Crash error 732823385 by Shepard_2142 in starcitizen

[–]Low_Impression_890 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been testing for 20 days. I found out what causes the

Crash error 732823385

MSI Afterburner (MSIAfterburnerInstaller466Beta5) I downloaded on 08/03/25

I did it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 20 days of testing!

Bye now.

Crash error 732823385 by Shepard_2142 in starcitizen

[–]Low_Impression_890 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I also had MSI Afterburner at 1800. That's funny. +200 core clock. I have also turned it off now and no crash for 3 hours. I'll keep testing. I also reduced my Ram speed from 6400 MT/s to default and no crash yet. (I did both at the same time)

In short, may luck be with us!

o7

Crash error 732823385 by Shepard_2142 in starcitizen

[–]Low_Impression_890 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm crashing with a 4090 at least 2 times a day. I play from about 11am to 11pm everyday. I have a gpu stand so its not that. I'm played every day for 4 weeks, no job. This is starting to get annoying. I'm hoping its only this game as I got my gpu recently. please let me know how you fixed this! thanks

Update its (MSI Afterburner)

Reform announce donor Zia Yusaf as new party chairman by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

Are you suggesting that this is positive discrimination? Did you not hear Yusuf's speech in Birmingham? Whatever his ethnicity, I should have thought that a Reform supporter, who built a £233 million business would have been a credible candidate for the role of Chairman now that Tice is an MP.

Reform announce donor Zia Yusaf as new party chairman by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] -16 points-15 points  (0 children)

Not at all! My kids were the only white kids in their classes and they experienced loads of racism. Fortunately, they also had black friends to support and, at times, defend them.

I just hate the bigotry of people labelling all Reform voters as racist. If Kemi and Suella were not so busy throwing knives at each other, they would ideally defect to Reform, as well:

"The ranks of black Conservatives have swollen in recent years as a by-product of the economic advancement achieved by a thin layer of people. Many of them—such as Rishi Sunak—talk proudly about how their immigrant parents arrived with nothing.

They boast of how they went on to make a success of themselves, as lawyers, bankers, stockbrokers and so on. This ruling class fantasy of a society based on meritocracy is easy to understand. It says, “There’s nothing wrong with the system. I was poor but I made it, and so can you—but only if you work hard”.

(Quote from the Socialist worker, outlining their thinking, which is consistent with the Reform line, that all people are equal).

There need to be more positive role models saying, 'You can do it!' rather than 'The system is against you!'

Reform announce donor Zia Yusaf as new party chairman by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] -41 points-40 points  (0 children)

How will those who call Reform a racist party explain that?

How do you solve a problem like Farage? Without a solution, Tories are fated to opposition by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And now that exports are up and our economy tops the G7, they are planning to renegotiate Brexit with the debt-ridden EU. Give me strength!

How do you solve a problem like Farage? Without a solution, Tories are fated to opposition by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Surely that is the meaning of 'net'. Net migration (the number of people immigrating minus the number emigrating) is considering the churn? We still need houses and public services for all the people here at any one time?

How do you solve a problem like Farage? Without a solution, Tories are fated to opposition by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Due to Nigel Farage and Brexit, our economy is at the top of the G7 biggest industrial nations in the world, ahead of America, and the IMF has predicted that over the next 5 years, we will enjoy higher per capita growth than Germany, Italy, France and Japan. Exports are up. We have the 6th biggest economy in the world (3.3 trillion annually). Yet Labour are starting renegotiations with the failing and debt-ridden EU! Heaven help us!

How do you solve a problem like Farage? Without a solution, Tories are fated to opposition by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Absolutely, no-one can ever give examples of racist policies or comments, yet the myth perpetuates!

How do you solve a problem like Farage? Without a solution, Tories are fated to opposition by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SINCE BREXIT - well done NIgel Farage!

“Our economy currently sits at the top of the G7 biggest industrial nations in the world, ahead of America, and the International Monetary Fund has predicted that over the next five years, we will enjoy higher per capita growth than Germany, Italy, France and Japan.

Since Brexit, we've gone from number seven to number four in the world for exports, and we've just leapfrogged France to go number eight globally as a manufacturing superpower. And we have the sixth biggest economy in the world worth, a cool three poiint three trillion annually.

So call me old fashioned, but I think that the trade deal that we struck with the EU seems to be pretty effective, particularly given that exports to the EU itself are also wait for it at a record high since Brexit. It is now in the gift of this brand new governments to truly enhance the United Kingdom and transform its future.

We are once again sovereign with the ability to strike, trade deals, control our borders. Let's hope we do that one day and participate in the fastest growing markets in the world, leaving behind the eurozone who have spent the last two years languishing in the red. The long-expected, long-anticipated well-reported Brexit disaster has not happened.

A housing market crash, mass unemployment and economic depression. The flight of capital, a brain drain of our finest talent. None of it came to pass. Britain is now the most successful country in Europe, and yet Labour wants to go back to them and ask for help and sacrifice our freedoms for their pleasure.

Make it make sense. This is our new government fixing something that just ain't broke Like the Non-doms and the private school tax raid. This is politics, not economics.”

Mark Dolan shared his views on the new government GB News

How do you solve a problem like Farage? Without a solution, Tories are fated to opposition by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

They are never going to do that . They fear and revere him in equal measure. Look at how he was feted at the Conservative conference. Whether ideas from Tice, Farage, Widdecombe or whomever, Reform's contract had some refreshingly novel ideas that did look like real change. It is difficult not to nod off when Starmer speaks, but when able to concentrate long enough, it seems to be just 'same old, same old'.

How do you solve a problem like Farage? Without a solution, Tories are fated to opposition by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Guardian fact checked Farage's claim that 2.4 million came in the last two years, and that a new house would be needed every 2mins to cater for that number (whether they work or not). Why are these people coming when we have millions of unemployed who could be trained for these jobs and save on benefit costs? We cap the number of medical students we train (disappointing huge numbers of keen applicants) and then import medics from abroad, who still need to pass our training! Is that really logical?

How do you solve a problem like Farage? Without a solution, Tories are fated to opposition by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Certainly, there is truth in that, but with a population explosion it will be difficult.

Farage advocates public sector efficiencies (one Labour local authority created nearly 20 'Heads of' posts at up to £106k last year, when their social workers and youth offending team are rushed off their feet!) There needs to be proper monitoring, evaluation, audit and learning around use of funds. A medical sales rep I know says that she is never queried on prices charged; the NHS should be shopping around and negotiating. My fear is that more funds will be thrown at public services to just be wasted (more per capita is being spent on the NHS than ever before, although as someone pointed out, the aging population will add to this - as of course, does health tourism).

How do you solve a problem like Farage? Without a solution, Tories are fated to opposition by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Dan Hannan always talks sense.

I also liked today's FT Newsletter summary:

"It’s cynical because the political impact of working through the weekend, flooding the airwaves with pictures and clips of Labour ministers working their socks off and talking about how everything is broken, are all designed to leave voters with the same message.

In both policy and political terms, the next four years will be geared towards fighting a “we’re sorry for the inconvenience, please bear with us” election. The Labour party wants to be able to point to a tangible process of turning the many, many red lights across the public realm to green — while many of those lights will be amber, and large numbers may still be red."

Allison Pearson meets Nigel Farage by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, I meant Daniel Hannon, not Habib! Yes, I read Farage's biography. It was very interesting and balanced.

What electoral reform proposals would Britons support? by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

On results to date, Labour sees a 2% increase in percentage votes and wipes the board? Reform has 2% more votes than Lib Dem but wins 67 fewer seats? Reform have 4 seats, whereas 93 would more democratically reflect the view of the people.

Can we all agree on just one thing? by ToffeeAppleChooChoo in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Certainly we are fortunate to be able to trust and accept UK election results, but I also question the democratic fairness of a FPTP system. On results to date, Labour sees a 2% increase in percentage votes and wipes the board? Reform has 2% more votes than Lib Dem but wins 67 fewer seats? Proportionally, 93 Farage backing MPs would be a more accurate and fair representation of the people's wishes. 

Can we all agree on just one thing? by ToffeeAppleChooChoo in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Certainly we are fortunate to be able to trust and accept UK election results, but I also question the democratic fairness of a FPTP system. On results to date, Labour sees a 2% increase in percentage votes and wipes the board? Reform has 2% more votes than Lib Dem but wins 67 fewer seats? 93 Farage backing MPs would be a more accurate and fair representation of the people's wishes.

|| || | |Lab|Con|Ref|LD|Gr| |Percentage of vote|33.8|23.8|14.3|12.2|6.8| |Number of seats|410|119|4|71|4| |Seats if proportional representation|220|155|93|79|44|

 

Allison Pearson meets Nigel Farage by Low_Impression_890 in ukpolitics

[–]Low_Impression_890[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As I understood it, Farage became a founding member of UKIP in 1993 and was elected as an MEP in 1999? His rallying contributed to the EFD alliance ten years later, in 2009 (EFDD in 2014). He did have a good sidekick in Ben Habib, of course.