On 4/17/2012 2:21 AM, Ric Moore wrote:
On 04/16/2012 04:20 PM, Hal wrote:
On 4/16/2012 2:37 PM, jdow wrote:
On 2012/04/16 07:28, fred smith wrote:
On Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 10:04:45AM +0100, Bryn M. Reeves wrote:
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On 04/13/2012 06:40 PM, jdow wrote:
It might help if you washed them once and awhile.
{O.O} (You should know by not I lurk here and NO good
straight-line is safe.)
Washing tends to make them fall apart faster, not slower (intense
mechanical agitation and all that ;).
I would think dry-cleaning would be the proper way to do it, no?
I don't think I've ever tried to get a tee-shirt dry cleaned. It MIGHT
work. Dry clean is a third best to actually washing the clothing in a
suitable detergent. (Best is a phosphate bearing detergent if you can
find one with phosphates in it and really want clean. Ditto for dish
washing, too. That's once a year whether they need it or not, right?
<Sigh - hoists a glass saluting the good old days!>)
Now, how can we tie this back to Linux? Anybody made a Fedora
controlled
washing machine? Why not?
Before the advent of soap/detergent what was used as a cleaning
component? How did a Roman keep their toga fresh and clean? :-)
Too many movies. my friend. I doubt they were nice and clean. But,
water and sand will do a lot. :) Ric
Roger had the answer. The Romans used stale human URINE(Uric Acid) to
was their togas and other things. No movies my friend.
--Hal.
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