Susie Raynor

Susie Raynor is a fictional character in the long-running television show Blue Heelers. She first appeared in 2003 and remained until the show's cancellation in 2006.

Susie Raynor
Blue Heelers character
Portrayed bySimone McAullay
Duration101 episodes
First appearanceThe Lowest of the Low
Ep. 409, 24/9/2003
Last appearanceOne Day More
Ep. 510, 4/6/2006
Profile
OccupationConstable
Senior Constable
Acting Sergeant

Description

She had a paralyzed husband when she first arrived in Mount Thomas, but he was killed by Ben Stewart. She had flings with three of her workmates over the series. These were Evan, Ben Stewart, and Alex.

Susie accidentally shot Ben in the arm during a burglary. Ben started to think it was revenge since he was the one who killed her husband. She and Ben later had a brief relationship, but Susie regretted it. Susie was shortly engaged to Evan Jones, but that ended because she had slept with Jonesy's best mate Alex Kirby. She was good friends with Jones, Ben, P. J. Hasham, Kelly O'Rourke, Alex Kirby, Jo Parrish And Tom Croydon; not so much with Joss Peroni and she had a distant working relationship with Amy Fox. Susie was promoted to Senior Constable in early 2005. In late 2005 she was semi-promoted to Acting Sergeant under Snr. Sgt. Croydon's direction, but was later semi-demoted back to Senior Constable under the Inspector's orders, due to that Leading Senior Constable Kirby outranks her. The Acting Sergeant's position then got given to Kirby. She is the 13th longest-serving character behind Tom Croydon, Chris Riley, P.J. Hasham, Maggie Doyle, Ben Stewart, Nick Schultz, Jo Parrish, Evan Jones Adam Cooper, Dash McKinley and Jack Lawson.


gollark: An alternative to using CD or USB images for installation is to use the static version of the package manager Pacman, from within another Linux-based operating system. The user can mount their newly formatted drive partition, and use pacstrap (or Pacman with the appropriate command-line switch) to install base and additional packages with the mountpoint of the destination device as the root for its operations. This method is useful when installing Arch Linux onto USB flash drives, or onto a temporarily mounted device which belongs to another system. Regardless of the selected installation type, further actions need to be taken before the new system is ready for use, most notably by installing a bootloader and configuring the new system with a system name, network connection, language settings, and graphical user interface. The installation images come packaged with an experimental command line installer, archinstall, which can assist with installing Arch Linux.
gollark: Arch is largely based on binary packages. Packages target x86-64 microprocessors to assist performance on modern hardware. A ports/ebuild-like system is also provided for automated source compilation, known as the Arch Build System. Arch Linux focuses on simplicity of design, meaning that the main focus involves creating an environment that is straightforward and relatively easy for the user to understand directly, rather than providing polished point-and-click style management tools — the package manager, for example, does not have an official graphical front-end. This is largely achieved by encouraging the use of succinctly commented, clean configuration files that are arranged for quick access and editing. This has earned it a reputation as a distribution for "advanced users" who are willing to use the command line. The Arch Linux website supplies ISO images that can be run from CD or USB. After a user partitions and formats their drive, a simple command line script (pacstrap) is used to install the base system. The installation of additional packages which are not part of the base system (for example, desktop environments), can be done with either pacstrap, or Pacman after booting (or chrooting) into the new installation.
gollark: On March 2021, Arch Linux developers were thinking of porting Arch Linux packages to x86_64-v3. x86-64-v3 roughly correlates to Intel Haswell era of processors.
gollark: The migration to systemd as its init system started in August 2012, and it became the default on new installations in October 2012. It replaced the SysV-style init system, used since the distribution inception. On 24 February 2020, Aaron Griffin announced that due to his limited involvement with the project, he would, after a voting period, transfer control of the project to Levente Polyak. This change also led to a new 2-year term period being added to the Project Leader position. The end of i686 support was announced in January 2017, with the February 2017 ISO being the last one including i686 and making the architecture unsupported in November 2017. Since then, the community derivative Arch Linux 32 can be used for i686 hardware.
gollark: Vinet led Arch Linux until 1 October 2007, when he stepped down due to lack of time, transferring control of the project to Aaron Griffin.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.