At first I thought you were serious, but then I read the "liberal form of elitism" line.
At first I thought you were serious, but then I read the "liberal form of elitism" line.
Name of bank(s)?
Why didn't you give us the name of this bank?
I don't think so. If 3 people give £1 to 3 different charities, each charity charges the processing fee 3 times.
I'm seeing unwitty comebacks to well-deserved criticism.
You followed up a joke with... trying to extend the joke in excruciating detail.
Are we reading the same article?
I don't see the conflict that you seem to be seeing. He was comparing the way people disassociate themselves, not implying that the associated actions are somehow dependent on one another.
Are we reading the same article? Your highly...detailed, empathetic, and well thought-out comment suggests otherwise.
This video is an accurate depiction of what it's like to use Google Map Maker.
When will George just learn to just stop worrying and love the bomb?
Homosexual lust is a sin just as much as wearing clothes woven of different fabric is. Homosexual love isn't mentioned at all. I think you and thousands of other Christians might be reading a bit too far into this.
Not if your systems are designed correctly. There might be systems built for support services to see certain account data, but everything else should be fairly well protected from human meddling. For example: a sysadmin cannot lookup a user's Google password, because Google doesn't store your password.
I think we need to distinguish what we're talking about. I'm talking more about content control, like what the DMCA deals with, not necessarily the management of the infrastructure that provides internet services. Infrastructure at the state level could very well be a great idea.
Dude, you missed a great opportunity to go "I'm sorry to inform you, but..."
Yeah. Nowadays you're lucky to get more than 2-3.
"you'll begin to wonder if Tetris isn't really part of a diabolical plot hatched in the Evil Empire to lower worker productivity in the United States."
It seems like Google Music uses a naïve shuffle. A proper shuffling algorithm will take steps to ensure an individual song doesn't get repeated before n other songs have played (n is based on the playlist size). For the short time that I did use Google Music, I would find that it would often play the same song twice…
It seems like you are though. The OP said this: