jwdd
j5000
jwdd

Indeed, and if this is simply Netflix paying for its uploading, why then would there be a dispute over who should pay for it, it should be pretty straightforward, and as it isn't and as the article says it isn't for Netflix's uploading, but for "increasing bandwidth loads", I have to conclude it isn't a simple case of

You overage charges are just $10/50gb? That's pretty great, up here in Canada our overage charges are per gigabyte, and range from $4-$1 each. And is that 300GB cap high or new, because we only got caps that high in recent years, when the companies first started capping, the highest caps you could get were usually

Yeah, I'd eat that.

Yes, and they must already pay for that, so the question is, why was there a dispute over the "increasing bandwidth loads" mentioned in the article. Netflix must not be using that bandwidth because they would simply be on the hook to pay for it, so it must be on the part of the users, which brings me back to my

Yes, but is Gawker paying simply to get their stuff on the internet, or are they paying for the same "increasing bandwidth loads" mentioned in the article? It would seem safe to assume those loads are on the user, not the source, otherwise Netflix would almost certainly be footing the bill for it no matter what, the

Well... good, that's actually pretty cool of them.

Interesting. I don't think I've ever seen cheese curds anywhere for anything other than poutine.

Why... what...? Why does Netflix pay? What is Netflix using? You, the user, are using the bandwidth to download things...

The only breakfast place I go is Tim Horton's (if that counts as fast food). Nothing beats their breakfast sandwiches.

It definitely wasn't shredded cheese the last time I had it (which was, admittedly, possibly a couple years ago).

I just love that it's one of the only places that's actually open 24 hours. I mean, it's not like I'm in some small town in the middle of nowhere, I'm right in the thick of the GTA, but... there's one McDonald's, some amount of A&Ws, and maybe still the Burger King, that's about it for 24 hour food. And while I do

KFC does do it pretty well, though I do find their gravy, umm, thick, maybe? I do remember quite enjoying Burger King's a number of years ago, but that was before the poutine craze really caught on in Ontario, so it may have just been one of the only non-specialized places that carried it.

That's more or less my thinking. If they don't squeak, they aren't fresh curds. And them using cubes of other cheese does make sense, let's them get away with faking it like the places that just use shredded cheese can't, yet they're all bullshitting. (Though, whatever, I figured that's better for you, and I can't

I don't know how long cheese curds last in fast food, I would expect a while because it is fast food, but not that long because they're still cheese curds, and that makes me worry about KFC. If you have cheese curds, you best be using them quickly enough they don't start to suck, which means having them only to put

I don't know, I would certainly hope they did, I mean... how could they not? But everything was presented so straight-forward and heavy handedly, it definitely felt at times like they didn't. Maybe just a couple of the writers who only did a couple episodes didn't realize and that's how that feeling crept into the

The first season is pretty disjointed. It goes back and forth between being a universe-building show with in-depth mythos being focused on... to a standard police procedural, except, twist, one of the cops is actually a cop from the future! There are also a number of points when it is just painfully clear this is a

I came here to make that joke... I'm glad someone did.

I'll certainly agree with all that about The Swan... but all that was good and made for a good show, up until the final season. Nailing down the moment the show went sour (otherwise known as the moment it turned to bullshit) is not hard at all: the first moment of the final season. And the reason it's not hard is

I suppose that's may be the question, who's making more money: PBS for importing Sherlock or CBS for stealing Sherlock in the form of Elementary?

A leap and a journey, yes, but a logical one. Things had obviously changed a lot from start to finish, but it seemed like a pretty logical progression from start to finish. I think looking at the end of the show, you can easily say "oh, so that's how things ended up, okay" as opposed to some of the other shows on