They didn't include the best line in the clip, something like... "Oh yes, I'm self loathing, but it doesn't have anything to do with being Jewish!"
They didn't include the best line in the clip, something like... "Oh yes, I'm self loathing, but it doesn't have anything to do with being Jewish!"
Disneyland did it in 1986.
You enjoy that, I'll be over here wishing I had enough disposable income for a plane ticket.
Too bad they don't even enforce the already existing policies. Lot of pages are still running sweepstakes for page likes, comments and such, and there isn't even an easy way to report this to Facebook.
"I'm perplexed by this decision to tuck the pant legs into the boots. It cuts him off at the leg and makes him look very boxy. I'd rethink that decision."
Camo never works as well as Milhouse thinks it will.
I propose that members of congress be dressed in the various options and put on the ground in Afghanistan to determine which camo is most effective. For science.
How I see current AOL and Hotmail users.
"Please open your web browser."
Yep, I was one until very recently. We had cable in our area but the company refused to bring it to our house, too far from the road they said, they would not even quote me a price. I finally found another company that ran fiber nearby for government contracts. Over a grand hook up fee and a five year contract ( I…
There are still many places in the US that AOL (or some other dial up service) is the only choice people have, since cable or DSL are not yet available in their area.
Verizon does. They will unlock your phone after 60 days with an account in good standing (no late payments or outstanding balance). I did it on my iPhone 4S with 13 months left on my contract.
AT&T refused to unlock my phone even though I was calling from outside the US to unlock my phone. I was out there for a month and AT&T rates are like $3.50/minute. If i get a local sim, the charges were like $0.001/minute
But ... You do not actually own the phone (yet). You paid a down payment when you signed a contract and the bulk of the payment comes as you pay your bill each month. This is why everyone should pay the full price of the phone up front and save each month on their phone bill.
Why would unlocking the phone get you out of your contractual agreement to pay for the phone? Or any other contractual agreement for that matter?
Exactly, this the most logical scenario.
What if you want to unlock it before your contract ends? Let's take my scenario for instance. I need to travel to India for a wedding for about 18 days, I still have about 8 months left on my contract for my wife's Note2. I want to use a local number/SIM while we are there. I am not going to cancel my contract, I…
They're not saying they wanted to cancel, they just needed the phone unlocked so as to be able to use a local SIM overseas for a couple of weeks. If they were to cancel their AT&T service, they would still have to pay the ETF.