Yes, the *legality* is the lowest form of ethics. I said nothing about lawyers or the legal profession, so (shocking) it’s not about you. Given how pedantic you are, I’d think you’d have picked up on that distinction.
Yes, the *legality* is the lowest form of ethics. I said nothing about lawyers or the legal profession, so (shocking) it’s not about you. Given how pedantic you are, I’d think you’d have picked up on that distinction.
Nope. When manufacturers offer sub-2% loans that is free money. Because your dollar 5 years from now is worth less than the dollar you have today. You can either give that future dollar to the bank (in exchange for a dollar today) or watch it shrivel due to inflation while you save up for that car.
Yup. Looking at Honda Finance offers myself right now. 0.9 for the first 5 years if you extend beyond that it’s still only 1.9%.
No, you’re using pedantry to try and obfuscate the issue. That works in court because legality is the lowest form of ethics, but out here its bullshit and you fucking know it. Lawyers always know it.
“Enslavement”? They’re giving you money. That’s literally the opposite of slavery. It’s not even serfdom.
Because (if real) this thing is literally impossible to see without modern telescopes. Neptune, despite being far closer, falls under a similar header. No human ever saw Neptune before the 17th century. If this new planet exists, no human will have seen it before. No human *could* have seen it before the late 20th…
You seem unable to grasp anything beyond the most base, literal meanings of things.
Yeah, sure, he skimmed them. I’d buy that, at least for the sake of argument. What he did *not* do is hold anything back. He was not an editor, and as a system admin, he wouldn’t even have the political or operational knowledge to make that judgment in the first place.
Except that’s not what happened. He took a large pile of files, a majority of which had nothing to do with domestic surveillance and then handed it over to journalists who then did most of the curating and releasing to the public. And they did *not* limit themselves to metadata and call logging either.
Right, USB is such a fad. It’s not like it was introduced 20 years ago and you can still find things that will plug into (and work) on those same devices all these years later.
USB ports aren’t easy to damage, mostly because USB (and especially Micro-B and C) is deliberately designed to physically fail at the connector. The springs are in the cable too, so no matter what, you’re far more likely to have to replace the cheap cable than the port (and whatever the port is built into).
Right, because doing the same thing 3 completely separate ways is *such* a productive use of time and resources. I mean, that’s the only way to end up with a good chat/SMS client or music player, which Google clearly has. /s
Beloved? No. But for those 2 hours in a IMAX, my eyes had sex with the screen. My brain was in the hall tossing butt-warmed milk duds at the wall trying to get them to stick.
Honestly, if you go in expecting the worst movie ever (as I did) you’ll probably be pleasantly surprised. It wasn’t bad, though it needs 20 minutes cut out.
Why are super delegates a thing? Have you seen Donald Trump and how he’s steamrolling the whole Republican party and no one can stop him?
I’d like a list of the specific companies where this woman was running into this issue. If your system is so shitty it doesn’t know the difference between “NULL” (a string) and NULL (note lack of quotes) then it probably has a lot of over problems too and will probably be in the news for getting hacked.
Right, but none of those thing apply to you so the question becomes “why are you trying to bullshit me”?
SSDs are like $60 these days. If that’s the difference between you eating and starving, then you need to do a lot more reflecting.
It’s 2016, if you’re not booting from an SSD, you need to reevaluate your life. Which, you should have plenty of time to do, since you’re gonna be sitting there doing nothing while your cheap ass laptop takes 45 seconds to 3 minutes to boot up.
No...but if you read the 5 part series from the NY Times on how corporations use arbitration clauses to get out of class actions, you realize that “wrong” starts to loose its normal meaning.