Faux.
Le dictionnaire d'Oxford considère cette utilisation de that comme correcte :
> ‘the woman that owns the place’
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/that
Le dictionnaire de Cambridge également :
> We met somebody last night that did the speech therapy course two years after you. (refers to a person)
I'm up and running on Starlink and it's good so far. The 'UFO on a stick' is currently in the middle of my backyard (for a clear view of the sky) on my sewage cover (lawn is not flat). I'd like to put it on my roof eventually but I also want easy access to it in winter in case snow needs to be cleared, so I'm still trying to determine a permanent home. Ideally I'd like to have it mounted on its own thick wooden post somewhere on the edge of my property with the cable running underground.
I'm running Xplornet also. I have a Dual WAN router but I played with the failover and load balancing options without much success, so I enlisted the help of Speedify which is a VPN service with a "channel bonding" feature, allowing you to easily run two separate connections simultaneously. It also has a "seamless failover" feature which basically ensures stability in case one or the other craps out (which both ISP's are known to do). Speedify's 3-year plan is currently on sale for about $74. Some might find it handy for pairing their home connection with their mobile data connection. I haven't used it much so far but it appears to be exactly what I need.
Anyway, this service trio isn't cheap, but as far as rural access goes, it is very fast, reliable, and secure. Here's a speed test, but keep in mind that speed tests vary wildly due to the many moving parts.
Yeah I agree, although I think their era of politics is long gone. Hatfield was actually a Progressive-Conservative, unlike just about anyone associated with his party today. And Robichaud was a true reformist. We mostly hear about him in the context of the Official Languages Act, but his New Brunswick Equal Opportunity Program was incredibly significant. Here's an interesting tidbit I read in Jacques Poitras' book lately in case anyone's interested:
>In his second term, Robichaud broke the old repressive system of county governance that saw a starkly uneven distribution of local services, with wealthy areas availing themselves of good roads and schools while poorer areas - among them most francophone counties - suffered a lack of essential infrastructure. In Saint John County, home of the province's industrial base and much of its wealth, the county budget was $180.79 per capita. In Restigouche County, in the francophone north, far from the centre of power, it was only slightly more than one-tenth of Saint John's - $19.06. It was the kind of inequality Robichaud had determined to correct as a student at Laval, and he did so by centralizing the property tax system and busting the old political cliques and cabals in the county seats. This guaranteed at least an approximately just distribution of government funding for services. The tax reforms were opposed in the 1967 election by K.C. Irving, who deployed his media holdings and his wealth in an attempt to unseat the Liberals.
Gone are the days when the Liberals would dare oppose the Irving Empire on any issue..
There's a couple good books I could recommend.
Better info here with recent reviews - https://www.alltrails.com/trail/canada/new-brunswick/welsford-brook-waterfall-trail
Not personally, but here is someone's trail record of it from only a few days ago, including a picture: https://www.alltrails.com/explore/recording/midland-ice-caves-94fee47
Definitely seems like less ice than the time I went years back, but still a fair amount.
https://www.alltrails.com/trail/canada/new-brunswick/mary-pitcher
The trail itself isn't too hard in summer at least, the real problem is driving to the trailhead, you need to navigate quite a few backroads......4X4 or ATV probably the best option, especially at a point mid-way in where only half the road is left after a washout. I managed to make it all the way in a car, but it was dicey. You can use the map provided at this link, type the coordinates given into Google Maps/Earth satellite view to see the road network. The coordinates for the start of the backroad are at 45.587850, -65.433898, trailhead at 45.49140972614136, -65.3948513501425. From there you can follow the trail markers downstream to the falls, or just follow the river if you lose the markers.
For reference, that picture was taken back at the start of May in 2020.
The inimitable Chris Rutkowski, Canada's UFO Guy on Podcast UFO last night with Martin Willis. One of the best scientific minded UFO researchers, he's been at it for decades in Canada. His new book is just out.
'Guest, Canadian UFO researcher, Chris Rutkowski comes on to discuss his latest book, Canada's UFOs: Declassified, the book touches on decades of reported sightings by military & civilians in Canada.
Check out his book here:
https://www.amazon.com/Canadas-UFOs-Declassified-Chris-Rutkowski/dp/1786771691/ref=sr\_1\_1
IBIO: Chris A. Rutkowski is a science writer who has devoted much time to investigating and studying reports of UFOs, writing about case investigations, and offering his insights into the broad UFO phenomenon.
PREVIOUS BOOKS: Visitations? (1989); Unnatural History (1993); Mysterious Manitoba, co-authored with Dave Creighton and Brian Fidler (1997); Abductions and Aliens (2000); The Canadian UFO Report , co-authored with Geoff Dittman (2006); A World of UFOs (2008), I Saw It Too! (2009) and The Big Book of UFOs (2010), When They Appeared, co-authored with Stan Michalak (2019). Rutkowski also has contributed chapters to many anthologies such as Phenomenon, Frontiers of Reality and UFO 1947-1997, a 50th anniversary review of the UFO phenomenon. He was a contributing editor of International UFO Reporter and was the editor of the Swamp Gas Journal, an occasional ufozine first published in 1978 when he was part of Decadent Winnipeg Fandom. He is a past-president of the Winnipeg Science Fiction Society and was part of the Winnipeg SF community that gathered Saturdays at the home of the legendary “first fan” Chester Cuthbert. He is also a past-president of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada - Winnipeg Centre and has degrees in science and education. Chris Rutkowski blogs at: uforum.blogspot.com He lives just outside Winnipeg.'
MBPF-1/4" 0.25 inch Locking Black Plastic Body and Sheet Metal Hole Plug Qty 50 PDR Paintless Dent Repair https://www.amazon.com/dp/B019CX5JWY/ref=cm_sw_r_awdo_S2MMV3WY0ND1NBWS5KMK
Something like that.
Not if they're only teaching theory. You can literally buy books with IED instructions from Amazon and have them delivered to your front door.
If you've got an Android phone, there's an app that downloads Open Street Map info to your phone, so even when you don't have a cell signal you have offline access to the map, including hiking trails etc.
If someone tries to sell you anti virus in the store, I personally use zone alarm. https://www.zonealarm.com/software
ZoneAlarm Free Antivirus Free
ZoneAlarm Pro Antivirus + Firewall 1 year - 5 PCs $49.95 (normally $60)
ZoneAlarm Extreme Security $61.95 (normally $80 )
(checkpoint, bought zone alarm way back when ) is an international company head quartered in Israel)
https://www.clamav.net/ ( is an open source antivirus engine for detecting trojans, viruses, malware & other malicious threats. ) Linux, windows, apple. (seems to be a cisco / talos sub company?)
> If you like twitter so much then bend mastodon to your will. > > https://joinmastodon.org/ > > https://github.com/tootsuite/mastodon
Not a particular fan of twitter but it just seems thats where all the updates happen first. mastodon seems interesting so thanks!
> I think you should call nb power.
missing the point
It is unfair.
You should read Irving vs Irving.
https://www.amazon.ca/Irving-vs-Canadas-Feuding-Billionaires/dp/0670067717
Even though I disagree with some of your core ideas, I definitely admire your knowledge for having lived here such a short time. I didn't know about the optimal fishing dilemma. Of course, I had no reason to...but still - good for you.