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> chapter1.txt
Finished reading that. I got the feeling that it was "more boring than the first pages of 'The Sound and the Fury'". The end of that chapter somewhat made me want to read the next one. Here's a "spoiler" from chapter 1:
> I... may have been interested in ponies more than just my friend’s nagging. It was just too perfect. Most animal stories even fantasy ones made them incompetent, not builders or movers or shapers, but just animals struggling to survive. Even Tailchaser’s Song really struggled to escape the mundane life of alley cats. Honestly I like that Golden Road series better. But putting that aside, ponies were an incredibly successful creature with great skills in art, in building and machines, and in food preparations. And not just that they were in touch with the land and the weather so intimately, I loved the idea of being a part of the universe instead of just being an accident that the universe just hasn’t stamped out yet. So... ponies were my ideal scenario. Except that they weren’t ferrets. But like I said, and I really meant it, the magic is what’s important, not whether you’re pony or human or wildebeast or woozle. If only Friendship was Magic in the real world. I’d have magic up the yin yang (though I wouldn’t be able to remember it). If you’ve ever seen a professional full time friend, then you’ve also seen a jobless bum.
> Using a Ubuntu-based OS which works in 32bit
I am using an older one: Lubuntu based on "Ubuntu 14.04 LTS trusty". Not sure how concerned I should be about that in terms of security. Maybe it is a horrible mistake because it is Internet-connected. Like what if a hacker gains access then sshs in to another computer on my local network, or does some other nasty shit? Perhaps ssh on a 64bit computer would be fine, so he couldn't get in there; still, I should quit being lazy and used key-based auth and not pass-based auth. (BTW, Lubuntu comes with openssh-client already install, you have to install openssh-server to ssh into Lubuntu.) Other concern:
> CPU0: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
> CPU1: Core temperature above threshold, cpu clock throttled (total events = 1)
Linux, do your thang, don't let a core meltdown happen.