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Yes. When I was in college one instructor had us edit existing Wikipedia entries. The assignment was to find a page on the class subject (Byzantine History) which had little to no information. It was a good research project and allowed everyone to work on their narrative structure and footnotes. Since then I

Here's the #1 tip for not being an asshole while flying: DON'T RECLINE YOUR SEAT.

All I know, after not really reading: I want a Nokia Lumia 1020!

Not at all...

Why would you want to put cheese with an apple pie????? stange tastes over there in the US

What's "pre-installed hardware"? Is that another name for "phone"?

What is the procedure to permanently and completely delete your Gawker Media account? Or is this website completely wrong?

Exactly. I didn't read the OP has sarcasm either. Why? Show us the most popular aftermarket iPad accessories and you'll find:

Ah, the pendulum swings one way ... AAAAAANNNDDDD ... back it goes the other way. I well remember in the late 90s my giant company wanting all their managers and execs to be accessible, so they tossed them out of their offices and into cubicles just like the hoi polloi.. Supposedly you could walk right up to the CEO

That bookmarklet will exclude the query string, which might be important. It will also leave out a port number if there is one.

On Android, I've been using ShareKM for months now and like it was well. Wifi, Bluetooth, or USB.

(...I can't believe I gave up a perfectly good cubicle to sit in front of this monstrosity on national television...)

Stunt - noun. An achievement by a country other than the USA.

As a Commiewealth lad and sailor (navy and otherwise), and one who was brought up in the Queen's English, I'm going sort of with the first definition, except that "to the wind" means "lost to the wind", not "released". "Three sheets to the wind" means that all your sheets have been blown away (i.e., broken), and

God created BSOD to train the faithful to save often.

The best comment is not making any comments.

Yes, and some of those also settled briefly in far eastern Canada in about 1000AD. I think the scientific community believes they discovered us in error - blown off course, they landed in Newfoundland, said "Yeah, well, what the heck", built a few homes and a few years later built up stocks and heading back to

Try a crotchety 210 year old man. For you to have finished college prior to the first "incorrect" usage of this word that's been sourced, you'd have to have been born in the first decade of the 1800s (assuming you finished college at 21, even back then).

Sir Walter Scott used it in 1826, and Charles Dickens used it in

Is it preferable for them to misuse it correctly?