Or better yet, learn about the horrific environmental impact of coffee pods and quit buying them. For example:
Or better yet, learn about the horrific environmental impact of coffee pods and quit buying them. For example:
Those are excellent suggestions. I personally enjoy working in the library.
A broader sense of perspective helps. I know a couple of blind people who wish they had your problem…
"Is PotPlayer really that good?"
I think it's worthwhile to not only ask "how" to conduct a romantic relationship with a co-worker but also to ask "why". That is, why does one feel it necessary to have the two primary portions of one's life overlap to that extent?
Technical merits notwithstanding, lose the cutesy pink hippo, please.
Grab and Drag is very high on my list of very useful add-ons.
I agree with Python because it's a full-featured, block-structured language that can be interactively learned with the IDLE Python shell in conjunction with books or tutorials.
If I'm not hugging you "for real", I don't want to be able to smell your scent product…
Which of the preceding rules would we use to change the article's title from "…avoid making" to simply "…avoid"?
Not sure if you're being facetious, but in technical communications the serial comma is very useful and important.
Sociometric Solutions tracked workplace behaviors with sensors built into office IDs at an online travel company.
I second GIMP. The initial learning curve can be a bit painful, but the investment pays off as a large of amount of capability.
I don't like either of them. But at least I believe I can control the worst parts of FaceBook.
To make the most of working abroad, stay out of bars and avoid drinking alcohol as much as possible.
Although I use gVim, my favorite open source text editor is jEdit. Lots of extensions, runs on any OS via a JRE.
If you're gonna' write an article about drinking in moderation, don't lead into it with a picture of some guy hungrily tipping his glass nearly vertically as if he's trying to suck the very last drop of wine out of it
For a start, I've learned to regularly purge bookmarks I don't regularly make use of.
For those with cars, when you need to use a self-serve gasoline pump that doesn't have the little gadget that enables you to let go of the handle while the gas pumps, use a tennis ball to hold the lever in the "squeezed" position.
A trick I use with great success is to write down the name of something I think I "need" on a sticky note along with a date 14-days into the future. I then promise myself that if I still want the item when the designated date arrives I'll be permitted to buy it.