We... all of us...

Skylar Grey wrote the lyrics for both the feminine (Rihanna) and masculine (Eminem) of "Love The Way You Lie".

The story revolved around a relationship painted with chaos, oblivion,  passion, and (subtle) harmony. The song would still be great without the repetitive chorus IMHO, i.e. it'd be have more points on poignance given the song features only its hooks, lines, and raps. Also, I don't think anyone in the song was lying to each other, they simply couldn't explain how they were feeling and expect what'd happen next.

Here, ppl elect Grey to sing the second part (and chorus. if that matters) better than Rihanna. Grey supposedly gave it Rihanna cause the Chris Brown thing. I guess this is what we call sisterhood, no?


_______
Lala introduced me to these songs, The Pekalongans'd listened to this non-chalantly over the course. But now, every now and then I recall the feelings more personal and dismayed when I listen to these songs.


How'd you read your code?

How'd you read your code?. The /. article got various responses:
  • some simply don't read their code (think of shell scripters),
  • some go with high-level tech-like abstraction,
  • some go with word by word substitution to daily words, mostly English,
  • some read the each symbol and token of the code,
  • some got angry/sentimental/high when reading a piece of code they wrote themselves previously,
  • some got into their zen analytic mental concept.
The problem is largely how to translate analytic construct to communicative linguistic construct.

Programmer/engineer/code usually have easier time with charts and graphs. Still, programs' linguistic construct is also important in conveying how the things should be used (not how it works) and explaining to new-programmers, like from lecturer to students (or you to your SO, if it matters).

I'd suggest explaining the arithmetic-logic process with natural language, one block (lines of code delivering particular function) at a time, somewhat in between between usage-and-purpose-driven and value-and-function-driven. Hopefully we can actually learn how the the code works, what purpose lies beneath, and what to alter/modify/add in the code to suit one's specific usage scenario.

Realtek RTS5129 module

Cards weren't detected on Latitude 3540.
Embedded card reader was Realtek RTS5129.

# modprobe rtsx_usb rtsx_usb_sdmmc

did the trick.