and this was back in 2005. This company did absolutely everything systems related on CentOS. If this company could do it 18 years ago on CentOS, I can only imagine it is going to be even easier today.
Have you tried Inkscape?