This implies there is a moral spectrum. Their spectrum is binary:
This implies there is a moral spectrum. Their spectrum is binary:
They are all mouth and no trousers.
Trying to buy his way into what?...
Wow. This is a game-changer.
I used to live across from the Pat’s on Sheffield. Fuckin’ hell, that was great pizza. Pep and ricotta.
The best way to stop the practice is to stop watching.
I tell my non-existent children I love them very much.
Nope. I do shitty at the track, and in all other forms of gambling.
Alternate theory of the crime: Take that pie dough, roll it out sprinkle cinnamon sugar on it, dot with a bit of butter, roll up, put on a bit of foil, bake along side pie. Takes about 30 mins. Sprinkle with cinnamon sugar after it comes out of the oven. Let cool. Deliciousness ensues.
...some of us have been waiting for, old man. Some of us.
Apple was sued recently in the US and in Australia for the “Error 53" issue, which locked the fingerprint scanner on certain iPhones after an update. There’s a class action suit that’s still in progress in this country, and the Australian government fined Apple $6m.
Any mention in that release regarding supporting other scripting languages, or is VBA your only option? There was an RFP floated a few years ago to provide Python support for Excel.
Wow, this is so much bullshit. I just buy what works. In my case, it’s a combination of Apple and Linux devices.
Now is the time to devolve to a rural agrarian society. There will be casualties, but it’ll be worth it.
Try not to underestimate yourself. It’s unseemly. Think like David Tracy. “I’m fixing this 1845 Conestoga Wagon!”
I’ll see at least 730 articles on Lifehacker alone about the new phone, changes to iOS, the impact on Android, the lack of impact on Android, yadda.
However, if you want to hear journalists interviewing journalists, any time is fine.
Billions in ticket sales and the need for validation.
When you watch the Oscars, you’re not watching an awards show, you’re watching a board meeting for the awards business.
I worked at a stats company in Chicago as a developer. I was basically responsible for the care, feeding, distribution, support, training of a server product. The guy who hired me was sacked by the department director, a snivelly little man, who felt that my former boss wasn’t being ‘tough enough’ with us (my former…