A point of clarification, an arbitration ruling would only apply to Uber. It would have exactly zero precedential value in any other context.
A point of clarification, an arbitration ruling would only apply to Uber. It would have exactly zero precedential value in any other context.
So... 7 people die out of 330,000,000 (or, 0.000002% of the population) and people are up in arms about banning it.
You can absolutely change the settings on the PSMove controllers so that you have smooth turning and locomotion. It was the first thing I changed when I started playing in VR. I hate the teleportation mechanic in VR.
Occam’s Razor. The simplest answer is usually the right one. For the rare occasion of zebras, yeah, it may be wrong. But, 99.9% of the time, it’s right.
We’re not in NYC, not by a long shot (though, definitely not rural either). We’re in a metro area of around a million.
Well... I can tell by the use of “ya’ll”, that you’re not a professional. At least, not one that should be taken seriously.
Yeah... I’m going to go ahead and disagree. Given that my wife is a doctor, many of my clients are doctors, and I associate with a whole hell of a lot of doctors, if they’re not surgeons (who are in or going into surgery) or ER, they are in suits and ties.
Usually the term “professional” is reserved for regulated fields requiring licensing, like accounting, law, medicine, teaching, etc.
and doctors, accountants, finance people, basically, if you’re spending a shitload of money on the professional service, they’re wearing suits and ties.
Here’s what you’ve missed, heals, pantyhose, shaved legs, hair, makeup, etc. not actually required, ever. My wife is an attending physician. She’s never worn makeup or heels or spent more than a minute tying up her hair. She’s not an ER doc, she’s a neurologist, where the men are expected to wear suit and ties.
Or... and hear me out, you’re required to wear it because that’s the dress code.
It’s not. Pretty much every “professional” industry requires suit and tie outside of the west coast.
I think you might have a very different definition of “professional” than most.
So... getting around an employee protection law, like overtime, healthcare benefits, sick leave, paid time off, etc. are bad and corrupt laws?
I’m a conservative. I voted Trump. I’m sure as Hell not rich or even well off. I’m well educated.
That’s the key. Many times, when a company says the have “disruptive” technology, what they really mean is that they figured out how to get around a law.
Your point is entirely moot based on the fact that if you’re not traveling in a place that has it’s own wifi router with password (i.e., not a gateway), you can’t use Chromecast.
So... pay for the same stuff but don’t earn cash back when you do it? Is this like the opposite of sound financial advice?
You need to know both. Just because you understand math doesn’t mean you understand how compound interest rates work in a loan document or something like that. Conversely, if you don’t know math, you may understand the concept of compound interest, but you won’t be able to verify it.
This BS, JD, LLM corporate tax attorney fully supports Sanders.