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Comment Re:Just buy insurance...it's honestly that simple. (Score 1) 468

I clearly recall one week my three kids caught the same flu and I spent $900 out of pocket for 3 doctors visits.

Just curious, but why do you go to the doctor for a flu? They can't really do anything about it anyway? Worried about the temperature getting too high?

EXACTLY. And yet the US public school absolutely required a doctor's note if you miss more than one day of school. If they need 2 to sleep it off, I have to pay to show I had my child examined by a doctor and that they can verify the high fever or flu-symptoms. So I spent $900 for 3 pieces of paper to keep the school from slapping me with truancy charges.

If you move to Denmark, doctor and hospital visits will be 100% free no matter what, dental free only up to 18 years (but I think they're looking to change that), if you got something serious I think you can get some money for the medicine, but otherwise you'll have to pay for that yourself. Same with glasses, birth control pills and that sort of thing. If you get old, things change so you can actually some coverage of glasses and hearing aids.

I don't know how things work for foreigners, but I imagine as soon as you get a permit to stay here, you're covered in the same way as Danish citizens.

I'm considering a move to the EU for exactly these reasons.

Comment Re:Just buy insurance...it's honestly that simple. (Score 2) 468

I've been independent for over 4 years now, and for my family of five including my autistic son with a major genetic disorder our insurance started at $400 per month. Catastrophic only, any doctors bills, RX, etc was strictly out of pocket and always hundreds of dollars. I clearly recall one week my three kids caught the same flu and I spent $900 out of pocket for 3 doctors visits.

Every year the rates went up and covered less. I now spend $620/month on a plan without dental, maternity, or vision. I'm spending about $4000 this month on minor dental work (ie: cleanings and a filling!) for myself and my wife, and new glasses for us and one son.

I expect my rates to exceed $700/mo next summer at the rate it's going. I fully expect that should I get injured or require hospitalization my insurance will weasel out, and I'll be bankrupt in 90 days. I feel that I'd get the same value if I just took the money out back and burned it each month.

As a result, I'm looking to emigrate to a first world nation that does have universal coverage. This system is broken and shows no signs of being fixed, Obamacare or not.

Comment Re:Try Mapivi (Score 1) 326

I agree that the spirit of adding/removing tags means they should add and remove to the file.

I tried implementing a workflow for scanned receipt management on top of Digikam and got bit by several of the issues we've discussed (ie: using tags for workflow).

I moved off it to other methods, so I'm not current on the capabilities.

Comment Re:Try Mapivi (Score 1) 326

I have found multiple inconsistencies in my testing. Warning, I'm on Debian Lenny using Digikam 0.9.4, so these may be fixed in later releases.

Dates: Date handling doesn't update live in the application, I can enter a new date and until I reload the album the changes don't take effect. According to exiftool Digikam is shotgun updating multiple EXIF date fields too, so it has been difficult for me to know which date Digikam honors on first seeing a file (EXIF timestamp, file mod time date, etc).

Tags: You can add a tag and have it stored in the EXIF/IPTC header in the file, but if you remove a tag from the image the removal is performed in the database only.

Comments: Comments are also stored in multiple EXIF locations.

My experience is simply that Digikam was built around owning a central database. The concept of updating the metadata in the files themselves appears to be an incomplete bolt-on feature. OTOH Mapivi only caches data, but I get frustrated with the UI. If you experiment with using exiftool to examine and change file content and compare against what Digikam does, you may discover more holes.

I would really love to find an app which would allow customization of metadata entry, so far I'm using exiftool on the command line to do it in combination with a shell script which prompts for values with history.

Comment Try Mapivi (Score 4, Informative) 326

I've been searching for the same feature set, a file centric image manager whose metadata is stored exclusively in the file.

One of the best ones I have found is Mapivi:

http://mapivi.sourceforge.net/mapivi.shtml

I still often use Digikam, but its metadata support is inconsistent at best. On the other hand the front end is more useable than Mapivi.

You should also look at ExifTool, because you can manipulate and query metadata with it on the command line.

http://www.sno.phy.queensu.ca/~phil/exiftool/

If you find a solution, please share!

Comment Re:High-fat, but no carbs (Score 1) 379

Do you drink alcohol?

Kudos to the other poster (different thread) that posted "Sugar: The Bitter Truth", its a great watch.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBnniua6-oM

Gary Taubes' book is almost the same regarding high carb diets and related topics like ketosis.

Keep up the fiber in your carb diet, cut out refined anything. Eat all the whole wheat and veggies you want.

Good luck!

Comment Re:High-fat, but no carbs (Score 1) 379

You left off several "citation needed" items in that statement, right out of a paragraph labeled "Controversy". One might argue that should be the default state of a human.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketosis#Controversy

I can't say one way or the other on it, but I'm in the middle of Gary Taubes book, "Good Calories, Bad Calories". It isn't as much a diet book as a study on the science of diet. It has been an interesting read, and very disappointing in terms of the junk science and politics involved. I intend to spot check resources when I'm done to verify some of his claims, but feel free to weigh in.

http://www.amazon.com/Good-Calories-Bad-Gary-Taubes/dp/1400040787
http://a.abcnews.com/GMA/NewYearNewYou/story?id=3654291&page=1

Comment Ledger (Score 1) 291

I use Ledger (http://wiki.github.com/jwiegley/ledger) and CSV2Ledger (https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Flaunchpad.net%2Fcsv2ledger) to import data from my bank, and report on in any variety of means.

Its all text based, which means you can use Version Control and your favorite editor. Ledger even has an Emacs Mode.

Enjoy.

Comment Re:LaTeX (Score 1) 325

Use Org-mode w/ flyspell inside Emacs.

Org-mode contains a great folding outline organizer which flows with your text, and then you can export to Latex later.

It can also generate TOC, include graphics and tables, and the Latex output is very clean and neat.

I use it for all of my technical documentation, and though the Latex/PDF output would be acceptable, I have a techwriter import an HTML exported version of my document into Word and apply a company template. So native is good, or you can easily adapt it into other systems.

http://www.orgmode.org/

Power

Submission + - Untapped Energy Below Us (yahoo.com) 1

EskimoJoe writes: "BASEL, Switzerland — When tremors started cracking walls and bathroom tiles in this Swiss city on the Rhine, the engineers knew they had a problem. "The glass vases on the shelf rattled, and there was a loud bang," Catherine Wueest, a teashop owner, recalls. "I thought a truck had crashed into the building." But the 3.4 magnitude tremor on the evening of Dec. 8 was no ordinary act of nature: It had been accidentally triggered by engineers drilling deep into the Earth's crust to tap its inner heat and thus break new ground — literally — in the world's search for new sources of energy. On paper, the Basel project looks fairly straightforward: Drill down, shoot cold water into the shaft and bring it up again superheated and capable of generating enough power through a steam turbine to meet the electricity needs of 10,000 households, and heat 2,700 homes. Scientists say this geothermal energy, clean, quiet and virtually inexhaustible, could fill the world's annual needs 250,000 times over with nearly zero impact on the climate or the environment. A study released this year by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology said if 40 percent of the heat under the United States could be tapped, it would meet demand 56,000 times over. It said an investment of $800 million to $1 billion could produce more than 100 gigawatts of electricity by 2050, equaling the combined output of all 104 nuclear power plants in the U.S."

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