MauriceCallidice
MauriceCallidice
MauriceCallidice

@AlteredSpeed08: The players voluntarily enter into a contract with a private employer in which they agree that as part of their employment they will not say and not do certain things at certain times.

@JrsyDevil's Advocate®: Considering what he's doing, I think the Powerbook (Macbook Pro?) puts up a pretty good fight.

@Agrippa: There probably wasn't any theorem-writing involved, but it was a key plot point in SG-1's "Holiday" episode that the switch couldn't be directly reversed, so a series of extra swaps was required to get things back to where they started.

@coldcaption: It's a motor drive. So you don't have to crank to the next piece of CMOS by hand.

@clevemire:Hardly. This is a government interfering in the actions of private individuals, not two companies competing in a market.

@drmrw: Nah, you were just trying to think different.

Apparently, you don't understand. Someone with a car like that never drives it. He just rubs it with a diaper.

@Pesti-Esti: No, that's not similar. It's not good business, but it's at least consistent with asking that a customer make good on a debt. Demanding payment of 0 cents is beyond logic.

@PaddyDugan: Answer, the United States. Bonus answer, Japan didn't surrender after the first one.

@Tommy Five: More than mere specificity and clarity is required. For instance if you are passenger in a car near the midtown tunnel, or otherwise in a public place where you have a right to be and within sight of the tunnel, you have the legal right to take a picture no matter how specific and clear the sign may be

@SoggyPirate: Seymour, your feelings are shameful and wrong!

@tomsomething: I keep one right next to my bread maker maker.

@ProsumeThis: Would've done better in the bank. Compound interest. :-)