dereksalem
dereksalem
dereksalem

So do what I did: Tell them the site told you to call to add the feature. I called, told them the site said I needed to call to activate the feature, and she set it up within 5 minutes. They don't *have* to add it, but if it's on the site and they're willing to do it, why would you feel a reason not to? (assuming you

That's actually completely irrelevant. The "clause", as you call it (it's not a clause...it's a function of the contract), specifically states that if Verizon makes an unauthorized change to your account that you have the ability to cancel the contract, outright.

Easy way to know this is fake: the vehicles take a different path the second time around than the first. Using Quantum Levitation, the vehicles would take an identicle path (by definition) every single time around the track (exactly the same). In the first time around the vehicles criss-cross to opposite sides of the

Oh, also, using 60GB in a month is idiotic. If you don't think Verizon would take note of someone using 60GB in a month on an unlimited plan, you're out of your mind. There's *absolutely* no way to use 60GB a month without tethering. I could stream HD music all day long, every day, and not achieve 60GB of data in a

^^ This. No reason to give millions of people this kind of information so that Verizon takes note of it. That's ridiculously bad tact.

They can try. Guess what they'll do when I threaten to sue.

HostMonster.com is arguably the best in the business, IMO. Many of my friends use the service because of me, and they all love it, as well. It's cheap, it always works perfectly, and their customer support always goes the extra mile to make sure you're satisfied. Unlimited storage and unlimited traffic are included in

Citations for all:

2 things:

Actually, it's not much more than a simple link...it actually *IS* a simple link. It's called Masking. When the system finds a series of letters and numbers that match a format, it does "X" action. For instance: When the system finds 9 numbers in a row, separated either by dashes or spaces, it believe it to be a phone

OK, then how about this. When I get an email in Outlook that requests a meeting (not a meeting request, but an email that includes a request in normal text), Outlook will automatically add it to my calendar, set up an notification, and add the name, numbers, and emails of all attendees (that it grabs, automatically,

The Apple box? Visit any website with a clickable link (whether a URL or e-mail address) and it will be highlighted and underlined in blue. Have Skype installed? Then phone numbers will be dealt with the same way.

Actually it makes a huge difference. I'm using the GN with the extended battery and the difference betwixt the two is *immediately* noticeable. Over the past 4 hours my battery has drained 7%. Most of that time it's been just sitting there, but I've read and replied to well over 20 emails, texts, and facebook messages

Regardless of whether it has an NFC chip...any battery you buy for $8 won't have 1/2 of the noted battery life. It'll be dead in a year and the entire time you'll be working off of an inefficient battery.

But that phone *needed* 2500+. The Thunderbolt is one of the most energy-inefficient phones on the market.

Actually, that's not completely accurate. The problem with many of the nukes from the cold war and before is that they were made *very* cheaply. Russia didn't invest enough money in the R&D side, so many of them are pieced together with inadequate construction. This means the detonators are often *very* untrustworthy,

They own those planes so they can use them for business reasons. They own them so they can send the jet to pick up potential clients or help transfer people around, it's not purely for *them*.

You seriously are deluded if you think that rival companies would all start coming together without legislation. Some industries would see it, but none the less capitalism would ensure that more competition would spring up. There are plenty of other industries that aren't even governed by monopolistic laws.

You're assuming people don't have a choice. If airlines were demanding $5k for a ticket people *would* start driving, no matter how much of an inconvenience it would be. On top of that, a new airline selling tickets for $500 would get pretty much all of the consumer traffic, if they provided adequate services. There

I wasn't saying people wouldn't take advantage of each other, but Capitalism allows for this too.