As interesting as that initially sounds, if ACIII is any indication, I wouldn't want to see it. Running around the woods wasn't fun then, and it won't be fun running around a forest in Bahia.
As interesting as that initially sounds, if ACIII is any indication, I wouldn't want to see it. Running around the woods wasn't fun then, and it won't be fun running around a forest in Bahia.
I think you would be surprised, as the term Creole is VERY common.
Believe it or not, besides their French and African influences, Louisiana Creole and Kreyol ayisian have no relationship, except for the migration of Haitians after the rebellion.
This is not the case for all phones, but it is the case for the VAST majority, so far as I have tested at my job.
I would've been happy with this alone.
Examiner and PCMag (I think) are reporting that this is a release of data that was stolen earlier in the year, and it is not a new hack from this Tibitximer.
Thank you for saving me the time.
Google "fios rollout"
You mean the Turing test? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_test
Neither do I. If I had heard that several years ago when I was working for the company, I would have raised my eyebrow and kept it moving.
It was spelled wrong so many times, I began to doubt myself.
Most Verizon Phones come with GSM radios these days.
I agree wholeheartedly with this. I am an avid weightlifter, but over the past 1-3 years I had stopped ( I have, over the past year gotten back into the habit.) At my biggest muscle-wise, I was about 215 pounds (5'7"). When I stopped working out, I began to drop weight. Of course, I was losing muscle while gaining…
Eugenics has a genetic requirement. I can think of a myriad of ways that I can have a preference of who lives and who dies that has nothing to do with genetics, even indirectly.
"Though initially developed in the late 19th century, it wasn't until the 1970s that long distance attenuation could be achieved."
Network-impacting issues don't always manifest themselves on the people who have the UEs that have the issues. OEMs have to submit a separate software load for each service provider, each having different chipsets that they must test against, each with different sized networks they must test against, etcetera.
It usually isn't a Verizon issue. Verizon receives whatever software submission from the OEM, and tests it within a few weeks. If you aren't getting something, it is usually because either the OEM hasn't released it to Verizon's engineers, or there might be a problem that is network-impacting. Or you can usually…
I'd rather not say where I work, but I'm sure you can figure it out after I post this. My job is to test UICC interoperability between UE and UICC. This is one of the things we test. You can go on Comprion.com, Comprion is a company that provides test equipment for UICC. You can also go into a Verizon Wireless…
There seems to be a misconception about how SIM cards work with Verizon Wireless. Universal Integrated Circuit Cards (UICCs) used by VZW have both a USIM and CSIM application, which allows one to switch out the UICC from one VZW phone and enter it into another VZW phone that accepts a UICC.
trolltoadington is incorrect. If you have a Verizon Wireless SIM already, of the proper size, you can easily switch it out to another VZW phone.