Wednesday, January 27, 2021

grubhub


 

soy yo (grub hub song)


 Me caĂ­, me parĂ©, caminĂ©, me subĂ­

Me fui contra la corriente y también me perdí
Fracasé, me encontré, lo viví y aprendí
Cuando te pegas fuerte mĂĄs profundo es el beat
Sigo bailando y escribiendo mis letras
Sigo cantando con las puertas abiertas
Atravesando todas estas tierras
Y no hay que viajar tanto pa' encontrar la respuesta
Y no te preocupes si no te aprueban
Cuando te critiquen, tĂș solo di
Soy yo
Soy yo
Soy yo (soy, soy, soy, soy, soy, soy, soy)
Soy yo (yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo)
Sigo caminando y sigo riendo
Hago lo que quiero y muero en el intento
A nadie le importa lo que estoy haciendo
Lo Ășnico que importa es lo que estĂĄ por dentro
A mĂ­ me gusta estar en la arena
Bañarme en el mar sin razón, sin problema
Estar sentada sin hacer nada
Mirando de lejos y estar relajada
Y no te preocupes si no te aprueban
Cuando te critiquen, tĂș solo di
Soy yo
Soy yo
Soy yo (soy, soy, soy, soy, soy, soy, soy)
Soy yo (yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo)
Soy asĂ­, soy asĂ­, soy asĂ­ (Relaja)
Y tĂș ni me conoces a mĂ­ (Bien relaja)
Soy asĂ­, soy asĂ­, soy asĂ­ (Relaja)
Y tĂș ni me conoces a mĂ­ (Bien relaja)
You know what I mean? You know what I mean?
SĂ­, papĂĄ
Y no te preocupes si no te aprueban
Cuando te critiquen, tĂș solo di
Soy yo
Soy yo
Soy yo (soy, soy, soy, soy, soy, soy, soy)
Soy yo (yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo)
En la cama
RelajĂĄ
Con mi encanto
Con pijama, soy yo

Blue Chalcedony

 

Crystal Master's Midnight Secret and Sale

25% OFF SALE

+ Learn How to Program Blue Chalcedony to Relay Thoughts

Watch the Video


Click above to watch a short video on this topic.
 

Why Blue Chalcedony Works


Blue Chalcedony is a demure crystal, subtle and mystic, cool and serene, ethereal yet solid. It has an inviting, soft blue translucence, and an almost imperceptible movement within the stone that invokes a stillness of silent reverence. It's calming and speaks of spirit and trust. The Crystal Metaphysical Encyclopedia has two clues about an unusual use. First, it says, “the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Greece, and Rome used varieties of Chalcedony in jewelry and carvings, and, as gems of antiquity, they were believed to imbue their holders with certain powers". Secondly, it tells us, "it is still in use today for meditations, and as a pathway for receiving successful thought transmissions".

The Crystal Masters know that “the certain powers” ancient civilizations used were that Blue Chalcedony can be programmed by a person to relay or convey feelings to another person.

For example, your daughter may be going off to school, but you want her to have something to remind her of your love. Take a piece of blue chalcedony and perform a small ritual of attunement and then give it to her to take with her off to school. When you wish to send love to her, the attuned crystal will receive your thoughts of love for her and radiate them. If she is nearby she will receive them.

The idea is to imbue the stone with the spirit of your feelings. Any thoughts, feelings, or prayers can be attuned into the blue calcedony, but it works best with subtle thoughts and feelings of mystic, serene calmness, and prayers such as love, care, getting well from injury or sickness, family, affection, good will, happiness, etc. It doesn’t work with the hard, brittle, red end of the spectrum heated thoughts. For wild passion, you need another stone. For gentle, warm feelings of sustained love and affection, this is where Blue Chalcedony is perfect.

 
How to use Blue Chalcedony

Instructions:
  1. Take the Blue Chalcedony to a quiet place where you will not be disturbed.
  2. Hold it in both hands, maybe over your heart. Imagine you are projecting a white light from your third eye into the stone.
  3. Now, use that white light as a path and send the emotions and thoughts you wish to attune the stone to down the path. You will probably see the color of the white light change. I suspect you, as some people do, will feel a change of some sort in the stone.
  4. Now wrap the stone in a small piece of dark cloth and it is ready to be given to the person to whom you will be sending the emotions and feelings.
  5. Explain to the recipient that they need to put the Blue Chalcedony near where they spend a lot of time and even take it to their bedroom at night. That way it will be near when you happen to send thoughts, emotions and wishes to them and the Blue Chalcedony receives them. 

For our special Crystal Master's Midnight Secret and Sale from now until the sun rises on the west coast, 6 am PT/9 am ET...
 
GET A POWERFUL BLUE CHALCEDONY FOR 25% OFF
 
No Limit! Us discount code MIDNIGHT to save!

Just add any Blue Chalcedony to your cart, use discount code MIDNIGHT and you'll save 25% OFF instantly!

I really need to increase the font size these days and I cannot find

 

  • I really need to increase the font size these days and I cannot find
    a setting that affects the contents of HTML contents. I guess there should be 
    some % number setting somewhere ?

      Jocke
    _______________________________________________
    evolution-list mailing list
    To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ...

  • Milan Crha via evolution-list <evolution-list@gnome.org>
    To:evolution-list@gnome.org
    Thu, Oct 1, 2020 at 8:07 AM
    On Thu, 2020-10-01 at 13:49 +0200, Joakim Tjernlund via evolution-list
    wrote:
    > I really need to increase the font size these days and I cannot find
    > a setting that affects the contents of HTML contents. I guess there
    > should be some % number setting somewhere ?

        Hi,
    if you mean when reading HTML mails, then you can Ctrl+MouseWheel to
    change the zoom temporarily, or you can limit the minimum font size in
    Edit->Preferences->Mail Preferences->General tab->Message Display
    section->Minimum Font Size option. Evolution used to set it, but I
    removed it for the 3.38.0.
        Bye,
        Milan

    P.S.: a side note: Gmail seems to understand "Normal" font size as
    "small" for the rest of the world, which makes it hard to read when
    people change the font size in the Gmail's web UI. No idea whether it's
    your case too, this is just one place I noticed it with (reported to
    Google weeks ago, no response from them yet).
  • Joakim Tjernlund via evolution-list <evolution-list@gnome.org>
    To:mcrha@redhat.com,evolution-list@gnome.org
    Thu, Oct 1, 2020 at 9:36 AM
    On Thu, 2020-10-01 at 14:02 +0200, Milan Crha via evolution-list wrote:
    > CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.
    >
    >
    > On Thu, 2020-10-01 at 13:49 +0200, Joakim Tjernlund via evolution-list
    > wrote:
    > > I really need to increase the font size these days and I cannot find
    > > a setting that affects the contents of HTML contents. I guess there
    > > should be some % number setting somewhere ?
    >
    >         Hi,
    > if you mean when reading HTML mails, then you can Ctrl+MouseWheel to
    > change the zoom temporarily, or you can limit the minimum font size in
    > Edit->Preferences->Mail Preferences->General tab->Message Display
    > section->Minimum Font Size option. Evolution used to set it, but I
    > removed it for the 3.38.0.

    Minimum Font Size works for me :) Please add back..
    Maybe some default zoom, like firefox has, instead ?

    The control+Mouse think is a bit fiddly to do every time.

    >         Bye,
    >         Milan
    >
    > P.S.: a side note: Gmail seems to understand "Normal" font size as
    > "small" for the rest of the world, which makes it hard to read when
    > people change the font size in the Gmail's web UI. No idea whether it's
    > your case too, this is just one place I noticed it with (reported to
    > Google weeks ago, no response from them yet).

    For it is just that my eyes are getting "old"

      Jocke
  • Milan Crha via evolution-list <evolution-list@gnome.org>
    To:evolution-list@gnome.org
    Thu, Oct 1, 2020 at 10:13 AM
    On Thu, 2020-10-01 at 15:36 +0200, Joakim Tjernlund wrote:
    > Minimum Font Size works for me :) Please add back..
    > Maybe some default zoom, like firefox has, instead ?

        Hi,
    there's nothing to be added back from my point of view. Users have the
    option fully under their control now. The option is not about the zoom,
    it's really about the minimum font size. Quoting from the WebKitGTK
    documentation:

      The minimum font size in pixels used to display text. This setting
      controls the absolute smallest size. Values other than 0 can
      potentially break page layouts.

    Thus that Evolution forced its own value there was kind of a bad idea.

    The other font settings (above this Minimum Font Size option in the
    Preferences) can influence the default font size, from which are
    derived other sizes (unless the HTML contains absolute sizes).

    I'd rather not add an option for "the default zoom".
  • Joakim Tjernlund via evolution-list <evolution-list@gnome.org>
    To:mcrha@redhat.com,evolution-list@gnome.org
    Thu, Oct 1, 2020 at 11:19 AM
    On Thu, 2020-10-01 at 16:07 +0200, Milan Crha via evolution-list wrote:
    > CAUTION: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.
    >
    >
    > On Thu, 2020-10-01 at 15:36 +0200, Joakim Tjernlund wrote:
    > > Minimum Font Size works for me :) Please add back..
    > > Maybe some default zoom, like firefox has, instead ?
    >
    >         Hi,
    > there's nothing to be added back from my point of view. Users have the
    > option fully under their control now. The option is not about the zoom,
    > it's really about the minimum font size. Quoting from the WebKitGTK
    > documentation:
    >
    >    The minimum font size in pixels used to display text. This setting
    >    controls the absolute smallest size. Values other than 0 can
    >    potentially break page layouts.
    >
    > Thus that Evolution forced its own value there was kind of a bad idea.
    >
    > The other font settings (above this Minimum Font Size option in the
    > Preferences) can influence the default font size, from which are
    > derived other sizes (unless the HTML contains absolute sizes).
    >
    > I'd rather not add an option for "the default zoom".

    Right, it was just an suggestion but I though you had removed something,
    like Minimum font size?

    Also, I just noted that Min font size didn't really work for HTML mails(from Outlook),
    still at original size. Should not min font size affect all HTML mail, regardless
    of abs. font size?

    Jocke
  • Milan Crha via evolution-list <evolution-list@gnome.org>
    To:evolution-list
    Thu, Oct 1, 2020 at 11:59 AM
    On Thu, 2020-10-01 at 17:18 +0200, Joakim Tjernlund wrote:
    > Right, it was just an suggestion but I though you had removed
    > something, like Minimum font size?

        Hi,
    no, I did not remove anything, I only moved it in a way that users have
    control over it.

    > Also, I just noted that Min font size didn't really work for HTML
    > mails(from Outlook), still at original size.

    Works for me, with an Undelivered message notification from the server.
    I tried with value 50, which made the text super-large. Remember, it's
    pixels. If you are on hiDPI, then maybe the value should be larger. In
    any case, the drawing is handled by WebKitGTK, thus if anything doesn't
    work it might be a question for them. Evolution only sets the value.
        Bye,
  • Zan Lynx <zlynx@acm.org>
    To:evolution-list@gnome.org
    Thu, Oct 1, 2020 at 12:03 PM
    On 10/1/20 8:07 AM, Milan Crha via evolution-list wrote:
    >     Hi,
    > there's nothing to be added back from my point of view. Users have the
    > option fully under their control now. The option is not about the zoom,
    > it's really about the minimum font size. Quoting from the WebKitGTK
    > documentation:
    >
    >    The minimum font size in pixels used to display text. This setting
    >    controls the absolute smallest size. Values other than 0 can
    >    potentially break page layouts.
    >
    > Thus that Evolution forced its own value there was kind of a bad idea.

    One idea I saw in a phone mail client that seemed to work well combines
    minimum font and zoom.

    Zoom is applied until the smallest font is at least the minimum size.
    Everything else gets bigger. This preserves the page layout at the
    expense of scrolling, but the user is of course able to use pinch-zoom
    to see the entire message.

    That might be a good option for Evolution if someone is reworking the
    HTML display code.

    --
                    Knowledge is Power -- Power Corrupts
                            Study Hard -- Be Evil
  • Gerd Röthig via evolution-list <evolution-list@gnome.org>
    To:evolution-list
    Mon, Jan 25 at 9:54 AM
    Am Donnerstag, dem 01.10.2020 um 17:57 +0200 schrieb Milan Crha via evolution-list:
    > On Thu, 2020-10-01 at 17:18 +0200, Joakim Tjernlund wrote:
    > > Right, it was just an suggestion but I though you had removed
    > > something, like Minimum font size?
    >
    >         Hi,
    > no, I did not remove anything, I only moved it in a way that users have
    > control over it.

    I am afraid that I do not understand fully. The possibility to specify a minimum font size for
    displaying HTML mails in Evolution was removed in order to allow users "control over it"?

    How do users now have "control over it"?

    I am using Evolution on Manjaro Linux (xfce) - is there some setting, for example in dconf, that I
    can adjust?

    Thank you very much and kind regards.
  • Milan Crha via evolution-list <evolution-list@gnome.org>
    To:evolution-list@gnome.org
    Tue, Jan 26 at 3:25 AM
    On Mon, 2021-01-25 at 15:54 +0100, Gerd Röthig via evolution-list
    wrote:
    > How do users now have "control over it"?

        Hi,
    just navigate to Edit->Preferences->Mail Preferences->General tab and
    near the top, where you can override the font settings, is added an
    option named "Minimum Font Size: [xxx] (in pixels)". My quotes just for
    clarity, yours for... something else.

        Bye,

Infinity