elsevier2
Elsevier2
elsevier2

had Apple not made the move to sell their own products directly, the company would not be here today.

They can but they probably will not. I worked in a factory store before, and we would not undersale our retail partners, unless we got in a batch of factory blemished stuff. Walmart did 80% of our total sales and the upper management didn’t want to do anything to mess with that. I think they can have the factory

Maybe it was the route I used to take. I would always get on 93 at the last on ramp before the tunnel and basically have to get over 3 lanes in short order because the exits were so close together. This was while everyone else wanted to get to the exits. Maybe it was a particularly hectic spot.

Thankfully the driver was able to get out of the truck on his own

The thing about the big dig is you are always three lanes over from where you need to be from the moment you enter the space. Either you are in a lane that is about to exit or you suddenly need to be in the one that is about to exit. Some places have exits every 1,000 feet, making it hard to stay in the correct lane. 

There is also evidence that performing tests where people feel more comfortable leads to better results. On average people had much lower blood pressure in the barber shop compared to the docs office. Thus it also prevents false diagnosis and burdening people with unneeded medicine and costs.

IDK. I have seen other reports from taller people that seemed to like it. They said there was plenty of room for the legs to extend, but those were more pre-production models. I can’t imagine it changed much though. 

I’m sorry my ‘welcome back’ offended you. I truly hope you had a good vacation.

Yeah, he is probably on a list they notify whenever there is a new product. 

Where are you getting this? I can’t find anything about not being able to drive. It literally only applies to interactions with federal agencies. States regulate drivers.

Not really. The way the law was written, even if it was the smallest of rain showers on a mostly sunny day, if you turned on you wipers but not your headlights, you could get a ticket. However, if it was snowing and you didn’t run the wipers, because the dry snow in Boston didn’t really stick to a moving vehicle, you

If using a laptop is implied as part of what you can do, then reclining the seat shouldn’t be an issue at all since the airlines are giving you that ability as part of the actual thing you paid for, there is no implying since it’s the actual seat they’re providing.

Where do you live with a law like that? Around me it is normally an arbitrary rule. Like if you can hear the exhaust more than 100 yards away, then it is too loud. Basically, something general enough the cop can enforce it if he feels like it. 

I had the misfortune to live in Massachusetts when they passed a law like this a few years ago. I just rainx’d everything so I didn’t have to use the wipers unless it was a downpour. Usually the auto headlights would come on before it got that bad anyway. 

And maybe “wust.”

Welcome back. Hope you had a good vacation.

I was more commenting on the level of rudeness. Perhaps a better example would be you buy a movie ticket and then someone comes and sits in front of you with a 5ft tall cowboy hat. There is not rule against wearing a 5ft tall cowboy hat, but it is quite rude. Technically, you paid for a seat, not the airspace in front

No. If they advertise that you should be able to use it, then it is an implied service. If you bought a ticket to see a movie or a show and your seat was behind a wall where you could not see the screen, you would complain. Technically, the ticket for the movie only guarantees the seat.

Actually, do to limitations on federal funding, I am required to buy the cheapest seat possible whenever I travel for work.