If you can have this conversation with your boss and actually be heard, count yourself lucky.
If you can have this conversation with your boss and actually be heard, count yourself lucky.
I can see the contents going all over the place when the lunch bag gets squished and the egg separates under pressure. These aren't exactly the most securely closing containers in the world.
For those of us who don't get free copies of SPSS, we can buy a grad-pack version for less than $200. However, it now has a 1-year limitation. Maybe that's why I'm still rocking SPSS 11.
Just something related to my job. We live in a flyover state with a lot of rural area, and a lot of folks still have dial-up. So it doesn't really surprise me that our stats skew to IE6.
Gentle cycle will agitate the water and clothes less, which means less pulling of the fabric that will slowly cause imprints to peel or fade. Medium-low heat prevents heat damage to imprints, but it also reduces shrinkage of the fabric which also can negatively affect imprints.
IE9 is a significant improvement. However, most of our traffic with IE user agents is still through IE6 and 7. In fact, reported IE9 hits represent only 6.4% of the number of IE6 hits. (just checked and did the math).
Well, technically, it's usually a couple of screws and some math. :)
It isn't "using IE" that's really the problem. It's "coding so that IE shows something at least close to what you originally had in mind and looks perfect in Firefox and Chrome."
Calipari didn't create the system. But he works it to his advantage. If the NBA let kids sign up for the draft while in high school, Anthony Davis would never have signed at UK (probably). But Calipari's coaching style and recruitment strategy make the Wildcats competitive.
Brilliant idea! Plus, it solves the problem for those of us who have smoke alarms that are wired into the household electricity as well has having a battery. Unplugging the battery doesn't do a thing unless our power is also out.
In the phone, he's created a lot of dead space. If the racks were closer together, this'd make more sense for me. I'd need to see three racks in the space used for two.
It's also a violation of Facebook's terms of service about maintaining two profiles.
Well, the residents of a 9.83 million km^2 area of North America use Fahrenheit ever time they check their local weather report. ;)
Well, sure. I never talk about it be 273 degrees Kelvin when it snows. That just gets me strange looks. Well, stranger than normal.
If more app developers actually sold versions of their apps, rather than relying solely on ad revenue, I'd be paying more out of pocket. Angry Birds is a good example. You can't buy an add-free license from Google Play, but you can from the Amazon Appstore.
I'm with you. I'd even be a happy camper if AT&T's plan was $15 for 1GB and $10 for each GB thereafter. The town I'm in, public WiFi is limited in availability.
But, if you look down the hallway, you'd see that the new sliding door looks similar in color to at least 1 other door in the house.
I wouldn't have a problem going metric. But, after years of working in a research lab, I don't have much of a problem with being "bilingual."
As far as "sensitive documents" go, I've been using Truecrypt, Dropbox and Boxcryptor for a while, and it works well. I believe I read about Boxcryptor on Lifehacker...
I'm going to go with Fahrenheit. 325C = 617F. I'm not even sure my oven gets that hot.