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...how much does it have and is it a desktop or a notebook?
Also what operating system?
...that still seems to be the case where I am. yes it is very "walkable" but it's just off Old Town district which it a pretty sketchy. area. Sometimes denizens of that part of town wander into our neighbourhood occasionally strung out on some illicit substance or just plain schnockered. I have heard gunshots on occasion and there have been a couple murders not far away. Sometimes when I come home I see one of these folks lurking near the front door of my building hoping to "shadow" a tenant in.(this is a secure building that need a special key to enter)
Transit is fairly good in my area with two tram line stops literally right outside my door along with two LRT and a BRT (Bus Rapid Transit) lines a short walk away. I'm also only a couple blocks away from Union Station (built in the 1890s), handy when I head to Seattle or down south.
...love the original which is one of my top favourites , I was able to see it at an old 1920s cinema palace a few years ago here on the big screen. Felt like a kid again myself. When I was young, I was frightened by Gort who could melt howitzers and tanks..
..I haven't driven or owned a car in many, many years,. and the cost of an Uber ride is still too much (meagre SS benefit that is rather shy of the median amount).. Hence having such good transit access is nice and a bargain with the senior fare. When the weather is nice I walk t o downtown or the Northwest district which has lots of shops restaurants and pubs. .
I used to live in that area decades ago when it was still affordable, now it's been gentrified and rents are through the roof I don't even want to know what the lovely big one bedroom apartment I had there rents for now . It' s a nice old art deco building that was always well maintained. even when I lived there.
click to see details
windows 11 desktop and 8 gb
If it's a desktop of median and modern design, it should be able to accept 16 or 32GB of ram. HOWEVER, that is very dependent on the motherboard. So, if the desktop was a commercial off-the-shelf model, then the manufacturer and model number specifications should be sufficient to determine the type of RAM required, its speed, and its maximum capacity. Depending on the age of the system, the RAM type would probably be either DDR3, DDR4, or DDR5, but we need to know the desktop's manufacturer and model number, or the exact model number of the motherboard(sometimes hard to see without tearing the machine apart). If there are only two memory slots then you'd have to replace both RAM sticks. If there are four slots with two empty, then you could add another pair that match the two already in there. Mixing RAM of differing manufacturer and speeds, can be problematic. Easiest thing to do is just buy a pair of larger RAM sticks to replace your old RAM.
Here's a typical price on a good grade of recently modern DDR4 type RAM, but you still need to identify the desktop manufacturer and model number, or the motherboard model number to be sure to get the right type of RAM. Not saying some other speeds or manufacturers of RAM wouldn't work, but modern computers can be finicky.
Replacing RAM is easy-peasy if you can get to it without having to remove the CPU cooler, and it's not otherwise obstructed. If you've not replaced desktop RAM sticks before, check out a YouTube video (basically: turn off & unplug computer, open side panel, open the RAM slot's little retention levers on one or both ends, pop out old memory, orient new memory cutout key notch correctly, insert straight down, use careful, firm, downward pressure, make sure end levers are fully snapped into place.). However once new memory is in the machine, during the first boot, the BIOS of the computer will take some time to sniff it out, figure out how well it works, and the best way to poke at it. Once the computer accepts your new RAM you're set to go, but not all done. You might be able to enhance the speed of the RAM by 20% or so, by turning on the XMP (eXtreme Memory Profile) feature via your motherboard's BIOS (check the manual). It's not difficult to replace RAM, but do your homework.
So, what's your desktop's model number?
Es ist zu kalt.
...ah, LeatherGryphon beat me to it.
Well there is quite a ruckus out here. Apparently one of our sporting teams won some big game and is now planning to play some even bigger game. Whatever.
Complaint: Arghhh..., after the good fortune to have had an unexpected windfall of a significant refund check to easily pay off an unexpected hospital bill, I was happy and semi-secure. My heart attack had been managed, my uncontrollable bloody nose episodes had been managed and apparently resolved. The only medical issue left was getting my new prescriptions properly registered, insured and delivered regularly at an affordable price. It had all been done except for one prescription. "Xarelto", a blood thinner (anti-coagulant). I'd been told at the cardiac hospital that not taking my blood thinner would essentially be a death sentence and to not miss even one day for fear of blood clots clogging my new metal mesh stent in my heart vessel. Um, OK, I promise. They gave me a 30-day supply as I left the hospital at the end of November and charged me $47. Ouch, but doable. I went through the hoops of transferring my six new prescriptions from Buffalo hospital pharmacy to my local CVS pharmacy. Yay, all successfully transfered and purchased locally at the end of December. I'm set, I thought. But no! Now at the end of January, I find that my insurance company has refused to pay for Xarelto and I've been charged full price of about $550 And I run out of Xarleto on Thursday 1/30/25. I absolutely CANNOT afford an extra $550 every month. $200 maybe but not $550.
My Options: Today I must check with the pharmacist to see if there was any foul up of paperwork or authorizing agencies involved.
Must also check with the insurance company to see if this is a "feature" of my new policy for 2025, I'm sorry I didn't read the telephonebook sized list of covered items. Switching to new policy was required by changes in Social Security law that caused the insurance companies to modify their policies, I did some homework and checked into the coverage of the new policy offerings, but I'd thought that I'd picked the same level of coverage as the previous policy, but maybe not, the devil is in the details.
I can also check with my cardiologist to see if he has any manufacturer's samples to provide me with temporarily for a week or so. And to see if there's another blood thinner drug that isn't so expensive. I know that Warfarin is cheap but requires weekly blood tests to monitor levels in the blood. I am currently taking Clopidigrel (covered completely by insurance) also but don't know if increasing the dosage will work as well as Xarelto, or is advisable. Eliquis is supposedly very good but is very expensive ($$$$) even if partly covered by insurance. (*Sigh, life in the modern age.*) Health care was easier back in the old days. One just learned to not annoy the bear at the back of the cave.
I am thinking football!
Leather Gryphon: My dad was on Rat Poison Warfarin. Dead cheap (cost him nothing - UK has a National Health System [NHS] - but using basic, dead cheap, old fashioned drugs is what keeps the NHS vaguely affordable), and it does the same job. Might be worth asking about if it might be suitable for you.
Regards,
Richard
Thanks for the information. However, there are two problems with Warfarin for me.
Transportation: I don't have a car and going into the medical part of the city costs me at least $30 every trip. $2 bus in, and $28 Uber home, unless I want to stick around in the city for 6 hours to get the bus home.
Injections: I have very tiny veins and have run out of places to get poked. Phlebotomists have trouble poking me and hitting the target. So, weekly blood tests would be a problem. However, it would be a last ditch effort, so it's not off the table.
I'm hoping my Cardiologist can come up with an affordable solution that doesn't involve poking. Or better yet, I'm hoping there's something I can do with the insurance company. Hoping this situation is just an error. I did call the pharmacist at the drug store and he did say that insurance paid $100 for the Xarleto, so the actual price was $660
My mum puts moist cat food into two bowls and puts them on the ground. Both Oscar and Misty then gobbles it down from their bowl.
@LeatherGryphon is there a program from the manufacturer that can help you pay for it? I was on a free program last year for my MS meds (Kesimpta) that normally cost like $9k/month. My insurance refused to pay for it last year. For some reason they'll cover it this year, though, so I'm getting it through them now.
Thank you for the suggestion.
I've poked around in my account at the insurance company website and have discovered a $570 deductable for "Tier-3" class of drugs, of which Xarleto is one. This jibes with what the pharmacist suggested as "possibly a deductable issue". So, long story short, I believe that I only have to pay the $570 once during the year and then the rest of the year it's covered? And since this is a brand new insurance policy and this is the first drug order of the year, I think that's the explanation. Although, I'm still trying to find a human being to talk to at the insurance company. And I will talk with my Cardiologist about alternatives tomorrow (making a special trip). Wheee..., an undesired mini-adventure. Regardless, I need a resolution by Friday morning or I'm out of pills.
Musings: So, maybe it's a coincidence but I was able to get Xarelto for $47 twice (Nov & Dec) at the end of 2024, and coincidentally, 570 divided by 47 is 12 So, perhaps I was lucky and between the hospital issuing Xarelto and the confusion of tranfering prescriptions at the end of the year, and simultaneous activation of a new policy, my 2024 deductable got lost in the cracks? Or perhaps, in 2024 they didn't require a deductable at all. Yeah, that's probably the situation, they now require a deductable on Tier-3 drugs because the new laws require a $50 cap on the cost of Insulin. Insurance companies are slick, squeeze them in one area and they bulge out in others.
I found this in one of my pots outside. What is it?
I was looking at my pots so I could bring some inside. I wanted to put seeds in them.
Non-complaint: Made an emergency trip to my cardiologist this morning, and was able to get a few days sample supply of Xarelto to hold me over until I get the insurance issue straightened out. Stopped into Tim Horton's for breakfast, and picked up a couple plain donuts and a blueberry muffin to take home. Toddled over to BigLots for a look at what's on sale. Lots of furniture 40% off.
Complaint: The BigLots store is closing. That was a major part of my entertainment when I had to go to the medical center. But the TimHorton's is still in that area so all is not lost.
Complaint: I went ahead and ordered my prescriptions for the month, including the Insurance deductable ($$$) on Xarelto. But now that the deductable is completely satisfied, the cost per month should be manageable. I hope.