I would guess they are more concerned with the percentage of Firefox users still on each platform than they are with the relationships between the various platforms.
(And then, as you say, there is the matter of the relative lack of difference between Windows 2000 and Windows XP)
They are still releasing security updates for 3.0. I would imagine that translates into at least another year, probably more, of security updates for 3.5.
Does the phone even need to be activated at purchase?
Anyway, you are correct that the obligations are very different, but I'm not real sure it is more sensible to compare a phone with 2 years of service to a phone with 1 month of service. Obviously, opinions may vary.
Well, once the contract expires, I'm pretty sure anybody aware enough to do this particular price comparison would be aware enough to switch to the contract free plan (I made a slight mistake, there is no contract with the unsubsidized phone, and you wouldn't need one after 2 years with the subsidized phone).
I would guess that you pretty much nailed it, except the guy was probably already obsessed with cavities and came across some information about low temperature plasma.
There really isn't anything very interesting about the lambda statement in python.
(all objects in python are first class, so you can use a named function anywhere you can use a lambda, and lambdas are restricted to a single expression)
The rate is probably 15.9%, compounding monthly (really the rate is somewhat higher than that as I am not dealing with the shrinking principle, but it is close enough).
That's not way out of whack with other unsecured loans.
They are actively investigating the problem (with the likely intention of fixing it...).
The operational limit is probably what it is because there is no reason for a plant to be leaking much tritium, not because they determined a particular level to be hugely dangerous.
It may be the case that I misinterpreted soda water, but it isn't unreasonable for me to point out that 'alcohol is teh awesome' was not the context of my comment, especially when the comment came with the 'Contrary to what kids think' bullshit.
I would guess they are more concerned with the percentage of Firefox users still on each platform than they are with the relationships between the various platforms.
(And then, as you say, there is the matter of the relative lack of difference between Windows 2000 and Windows XP)
They are still releasing security updates for 3.0. I would imagine that translates into at least another year, probably more, of security updates for 3.5.
You use OpenDNS because you are paranoid!?
That's like smoking some crack rocks to help with your insomnia.
Somebody out there is just itching to write C on Crack.
You never did get me that tank, so I'm not sure I believe you this time.
So there are a bunch of dudes that you find cute and nerdy?
Does the phone even need to be activated at purchase?
Anyway, you are correct that the obligations are very different, but I'm not real sure it is more sensible to compare a phone with 2 years of service to a phone with 1 month of service. Obviously, opinions may vary.
Well, once the contract expires, I'm pretty sure anybody aware enough to do this particular price comparison would be aware enough to switch to the contract free plan (I made a slight mistake, there is no contract with the unsubsidized phone, and you wouldn't need one after 2 years with the subsidized phone).
I would guess that you pretty much nailed it, except the guy was probably already obsessed with cavities and came across some information about low temperature plasma.
If I wanted juice in my soda, I'd steal it from Mark McGwire.
There really isn't anything very interesting about the lambda statement in python.
(all objects in python are first class, so you can use a named function anywhere you can use a lambda, and lambdas are restricted to a single expression)
My apologies, you were correct and I was spouting nonsense.
The rate is probably 15.9%, compounding monthly (really the rate is somewhat higher than that as I am not dealing with the shrinking principle, but it is close enough).
That's not way out of whack with other unsecured loans.
Compounding annually, it is about 17.1%.
I got it slightly wrong, the unsubsidized version doesn't come with a contract, it is just 24 monthly payments.
Apparently T-Mobile isn't real worried about staying in the consumer lending business.
It's a bit of a stretch, but it could be that the distributor that supplies the stores you frequent also serves a regulated county.
You flipped the monthly rates there, the monthly plan is, unsurprisingly, cheaper with the unsubsidized phone, not the subsidized phone.
Yeah, the more sensible comparison is $2,579 for the subsidized phone+contract, and $2,449 for the unsubsidized phone+contract.
The can I am presently drinking, purchased in Michigan, says 5%.
It may be the case that you are subject to county, rather than state, regulation.
Do they run those welders on cell phone batteries?
It's too bad they aren't very funny.
(I don't mean that in a stern killjoy sense, I mean that in an eye-rolling oh-just-shut-up sense)
Try a little harder, the attribution is just before it (apparently that is the submitters opinion).
It could simply be the case that containing the tritium is relatively easy, meaning that the regulatory level is far below the dangerous level.
They are actively investigating the problem (with the likely intention of fixing it...).
The operational limit is probably what it is because there is no reason for a plant to be leaking much tritium, not because they determined a particular level to be hugely dangerous.
It may be the case that I misinterpreted soda water, but it isn't unreasonable for me to point out that 'alcohol is teh awesome' was not the context of my comment, especially when the comment came with the 'Contrary to what kids think' bullshit.
No, it is 5% except in locations where 3.2% is legally mandated.
This seems reliable enough:
http://www.beer100.com/beercalories.htm
And it led me here:
http://nutritional.anheuser-busch.com/