O:9:"MagpieRSS":23:{s:6:"parser";i:0;s:12:"current_item";a:0:{}s:5:"items";a:8:{i:0;a:10:{s:5:"title";s:57:"Comment on Mavericks Install Stuck in Reboot Loop by Jeff";s:4:"link";s:104:"http://www.alt-tag.com/blog/2013/10/mavericks-install-stuck-in-reboot-loop/comment-page-1/#comment-36712";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:4:"Jeff";}s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Thu, 09 Oct 2014 15:57:19 +0000";s:4:"guid";s:44:"http://alt-tag.com/blog/?p=575#comment-36712";s:11:"description";s:4314:"Fixing the MacBookPro after failed Mavericks install (HD damaged and can’t be repaired). I decided to post this because I spent a day exploring several options in the knowledge base and I had to develop my own procedure to fix the problem. Summary of the problem:

Attempting to install Mavericks from OSX 10.6.8 on a MacbookPro resulted in the following message: “The OS X upgrade couldn’t be started because the disk Macintosh HD is damaged and can’t be repaired…”
- Restarting computer only causes OS X installer to run again with the same message
- No backup available and restore partition not available for OS X 10.6.8
- Disk utility from the OS X installer doesn’t allow repair of the damaged disk (greyed out)

The solution. Try these options in the following order (option 2 worked for me).

Option 1: Boot from your Snow Leopard install disc and run disk utility. Try verifying and repairing the start-up disk there. The repair option should not be greyed out. If it works, then restart and see if that fixes your problem (this option did not work for me after several attempts at running repair). Since the disk cannot be verified, any attempt to create an image (.dmg) will fail with an input/output error.

Option 2: This one worked, but took a few hours. Install OS X on an external drive, transfer information from the “damaged” disk, then install OS X back on the internal drive, and transfer the information back.

Boot from Snow Leopard install disc (insert disc, restart and press “c”. If that doesn’t work, restart and press “option” and select the install DVD)
Connect external disk and reformat it using disk utility


Click utilities -&#062; disk utility
Select the external drive (do NOT select your internal drive, otherwise you will lose all of your data)
Click Partition
Select “1 partition”
Options: GUID Partition table
Format as “Mac OS Extended (journaled)
Apply
Quit



Run the OS X installer and select your newly formatted external drive as the target


- When the install is complete, you will get an option to transfer information from another volume.
- Select the internal volume (this is the “damaged” disk) and select all items
- Transfer process will run for an hour or two and hopefully all of your settings, applications, users, and documents will transfer without problems
- Complete the registration process and eject the install dvd
4. Run SW update to bring OS X to 10.6.8 (repeat SW update until all the SW is updated). Your external drive should now be a clone of your internal drive. Play around to see if there’s anything missing.

Now you will reverse the process to put everything back on to your internal drive

Boot from install DVD, start disk utility, and verify the external disk that you just created (all should be ok)
Perform a clean install of Snow Leopard http://support.apple.com/kb/ht...


When erasing the Macintosh HD disk, format it as “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)”. I noticed that the original format was not journaled, which may have contributed to the problem in the first place.
Stop at Part Three Step 4 (instead, when the migration screen appears, select transfer info from another volume)
Select the external volume that you just created
Transfer process will now move all of the information back onto your internal drive



Run software update to bring your internal drive back up to 10.6.8. Keep repeating until no more software to update (2 or 3 times)
Ensure that everything is working ok before proceeding to next step


Optional: Configure your external drive for Time Machine backups
- Erase the drive using disk utility 
- After the erase, the system will automatically ask you whether you want to use the external drive for Time Machine backups. Respond to the prompts, or start Time Machine and manually configure it

Summary: There is something wrong with the Mavericks OS X installer when trying to upgrade from OS X 10.6.8 on an “older” MacbookPro. It seems to corrupt the internal start-up disk in such a way that disk utility can’t verify or repair it. The data on the disk appears to be OK since a fresh install of OS X on an external drive and using the installer to transfer information from the “damaged” disk to the external drive appears to work without a problem.
";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:4644:"<p>Fixing the MacBookPro after failed Mavericks install (HD damaged and can’t be repaired). I decided to post this because I spent a day exploring several options in the knowledge base and I had to develop my own procedure to fix the problem. Summary of the problem:</p>
<p>Attempting to install Mavericks from OSX 10.6.8 on a MacbookPro resulted in the following message: “The OS X upgrade couldn’t be started because the disk Macintosh HD is damaged and can’t be repaired…”<br />
&#8211; Restarting computer only causes OS X installer to run again with the same message<br />
&#8211; No backup available and restore partition not available for OS X 10.6.8<br />
&#8211; Disk utility from the OS X installer doesn’t allow repair of the damaged disk (greyed out)</p>
<p>The solution. Try these options in the following order (option 2 worked for me).</p>
<p>Option 1: Boot from your Snow Leopard install disc and run disk utility. Try verifying and repairing the start-up disk there. The repair option should not be greyed out. If it works, then restart and see if that fixes your problem (this option did not work for me after several attempts at running repair). Since the disk cannot be verified, any attempt to create an image (.dmg) will fail with an input/output error.</p>
<p>Option 2: This one worked, but took a few hours. Install OS X on an external drive, transfer information from the “damaged” disk, then install OS X back on the internal drive, and transfer the information back.</p>
<p>Boot from Snow Leopard install disc (insert disc, restart and press “c”. If that doesn’t work, restart and press “option” and select the install DVD)<br />
Connect external disk and reformat it using disk utility</p>
<p>Click utilities -&gt; disk utility<br />
Select the external drive (do NOT select your internal drive, otherwise you will lose all of your data)<br />
Click Partition<br />
Select “1 partition”<br />
Options: GUID Partition table<br />
Format as “Mac OS Extended (journaled)<br />
Apply<br />
Quit</p>
<p>Run the OS X installer and select your newly formatted external drive as the target</p>
<p>&#8211; When the install is complete, you will get an option to transfer information from another volume.<br />
&#8211; Select the internal volume (this is the “damaged” disk) and select all items<br />
&#8211; Transfer process will run for an hour or two and hopefully all of your settings, applications, users, and documents will transfer without problems<br />
&#8211; Complete the registration process and eject the install dvd<br />
4. Run SW update to bring OS X to 10.6.8 (repeat SW update until all the SW is updated). Your external drive should now be a clone of your internal drive. Play around to see if there’s anything missing.</p>
<p>Now you will reverse the process to put everything back on to your internal drive</p>
<p>Boot from install DVD, start disk utility, and verify the external disk that you just created (all should be ok)<br />
Perform a clean install of Snow Leopard <a href="http://support.apple.com/kb/ht" rel="nofollow">http://support.apple.com/kb/ht</a>&#8230;</p>
<p>When erasing the Macintosh HD disk, format it as “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)”. I noticed that the original format was not journaled, which may have contributed to the problem in the first place.<br />
Stop at Part Three Step 4 (instead, when the migration screen appears, select transfer info from another volume)<br />
Select the external volume that you just created<br />
Transfer process will now move all of the information back onto your internal drive</p>
<p>Run software update to bring your internal drive back up to 10.6.8. Keep repeating until no more software to update (2 or 3 times)<br />
Ensure that everything is working ok before proceeding to next step</p>
<p>Optional: Configure your external drive for Time Machine backups<br />
&#8211; Erase the drive using disk utility<br />
&#8211; After the erase, the system will automatically ask you whether you want to use the external drive for Time Machine backups. Respond to the prompts, or start Time Machine and manually configure it</p>
<p>Summary: There is something wrong with the Mavericks OS X installer when trying to upgrade from OS X 10.6.8 on an “older” MacbookPro. It seems to corrupt the internal start-up disk in such a way that disk utility can’t verify or repair it. The data on the disk appears to be OK since a fresh install of OS X on an external drive and using the installer to transfer information from the “damaged” disk to the external drive appears to work without a problem.</p>
";}s:7:"summary";s:4314:"Fixing the MacBookPro after failed Mavericks install (HD damaged and can’t be repaired). I decided to post this because I spent a day exploring several options in the knowledge base and I had to develop my own procedure to fix the problem. Summary of the problem:

Attempting to install Mavericks from OSX 10.6.8 on a MacbookPro resulted in the following message: “The OS X upgrade couldn’t be started because the disk Macintosh HD is damaged and can’t be repaired…”
- Restarting computer only causes OS X installer to run again with the same message
- No backup available and restore partition not available for OS X 10.6.8
- Disk utility from the OS X installer doesn’t allow repair of the damaged disk (greyed out)

The solution. Try these options in the following order (option 2 worked for me).

Option 1: Boot from your Snow Leopard install disc and run disk utility. Try verifying and repairing the start-up disk there. The repair option should not be greyed out. If it works, then restart and see if that fixes your problem (this option did not work for me after several attempts at running repair). Since the disk cannot be verified, any attempt to create an image (.dmg) will fail with an input/output error.

Option 2: This one worked, but took a few hours. Install OS X on an external drive, transfer information from the “damaged” disk, then install OS X back on the internal drive, and transfer the information back.

Boot from Snow Leopard install disc (insert disc, restart and press “c”. If that doesn’t work, restart and press “option” and select the install DVD)
Connect external disk and reformat it using disk utility


Click utilities -&#062; disk utility
Select the external drive (do NOT select your internal drive, otherwise you will lose all of your data)
Click Partition
Select “1 partition”
Options: GUID Partition table
Format as “Mac OS Extended (journaled)
Apply
Quit



Run the OS X installer and select your newly formatted external drive as the target


- When the install is complete, you will get an option to transfer information from another volume.
- Select the internal volume (this is the “damaged” disk) and select all items
- Transfer process will run for an hour or two and hopefully all of your settings, applications, users, and documents will transfer without problems
- Complete the registration process and eject the install dvd
4. Run SW update to bring OS X to 10.6.8 (repeat SW update until all the SW is updated). Your external drive should now be a clone of your internal drive. Play around to see if there’s anything missing.

Now you will reverse the process to put everything back on to your internal drive

Boot from install DVD, start disk utility, and verify the external disk that you just created (all should be ok)
Perform a clean install of Snow Leopard http://support.apple.com/kb/ht...


When erasing the Macintosh HD disk, format it as “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)”. I noticed that the original format was not journaled, which may have contributed to the problem in the first place.
Stop at Part Three Step 4 (instead, when the migration screen appears, select transfer info from another volume)
Select the external volume that you just created
Transfer process will now move all of the information back onto your internal drive



Run software update to bring your internal drive back up to 10.6.8. Keep repeating until no more software to update (2 or 3 times)
Ensure that everything is working ok before proceeding to next step


Optional: Configure your external drive for Time Machine backups
- Erase the drive using disk utility 
- After the erase, the system will automatically ask you whether you want to use the external drive for Time Machine backups. Respond to the prompts, or start Time Machine and manually configure it

Summary: There is something wrong with the Mavericks OS X installer when trying to upgrade from OS X 10.6.8 on an “older” MacbookPro. It seems to corrupt the internal start-up disk in such a way that disk utility can’t verify or repair it. The data on the disk appears to be OK since a fresh install of OS X on an external drive and using the installer to transfer information from the “damaged” disk to the external drive appears to work without a problem.
";s:12:"atom_content";s:4644:"<p>Fixing the MacBookPro after failed Mavericks install (HD damaged and can’t be repaired). I decided to post this because I spent a day exploring several options in the knowledge base and I had to develop my own procedure to fix the problem. Summary of the problem:</p>
<p>Attempting to install Mavericks from OSX 10.6.8 on a MacbookPro resulted in the following message: “The OS X upgrade couldn’t be started because the disk Macintosh HD is damaged and can’t be repaired…”<br />
&#8211; Restarting computer only causes OS X installer to run again with the same message<br />
&#8211; No backup available and restore partition not available for OS X 10.6.8<br />
&#8211; Disk utility from the OS X installer doesn’t allow repair of the damaged disk (greyed out)</p>
<p>The solution. Try these options in the following order (option 2 worked for me).</p>
<p>Option 1: Boot from your Snow Leopard install disc and run disk utility. Try verifying and repairing the start-up disk there. The repair option should not be greyed out. If it works, then restart and see if that fixes your problem (this option did not work for me after several attempts at running repair). Since the disk cannot be verified, any attempt to create an image (.dmg) will fail with an input/output error.</p>
<p>Option 2: This one worked, but took a few hours. Install OS X on an external drive, transfer information from the “damaged” disk, then install OS X back on the internal drive, and transfer the information back.</p>
<p>Boot from Snow Leopard install disc (insert disc, restart and press “c”. If that doesn’t work, restart and press “option” and select the install DVD)<br />
Connect external disk and reformat it using disk utility</p>
<p>Click utilities -&gt; disk utility<br />
Select the external drive (do NOT select your internal drive, otherwise you will lose all of your data)<br />
Click Partition<br />
Select “1 partition”<br />
Options: GUID Partition table<br />
Format as “Mac OS Extended (journaled)<br />
Apply<br />
Quit</p>
<p>Run the OS X installer and select your newly formatted external drive as the target</p>
<p>&#8211; When the install is complete, you will get an option to transfer information from another volume.<br />
&#8211; Select the internal volume (this is the “damaged” disk) and select all items<br />
&#8211; Transfer process will run for an hour or two and hopefully all of your settings, applications, users, and documents will transfer without problems<br />
&#8211; Complete the registration process and eject the install dvd<br />
4. Run SW update to bring OS X to 10.6.8 (repeat SW update until all the SW is updated). Your external drive should now be a clone of your internal drive. Play around to see if there’s anything missing.</p>
<p>Now you will reverse the process to put everything back on to your internal drive</p>
<p>Boot from install DVD, start disk utility, and verify the external disk that you just created (all should be ok)<br />
Perform a clean install of Snow Leopard <a href="http://support.apple.com/kb/ht" rel="nofollow">http://support.apple.com/kb/ht</a>&#8230;</p>
<p>When erasing the Macintosh HD disk, format it as “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)”. I noticed that the original format was not journaled, which may have contributed to the problem in the first place.<br />
Stop at Part Three Step 4 (instead, when the migration screen appears, select transfer info from another volume)<br />
Select the external volume that you just created<br />
Transfer process will now move all of the information back onto your internal drive</p>
<p>Run software update to bring your internal drive back up to 10.6.8. Keep repeating until no more software to update (2 or 3 times)<br />
Ensure that everything is working ok before proceeding to next step</p>
<p>Optional: Configure your external drive for Time Machine backups<br />
&#8211; Erase the drive using disk utility<br />
&#8211; After the erase, the system will automatically ask you whether you want to use the external drive for Time Machine backups. Respond to the prompts, or start Time Machine and manually configure it</p>
<p>Summary: There is something wrong with the Mavericks OS X installer when trying to upgrade from OS X 10.6.8 on an “older” MacbookPro. It seems to corrupt the internal start-up disk in such a way that disk utility can’t verify or repair it. The data on the disk appears to be OK since a fresh install of OS X on an external drive and using the installer to transfer information from the “damaged” disk to the external drive appears to work without a problem.</p>
";s:14:"date_timestamp";i:1412870239;}i:1;a:10:{s:5:"title";s:91:"Comment on The Racial Dot Map by Slate: America’s schools are segregating again | alt-tag";s:4:"link";s:84:"http://www.alt-tag.com/blog/2013/08/the-racial-dot-map/comment-page-1/#comment-35859";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:63:"Slate: America’s schools are segregating again &#124; alt-tag";}s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 19 May 2014 17:28:28 +0000";s:4:"guid";s:44:"http://alt-tag.com/blog/?p=470#comment-35859";s:11:"description";s:254:"[&#8230;] Board of Education, Slate concluded schools are segregating again. Not really a surprise, given the ethnic maps I linked to previously—my anecdotal experience is consistent with the conclusion. My son, for example, attend a majority [&#8230;]";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:262:"<p>[&#8230;] Board of Education, Slate concluded schools are segregating again. Not really a surprise, given the ethnic maps I linked to previously—my anecdotal experience is consistent with the conclusion. My son, for example, attend a majority [&#8230;]</p>
";}s:7:"summary";s:254:"[&#8230;] Board of Education, Slate concluded schools are segregating again. Not really a surprise, given the ethnic maps I linked to previously—my anecdotal experience is consistent with the conclusion. My son, for example, attend a majority [&#8230;]";s:12:"atom_content";s:262:"<p>[&#8230;] Board of Education, Slate concluded schools are segregating again. Not really a surprise, given the ethnic maps I linked to previously—my anecdotal experience is consistent with the conclusion. My son, for example, attend a majority [&#8230;]</p>
";s:14:"date_timestamp";i:1400520508;}i:2;a:10:{s:5:"title";s:65:"Comment on How the Broken Media Helped Break the Government by Jo";s:4:"link";s:114:"http://www.alt-tag.com/blog/2013/10/how-the-broken-media-helped-break-the-government/comment-page-1/#comment-35858";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:2:"Jo";}s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 21 Oct 2013 19:00:38 +0000";s:4:"guid";s:44:"http://alt-tag.com/blog/?p=541#comment-35858";s:11:"description";s:223:"The same &quot;morons&quot; that want to stand their ground like those the ones on the other side who stand their ground.  BUT when the left stands their ground, its OK. The right, its damaging. 

The imbalance is absurd.";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:237:"<p>The same &#8220;morons&#8221; that want to stand their ground like those the ones on the other side who stand their ground.  BUT when the left stands their ground, its OK. The right, its damaging. </p>
<p>The imbalance is absurd.</p>
";}s:7:"summary";s:223:"The same &quot;morons&quot; that want to stand their ground like those the ones on the other side who stand their ground.  BUT when the left stands their ground, its OK. The right, its damaging. 

The imbalance is absurd.";s:12:"atom_content";s:237:"<p>The same &#8220;morons&#8221; that want to stand their ground like those the ones on the other side who stand their ground.  BUT when the left stands their ground, its OK. The right, its damaging. </p>
<p>The imbalance is absurd.</p>
";s:14:"date_timestamp";i:1382382038;}i:3;a:10:{s:5:"title";s:87:"Comment on Obamacare’s broken website cost more than [your senator] by Ronald D. Hunt";s:4:"link";s:119:"http://www.alt-tag.com/blog/2013/10/obamacares-broken-website-cost-more-than-your-senator/comment-page-1/#comment-35805";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:14:"Ronald D. Hunt";}s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sun, 20 Oct 2013 08:37:52 +0000";s:4:"guid";s:44:"http://alt-tag.com/blog/?p=559#comment-35805";s:11:"description";s:1298:"Not a justification, but that sites is not a &quot;national exchange&quot; in the sense many are thinking of it as, plans for each state have to comply with that states insurance regulations.  So that is 38 states worth of regulatory statute to comply with.

The actual rules of the exchanges where finalized in November 2012, States where given extra time to choose what they wanted to do, which of course delayed the work on the exchanges.

I am not under the impression that interfacing with Experian(the credit bureau), is very difficult, so not sure why that is so broken.

The supreme court ruling also cause problems, even after the exchange rules where finalized, the legal status of those who would fall under the medicaid expansion in states that refused the expansion was somewhat in limbo.

I get the impression that this is one of those projects where the goals keep changing, from small changes that creep up and break large sections of code, cause large hurried rewrites. And we have another one of those changes potentially as the budget deal requires tougher income verification.

I will note however, that I have made it all the way through the site, and over 400,000 people have signed up in total(including from state ran exchanges which cover about half that figure).";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:1328:"<p>Not a justification, but that sites is not a &#8220;national exchange&#8221; in the sense many are thinking of it as, plans for each state have to comply with that states insurance regulations.  So that is 38 states worth of regulatory statute to comply with.</p>
<p>The actual rules of the exchanges where finalized in November 2012, States where given extra time to choose what they wanted to do, which of course delayed the work on the exchanges.</p>
<p>I am not under the impression that interfacing with Experian(the credit bureau), is very difficult, so not sure why that is so broken.</p>
<p>The supreme court ruling also cause problems, even after the exchange rules where finalized, the legal status of those who would fall under the medicaid expansion in states that refused the expansion was somewhat in limbo.</p>
<p>I get the impression that this is one of those projects where the goals keep changing, from small changes that creep up and break large sections of code, cause large hurried rewrites. And we have another one of those changes potentially as the budget deal requires tougher income verification.</p>
<p>I will note however, that I have made it all the way through the site, and over 400,000 people have signed up in total(including from state ran exchanges which cover about half that figure).</p>
";}s:7:"summary";s:1298:"Not a justification, but that sites is not a &quot;national exchange&quot; in the sense many are thinking of it as, plans for each state have to comply with that states insurance regulations.  So that is 38 states worth of regulatory statute to comply with.

The actual rules of the exchanges where finalized in November 2012, States where given extra time to choose what they wanted to do, which of course delayed the work on the exchanges.

I am not under the impression that interfacing with Experian(the credit bureau), is very difficult, so not sure why that is so broken.

The supreme court ruling also cause problems, even after the exchange rules where finalized, the legal status of those who would fall under the medicaid expansion in states that refused the expansion was somewhat in limbo.

I get the impression that this is one of those projects where the goals keep changing, from small changes that creep up and break large sections of code, cause large hurried rewrites. And we have another one of those changes potentially as the budget deal requires tougher income verification.

I will note however, that I have made it all the way through the site, and over 400,000 people have signed up in total(including from state ran exchanges which cover about half that figure).";s:12:"atom_content";s:1328:"<p>Not a justification, but that sites is not a &#8220;national exchange&#8221; in the sense many are thinking of it as, plans for each state have to comply with that states insurance regulations.  So that is 38 states worth of regulatory statute to comply with.</p>
<p>The actual rules of the exchanges where finalized in November 2012, States where given extra time to choose what they wanted to do, which of course delayed the work on the exchanges.</p>
<p>I am not under the impression that interfacing with Experian(the credit bureau), is very difficult, so not sure why that is so broken.</p>
<p>The supreme court ruling also cause problems, even after the exchange rules where finalized, the legal status of those who would fall under the medicaid expansion in states that refused the expansion was somewhat in limbo.</p>
<p>I get the impression that this is one of those projects where the goals keep changing, from small changes that creep up and break large sections of code, cause large hurried rewrites. And we have another one of those changes potentially as the budget deal requires tougher income verification.</p>
<p>I will note however, that I have made it all the way through the site, and over 400,000 people have signed up in total(including from state ran exchanges which cover about half that figure).</p>
";s:14:"date_timestamp";i:1382258272;}i:4;a:10:{s:5:"title";s:54:"Comment on View of Mount Rushmore Blocked by rmwarnick";s:4:"link";s:96:"http://www.alt-tag.com/blog/2013/10/view-of-mount-rushmore-blocked/comment-page-1/#comment-35769";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:9:"rmwarnick";}s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Mon, 14 Oct 2013 00:12:51 +0000";s:4:"guid";s:44:"http://alt-tag.com/blog/?p=546#comment-35769";s:11:"description";s:154:"Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) can end the Republican Shutdown with a 15-minute roll call vote in the House of Representatives.  Why doesn&#039;t he do that?";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:163:"<p>Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) can end the Republican Shutdown with a 15-minute roll call vote in the House of Representatives.  Why doesn&#8217;t he do that?</p>
";}s:7:"summary";s:154:"Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) can end the Republican Shutdown with a 15-minute roll call vote in the House of Representatives.  Why doesn&#039;t he do that?";s:12:"atom_content";s:163:"<p>Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) can end the Republican Shutdown with a 15-minute roll call vote in the House of Representatives.  Why doesn&#8217;t he do that?</p>
";s:14:"date_timestamp";i:1381709571;}i:5;a:10:{s:5:"title";s:68:"Comment on University apologizes for censoring crypto prof by Sidney";s:4:"link";s:113:"http://www.alt-tag.com/blog/2013/09/university-apologizes-for-censoring-crypto-prof/comment-page-1/#comment-35767";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:6:"Sidney";}s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sat, 12 Oct 2013 12:20:16 +0000";s:4:"guid";s:44:"http://alt-tag.com/blog/?p=531#comment-35767";s:11:"description";s:346:"Hey there just wanted to give you a quick heads up. The text in your article seem to be running off the screen in Internet explorer. I&#039;m not sure if this is a formatting issue or something to do with browser compatibility but I thought I&#039;d post to let you know. The design look great though! Hope you get the problem solved soon. Thanks";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:356:"<p>Hey there just wanted to give you a quick heads up. The text in your article seem to be running off the screen in Internet explorer. I&#8217;m not sure if this is a formatting issue or something to do with browser compatibility but I thought I&#8217;d post to let you know. The design look great though! Hope you get the problem solved soon. Thanks</p>
";}s:7:"summary";s:346:"Hey there just wanted to give you a quick heads up. The text in your article seem to be running off the screen in Internet explorer. I&#039;m not sure if this is a formatting issue or something to do with browser compatibility but I thought I&#039;d post to let you know. The design look great though! Hope you get the problem solved soon. Thanks";s:12:"atom_content";s:356:"<p>Hey there just wanted to give you a quick heads up. The text in your article seem to be running off the screen in Internet explorer. I&#8217;m not sure if this is a formatting issue or something to do with browser compatibility but I thought I&#8217;d post to let you know. The design look great though! Hope you get the problem solved soon. Thanks</p>
";s:14:"date_timestamp";i:1381580416;}i:6;a:10:{s:5:"title";s:72:"Comment on How the Broken Media Helped Break the Government by rmwarnick";s:4:"link";s:114:"http://www.alt-tag.com/blog/2013/10/how-the-broken-media-helped-break-the-government/comment-page-1/#comment-35745";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:9:"rmwarnick";}s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Tue, 08 Oct 2013 13:45:24 +0000";s:4:"guid";s:44:"http://alt-tag.com/blog/?p=541#comment-35745";s:11:"description";s:212:"What if some politicians ARE imbeciles?  For example, the kind of morons who would shut down the federal government for no reason or threaten to default on the National Debt and cause a global financial meltdown.";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:220:"<p>What if some politicians ARE imbeciles?  For example, the kind of morons who would shut down the federal government for no reason or threaten to default on the National Debt and cause a global financial meltdown.</p>
";}s:7:"summary";s:212:"What if some politicians ARE imbeciles?  For example, the kind of morons who would shut down the federal government for no reason or threaten to default on the National Debt and cause a global financial meltdown.";s:12:"atom_content";s:220:"<p>What if some politicians ARE imbeciles?  For example, the kind of morons who would shut down the federal government for no reason or threaten to default on the National Debt and cause a global financial meltdown.</p>
";s:14:"date_timestamp";i:1381239924;}i:7;a:10:{s:5:"title";s:110:"Comment on Integrating Mantis and Subversion by 10 najlepszych post-commit hooks dla Subversion | IT Managment";s:4:"link";s:99:"http://www.alt-tag.com/blog/2006/11/integrating-mantis-and-subversion/comment-page-3/#comment-35273";s:2:"dc";a:1:{s:7:"creator";s:67:"10 najlepszych post-commit hooks dla Subversion &#124; IT Managment";}s:7:"pubdate";s:31:"Sun, 16 Sep 2012 07:12:46 +0000";s:4:"guid";s:89:"http://alt-tag.com/blog/archives/2006/11/integrating-mantis-and-subversion/#comment-35273";s:11:"description";s:37:"[...] Subversion -&#062; Mantis [...]";s:7:"content";a:1:{s:7:"encoded";s:51:"<p>[&#8230;] Subversion -&gt; Mantis [&#8230;]</p>
";}s:7:"summary";s:37:"[...] Subversion -&#062; Mantis [...]";s:12:"atom_content";s:51:"<p>[&#8230;] Subversion -&gt; Mantis [&#8230;]</p>
";s:14:"date_timestamp";i:1347779566;}}s:7:"channel";a:6:{s:5:"title";s:20:"Comments for alt-tag";s:4:"link";s:27:"http://www.alt-tag.com/blog";s:13:"lastbuilddate";s:31:"Thu, 09 Oct 2014 15:57:19 +0000";s:2:"sy";a:2:{s:12:"updateperiod";s:6:"hourly";s:15:"updatefrequency";s:1:"1";}s:9:"generator";s:31:"https://wordpress.org/?v=4.4.10";s:7:"tagline";N;}s:9:"textinput";a:0:{}s:5:"image";a:0:{}s:9:"feed_type";s:3:"RSS";s:12:"feed_version";s:3:"2.0";s:8:"encoding";s:5:"UTF-8";s:16:"_source_encoding";s:0:"";s:5:"ERROR";s:0:"";s:7:"WARNING";s:0:"";s:19:"_CONTENT_CONSTRUCTS";a:6:{i:0;s:7:"content";i:1;s:7:"summary";i:2;s:4:"info";i:3;s:5:"title";i:4;s:7:"tagline";i:5;s:9:"copyright";}s:16:"_KNOWN_ENCODINGS";a:3:{i:0;s:5:"UTF-8";i:1;s:8:"US-ASCII";i:2;s:10:"ISO-8859-1";}s:5:"stack";a:0:{}s:9:"inchannel";b:0;s:6:"initem";b:0;s:9:"incontent";b:0;s:11:"intextinput";b:0;s:7:"inimage";b:0;s:17:"current_namespace";b:0;s:4:"etag";s:36:""a3be93e1ed5ad971371ae5694e3489ef"
";s:13:"last_modified";s:31:"Thu, 09 Oct 2014 15:57:19 GMT
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