What? The narration is compelling. Actually, I haven't watched it . . . yet. Just enough snippets to think it might be interested (pronounced "full of eye candy).
What? The narration is compelling. Actually, I haven't watched it . . . yet. Just enough snippets to think it might be interested (pronounced "full of eye candy).
I saw hints of Google Drive inside my account once. It had already been tipped prior, but I still feel kinda special.
Translation: You need a commercial or self-administered solution.
I think people are overly cautious about this. My wife hesitates to make a side trip after picking up milk out of fearitwill go basic left outfit an extra ten minutes. Her cousin won't eat anything that has reached it's sell by or best by date. I was raised in a household where it wasn't a big deal to leave thing…
But you can't tell me you didn't love the way Penelope Cruz says "Open your eyes."
The Mike Daisy thing in a 10 minute nutshell via MSNBC, "Up w/ Chris Hayes"
Don't know off-hand which ones, but two-pane views are certainly available in some Android apps. To get you started with the reseach, I've tried Cool Reader, Moon Reader, Aldiko, Laputa, and FBReader. It has to be one of those.
The guidelines excerpted here sound like strategies to employ while you're wrecking rather than the course of normal driving. I've always done 9 and 3 because 10 and 2 isn't comfortable, but if I get to the point of airbag deployment, I'm taking my cue from autoracing, getting my hands off the wheel, and crossing my…
Funny you should use the word "highlight" considering those uniforms.
That really depends on how you push the policy. If you inform them that deliberately bypassing a security protocol is grounds for dismissal, you can be assured that they won't do it. And if they do, you can be sure they won't do it again because they will be gone.
Perhaps an impetus to teach people to lock down their workstations when leaving their desk would be pragmatic. You can get people to do it the same way schools get people to run off their lights and lock their door whenever they leave their classroom or office. That would be a far more reasonable approach. You're…
What's your excuse now, Mr. Galloway :)
Earphones of all types just don't agree with me. The don't normally hurt. They just don't fit my small ears. And alternatives that go over my head tend to get in the way when I'm lying down with my audio.
I actually image the game would be much better.
Employers are being idiotic here. They act as if they don't understand unintended consequences. Putting aside the potential legal ramifications, consider that Facebook is filled with your customers. It is your outlet to reach the greatest number of them with the greatest ease. If you give them a reason to abandon…
Oh, there's always one :) Perhaps. Or perhaps not. That really depends on who you talk to, without the distinction of if they are educated in the area or not. "Well" probably does work better in this case, but I believe it's all well and good to use either. But I'll try to be more careful with that. I think about…
I've become aggravated by a series I adopted because it was a rather interesting sounding trilogy and as a less than avid reader, I thought I could handle that; that it would be a good start to changing my habits. Now I'm chasing it as it has expanded to five books to this point and spun of a series of prequels.
This is my preferred method, but it's been a recent change. I found that everytime a notification went off, I felt obligated to check it even though I knew that it was most likely something that could wait until I was already engaging my email or whatever service is pushing.
Great advice. And the tip given here could be motivation to get some people started developing the habit.
So a QR code that points to instructions on how to use a QR code is not a good idea.