Nonetheless, it DID suck for years, in the sense that this simple vulnerability had been around for all that time...
Nonetheless, it DID suck for years, in the sense that this simple vulnerability had been around for all that time...
I read this to my wife, and I'm still laughing! Add reading/replying to my list of things I do after work... (that makes 3!)
iOS only, I presume?
"IE doesn't suck and hasn't for years."
And Microsoft's Modern UI for Win8 isn't the exact same as Windows Phone?
Are there people that DON'T do this?
Not to mention thorium.... Way more abundant than uranium, and produces more energy per ton than uranium. Also, it can't start a chain reaction! Of course, gov't wanted bombs more than power, so we're screwed out of that deal.
Hydrogen is not a source of energy, it's a product of energy use. You have to apply energy in order to split hydrogen from H2O, then you recombine them when you want to use said energy. So really, you're losing energy twice with hydrogen, once we you split the molecule and again when you combine them.
Not necessarily... There are a number of health-foods stores that only sell the more natural products. In a world where companies don't have to provide nutritional value or pass certain tests, stores like these would more than likely only accept/sell products that have passed tests from the more stringent/reputable…
The problem is that these kinds of businesses don't exist because the FDA replaces them. Essentially, there's a government monopoly on the whole food/drug validation market.
Now, but non-profit and for-profit organizations who exist to do what the FDA does, for those that want it done, would exist if it weren't for the FDA... Furthermore, there would probably be better systems in place by those organizations, being as they don't have unlimited funds with which to do that research...
not only was that over a hundred years ago, but that was also exposed by a non-government official... Interesting how my logic, that the free market will iron out its own mistakes in due time, is completely proven by your use of it to prove me wrong...
Disclosing ingredients and requiring them to prove their claims are both things the general public could make them do, without the force of law... This is just more big government, probably brought to you by big tobacco since e-cigs are winning out so quickly with the young crowds. By forcing regulations on e-cigs…
Well, you know: 100% of people who drink water die... So maybe we need to take a closer look at water...
May also lead to kids eventually being homosexual, suicidal, POTUS, or a number of other things... Still not causation...
You're assuming that gas companies don't compete with one another; you're assuming that class-action lawsuits wouldn't still be possible for companies mis-representing their octane levels; you're assuming it doesn't already happen...
That's pretty legit. I suppose if you're trying to budget your drinking and/or caloric intake from drinks, this is a better idea. For people trying to just track BAC, I'd say the first app seems more direct (and looks like it's much easier to add a drink than the one you posted.
Yes
HA, what you should keep in mind is that even the newest snapdragon quad-cores are actually as good as or better than a lot of last year's processors. They have a low power processor included, which helps for when you aren't actually using the device, and they're designed to run smarter and with less power.
Yeah, Sprint's LTE network requires a SIM card (it's not called a SIM card, but it is). However, you can't get through the activation process without that card, so really you need it to connect to their network regardless (on devices that have it). Sprint-exclusive devices often had the card built-in (on the Galaxy…