@Tim it's interesting that you bring up R. I've been trying to use it with Nix on Ubuntu and I can't get the fonts to show up on the graphs in the popup windows. Beautiful graphs, but no labels on anything, just little boxes where the characters should be...
I think ggplot/R is just constructing svg's and punting it to the backend, which I think is supposed to be X11... but it doesn't find my fonts, even though a system call inside the R session can see the extensive results of fc-list.
Recently Stack Overflow introduced dark mode preference option, but it isn't available here, at Unix & Linux.
How it works for it be provided at the other forums?
@Tim Nix is a package manager and build system - and they've turned it into an operating system. The GUI stuff isn't really tested on other Linux distributions from what I can tell, though, and it looks like that issue extends to graphics generated by R. The SVGs are probably fine and correct, but the system graphics can't give me fonts for some reason.
I just wish I could find the log, if any - if I could get an error message, it would help me solve the problem.
I'm in India, and I'm currently trying to understand the accounting (i.e. simple arithmetic) of the Public Disclosure information of Indian insurance companies. The context is that I'm trying to figure out what health insurance policy I should buy. It's also useful to be able to read and understa...
@FaheemMitha I understand that what was said doesn't necesarily means that it is what is written in the contract (in India). I have experience with that. But the answer you've got (from someone that works with insurance in Germany) says Repudiation is a form of settlement
@FaheemMitha I meant what I (already) said: How is the knowledge of the details of how insurance companies count and report their numbers at the end of the month going to help you choose a better insurance policy ?
@Isaac I'm looking at the health insurance claims data for specific Indian insurance companies.
That helps me choose a company, because you obviously don't want a company that rejects too many claims (a major red flag), or one that is too slow in paying.
Unfortunately the data is poor quality. It's full of consistency errors. And these are big companies too. Apparently its too hard to get a bunch of numbers to add to to the right one.
For one thing, I don't know a statistically significant number of people who have Indian health insurance. And it would have to be in the thousands for it to be useful.
I really don't know enough people to make it a worthwhile exercise.
Of course, it's possible that the insurance companies are falsifying data. But you have to trust something.
@FaheemMitha So, you are going to trust someone (some company) by the numbers that that person (company) is telling you? Don't you ask other people: Can I trust him?
@FaheemMitha If you have some trust (more than zero) on me (a random person you met on the internet), then you could have also some trust in people that live around you or that you've meet before. Trust them, ask ! That is the best advice I can give.
Hey, I got an error while installing ettercap on debian, is it against the rules to post it? Is there another stackexchange site better-suited for such a question?