how well does it work at correctly detecting between positives and false positives?
how well does it work at correctly detecting between positives and false positives?
Maybe it varies by store location. Mine took 15 the other day.
they do. and there is no limit to the number of coupons you use in a transaction (but only one coupon per item). You can even use the coupon for online orders if you bring the receipt and coupon in to the store after you purchased it.
Bed Bath & Beyond
also check with the post office and ask for a change of address packet. Lowes includes a 20% off coupon in those, at least in my area.
yes. that's the nature of a mostly open platform like Android.
curious to see how well this works. seems like there are too many variables to correctly detect the user's intention. If it's buggy, it could be a huge battery drain turning on your screen for no reason. I'm assuming there will be a way to turn it off but I just don't understand the point of the feature. Tasker has a…
yes. watch out for an OTA update near the end of october
shouldn't that be flipped?
I'm assuming by off you mean the screen. Not the phone. I know most people might not believe me but phones do actually have a full power off feature. I think it was included in a very early beta release of Android. Not familiar enough with iOS to know if those have an equivalent feature.
or tilt the glass
"don't have to worry or think about how you pour it"
this one is a much more pervasive myth than any of the others and is an easy one to debunk. It's really too bad it didn't make the list.
no. super cheap. less than bottle of a good wine. about $12 on amazon for a set of 2.
I'm partial to the vacuum pump corks. Wax paper, plastic wrap, and most other sealers prevent additional air from coming in, but the air that is already the bottle is just as deadly to wine. The vacuum pump corks aren't perfect but they often do a pretty good job of getting as much air out of the bottle as possible…
I did a side by side comparison of a number of shots with my N5 vs my friend's iPhone 6. Various lighting conditions, different subjects, different camera settings. The results were quite comparable. Some shots the i6 came out on top. Others the N5 was the winner. The large majority (~80%) of the times the two shots…
Check out the Nexus 5. Hits all of those points.
anonymous to the potential employer. not anonymous to the service.
I read the headline and opened it up to check the date stamp and was like WTF? I also just learned iPhones didn't have the ability to switch keyboards or even have a predictive text keyboard until recently. I'm always baffled at how the iPhone is so popular but is so behind the curve on many basic simple things.
that can happen and that's a fair critique. In my experience, that attitudes like that are a result of a mismatch between delegation and skill set at the leadership level or a lack of passion for the work. A response like that is usually indicitave of an underlying problem not because of role definition.