P is stored in the blocks.
P is stored in the blocks.
“P P”... ... ...heh.
And if he’s so afraid for his life he could ask for solitary confinement for his (and our) peace of mind.
This may provide some insight.
I’m not a lawyer so someone needs to explain to me how you can knowingly and willfully tell a court that you live at an address, not live at that address, and not be guilty of fraud.
Why would anyone want to pay to get rejected? They can get that for free in real life.
How does someone get a 12 year sentence reduced to 2 years for good behaviour?!?!?! Has she been canonized by the Church for this saintly level of behaviour?
I know this is all tongue and cheek (I think?) but just to be clear - I don’t think we want the Anna Sorokins of the world to go unpunished, we just want the corporations who commit the same kinds of transgressions as individual criminals to face equal or worse punishment... right?
The series finale was kind of sweet, with Hank and Bobby finally bonding over something. Also you find out what Boomhauer does for a living finally.
I’d prefer they revive King of the Hill rather than Beavis & Butthead. Though I never saw the last season of KotH, so maybe it ended satisfactorily.
You would think, given its recent $6 billion valuation, Reddit would have the confidence to get rid of the pop-up …
Can the vote be secret? I mean are they legally allowed to make that rule? That would be helpful.
I can’t watch any of it. I do want the Democrats to make a convincing case, (which, frankly, shouldn’t be hard,) but I just cannot stand listening to the Republicans make cynical and hypocritical arguments that the whole trial is pointless.
Didn’t watch things last time; not going to watch this time. I’d be more interested if the Senators were really going to honestly evaluate the evidence, but they’ve already made up their minds. And so, even though I see the necessity of going through the motions, it’s all political theater at this point, and not…
Nothing ever sticks to this guy.
It doesn’t matter. This is the kind of thing that shouldn’t be happening to any consumers, full-stop. It’s the exact scenario sceptics of Stadia pointed to from day one; you only ‘own’ things as long as Google lets you access their services.
For it to have happened to a developer they’re actively working with - given…
It’s very likely, actually. He probably set up his personal account to be able to access the developer console for Android. and that’s not his sole reason. His reasoning is that Google doesn’t value its customers and partners, something I cannot disagree.