After a photo editing session was interrupted because the hard
drive in the computer I was using started ticking, and a
shutdown and cooldown in front of a fan wasn't enough to make it
able to boot again afterward (this is so very much not an encouraging
omen *sigh*), I turned on the television to see what they're saying
about the weather. (It's 307K / 34°C / 94°F in my bedroom.
The other computer by my bed had already been in front of a fan,
and it's what I'm typing on now.) The quote in the title of this
entry was uttered by some expert they interviewed. It makes perfect
sense but the phrasing amused me.
They then went on to talk about the price of gasoline and its
ramifications. "The high cost of oil is making its effects felt
in the unlikeliest of places ..." Uh, excuse me? What
'unlikely' places would those be? Since the context was consumer
goods and services, where don't you expect the price of
oil to have an effect? (Oh look, diapers, beer, and cosmetics
will be more expensive. Er ... duh?)
The late-August-visits-early-June heat wave is supposed to
break Wednesday. The ticking computer is in the 'fridge, wrapped
in a few layers of plastic to protect it against condensation
when I pull it out. If the hard drive works long enough then,
I'll scp -r
as much as I can to a rackmount machine
downstairs (wish me luck); in either case I'll probably be looking
for a new laptop-size hard drive soon. :-(
In other babble-age: oh hey, crunchy yogurt! That means
that I forgot that the arrival of hot, humid weather required
rearranging the stuff in the fridge to keep things that I don't
want crunchy off the top shelf.