but not Mexico would be hypocritical. Mexican citizens cast a significant number of votes in the election - illegally - which to me is a bigger deal than doing some advertising.
It's on Amazon right now BluRay, DVD and the code for the same price. (oddly, at the time of this post the combo pack I just mentioned is $0.19 cheaper than just the DVD).
I looked at a couple of other Disney releases on their site, with similar outcomes.
I couldn't get on-board with iTunes. Even though I actually kind of like using Mac OS sometimes I can't bring myself to actually use most Apple applications on it. I use the Mac versions of what I use on Linux for the most part.
I redeemed every UltraViolet movie I ever got. Yes it was a bit of a confusing endeavor, and I wrote about it quite a bit. I would be upset if Ultraviolet were truly dead, I rarely use it to actually watch movies, but I like having them there in case there's a theoretical stuck somewhere but I still have bandwidth occasion, that's why I'm incredibly diligent about the kids movies.
All that's happened when you get down to it is Disney finally partnered up with all of the UltraViolet people, and then Amazon got in on it, Google was already working with Disney (I found that surprising). Now I can watch my Amazon, UltraViolet and Disney Movies Anywhere (keychest) stuff on YouTube. Or I can use my Vudu account and watch all that stuff on my parents BluRay player.
Flixster was just a single place to redeem codes, it's no big deal, the real big deal is the fact all the other places are working together now.
I've wanted to come up with an AI software for old Academy Ratio movies like the Wizard of Oz.
If a camera pans, use leading and trailing info to create edges.
If it's a still shot use something like this to generate probable edges.
Make Academy ratio movies 16:9 and do the same to some old TV shows. If I could pull this off I could potentially be the most hated man since the onset of colorization of old movies....
I know about the edit accusations. They released two versions, a long form unedited and a version that trimmed out dead time and irrelevant info.
The propaganda mills that wanted to downplay and discredit Project Veritas simply pointed at the trimmed one and kept yelling "edited!" While pretending the other wasn't also available.
Project Veritas is such a pain the ass to people who refuse to accept evidence of reality because they tend to go undercover and get indisputable video (and other) records of shenanigans going on.
Since you don't like the video-only YouTube stuff (and to be honest the modern era of making everything and video and having print stuff become increasingly rare and hard to filter and find bothers me too) I'll leave you with a couple of less video-centric links.
That Harvard study disagrees with your last statement.
BTW, those videos you refuse to watch from Project Veritas have New York (and other) election officials admitting to buses going from neighborhood to neighborhood with the same people voting multiple times. "Ducks on the ground" talk started to get somewhat hilarious sounding after a while.
I take your recommendation as almost irrelevant and as something akin to a drive-by considering the number of "kill yourself" posts and similar low-brow nonconstructive commentary you tend to make.
If you're comfortable with a life of fallacy so be it. You dismiss Snopes (on the opposite end of the political spectrum) and multiple federal websites when you do it.
When Russia made some Tweets, bought some ads and asked nicely.
Meanwhile Mexican citizens literally rode buses from one poling place to the next voting multiple times in our elections, a literal serious interference in our election, to the point of qualifying as an act of war - silence.
Considering your user name in and of itself calls out the fact you're a shill and I'm looking at your comment history which is basically nothing but poke the bear, dismiss the reply, call someone an idiot, I'm going to let my case rest on that single example. I will admit it's not the most solid example available, but doing the research you're demanding in order to satisfy your requirement that my generalization be secured as a bullet proof fact when no one asked you to be the referee on my comment is more time and effort than I willing to put into satisfying a shill, though I do believe if I were to put the time and effort into the endeavor I likely could come up with better examples. Seriously, who wants to dig through that many documents from Germany, the EU, the U.N. and then the U.S.? I would probably go mad in the process.
I started on Red Hat and moved to SuSE Linux. I left SuSE because their repositories were horrible, there were official "factory" packages that had dependencies not in ANY of the available repositories. I moved to Debian in the Etch era because of it and I've been in one Debian down-stream or another ever after. (Once Ubuntu started to get big Debian stopped trying to be an actual desktop distro). I understand SuSE has gotten way better since, but it's hard to go back to RPM once you've gone Apt.
I'm in search of the perfect distro, and it doesn't exist. I've found Maui to be super-well curated and managed, though it's typically a little out of date and upgrade from one release to the next isn't always simple. It WAS Netrunner based on KUbuntu, but Maui and Netrunner split and the current Netrunner is going back to the Debian roots, which seem to have ease of use issues. I'm not sure but I think Maui is now down-stream of Mint. The customizations from Maui are very "average user" focused, my wife uses it just fine. A lot of the normal KDE stuff isn't enabled by default, most of it's stuff I don't use, and that's part of what makes it less confusing. That being said I'm thinking of going Mint for myself simply because it's geared more towards making standard stuff work better without stripping it down.
On top of that the U.N. is really trying to put the screws to us to do the same. It was happening under Obama, outside of our own law through end-runs and dictates. It's not happening anymore The U.N. is not happy about it.
My rent is about $1,300 a month, two bedrooms with a study, two baths, 30 miles away. For $1,300 close to my last job I could get a small one bedroom with an expectation of it getting broken into and robbed while I was at work approximately three times a year. I know this because I had a friend who lived in an upscale apartment close to where I worked with badge controlled doors on the building and he got robbed more often than that. On top of that the schools where i live are among the best in the state, top 5%. The public schools near my last job are among the bottom 10% in the state, but the expensive private ones are among the best.
So if I were to double (or more due to insurance differences in that zip code) my cost of living I could have cut the commute, put in double-bunk beds so my wife and I could share a one bedroom with the kids, and live in a neighborhood mostly by people who are the furthest from my personal values! (they wouldn't like me much either)
Germany is pretty much the center of the globalist movement. What Germany does is pretty much imposed on the rest of the EU. What the EU does is bullied onto everyone else through the U.N. Up until the current administration whatever the U.N. wanted the U.S. would not only implement but pay for it, then be the enforcer on everyone else.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news...
https://www.huffingtonpost.com...
http://thehill.com/blogs/pundi...
http://www.capoliticalreview.c...
but not Mexico would be hypocritical. Mexican citizens cast a significant number of votes in the election - illegally - which to me is a bigger deal than doing some advertising.
Cars 3 was right at $20.
It's on Amazon right now BluRay, DVD and the code for the same price. (oddly, at the time of this post the combo pack I just mentioned is $0.19 cheaper than just the DVD).
I looked at a couple of other Disney releases on their site, with similar outcomes.
I couldn't get on-board with iTunes. Even though I actually kind of like using Mac OS sometimes I can't bring myself to actually use most Apple applications on it. I use the Mac versions of what I use on Linux for the most part.
I redeemed every UltraViolet movie I ever got. Yes it was a bit of a confusing endeavor, and I wrote about it quite a bit. I would be upset if Ultraviolet were truly dead, I rarely use it to actually watch movies, but I like having them there in case there's a theoretical stuck somewhere but I still have bandwidth occasion, that's why I'm incredibly diligent about the kids movies.
All that's happened when you get down to it is Disney finally partnered up with all of the UltraViolet people, and then Amazon got in on it, Google was already working with Disney (I found that surprising). Now I can watch my Amazon, UltraViolet and Disney Movies Anywhere (keychest) stuff on YouTube. Or I can use my Vudu account and watch all that stuff on my parents BluRay player.
Flixster was just a single place to redeem codes, it's no big deal, the real big deal is the fact all the other places are working together now.
Can I get a side of BOB?
and forming a support group.
I've wanted to come up with an AI software for old Academy Ratio movies like the Wizard of Oz.
If a camera pans, use leading and trailing info to create edges.
If it's a still shot use something like this to generate probable edges.
Make Academy ratio movies 16:9 and do the same to some old TV shows. If I could pull this off I could potentially be the most hated man since the onset of colorization of old movies....
Just the edited one, not the long form. Ignoring exactly what was said....
I know about the edit accusations. They released two versions, a long form unedited and a version that trimmed out dead time and irrelevant info.
The propaganda mills that wanted to downplay and discredit Project Veritas simply pointed at the trimmed one and kept yelling "edited!" While pretending the other wasn't also available.
If you'll actually read the links most of them predate the current POTUS, so sure, whatever.
Project Veritas is such a pain the ass to people who refuse to accept evidence of reality because they tend to go undercover and get indisputable video (and other) records of shenanigans going on.
Since you don't like the video-only YouTube stuff (and to be honest the modern era of making everything and video and having print stuff become increasingly rare and hard to filter and find bothers me too) I'll leave you with a couple of less video-centric links.
https://www.projectveritas.com...
https://www.projectveritasacti...
That Harvard study disagrees with your last statement.
BTW, those videos you refuse to watch from Project Veritas have New York (and other) election officials admitting to buses going from neighborhood to neighborhood with the same people voting multiple times. "Ducks on the ground" talk started to get somewhat hilarious sounding after a while.
I have looked at your comment history.
I take your recommendation as almost irrelevant and as something akin to a drive-by considering the number of "kill yourself" posts and similar low-brow nonconstructive commentary you tend to make.
The Snope's link disagrees with that, and says your link is wrong. Usually I don't trust Snopes so let's look deeper.
I found this one with a more recent date.
Looks like you're probably right. Thank you for once again discrediting Snopes and making me regret using it in an attempt to show balance.
If you're comfortable with a life of fallacy so be it. You dismiss Snopes (on the opposite end of the political spectrum) and multiple federal websites when you do it.
Really?
http://www.judicialwatch.org/w...
https://thepoliticalinsider.co...
https://lasvegassun.com/news/2...
https://www.ice.gov/news/relea...
https://www.ice.gov/news/relea...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
https://www.justice.gov/usao-w...
http://www.breitbart.com/big-g...
https://www.snopes.com/cascade...
When Russia made some Tweets, bought some ads and asked nicely.
Meanwhile Mexican citizens literally rode buses from one poling place to the next voting multiple times in our elections, a literal serious interference in our election, to the point of qualifying as an act of war - silence.
Rail is the cheapest way to ship heavy cargo.
Amazon packages, maybe not, a load of coal or steel? Yep.
Considering your user name in and of itself calls out the fact you're a shill and I'm looking at your comment history which is basically nothing but poke the bear, dismiss the reply, call someone an idiot, I'm going to let my case rest on that single example. I will admit it's not the most solid example available, but doing the research you're demanding in order to satisfy your requirement that my generalization be secured as a bullet proof fact when no one asked you to be the referee on my comment is more time and effort than I willing to put into satisfying a shill, though I do believe if I were to put the time and effort into the endeavor I likely could come up with better examples. Seriously, who wants to dig through that many documents from Germany, the EU, the U.N. and then the U.S.? I would probably go mad in the process.
I'm still using Maui on my desktop and my wife's system. It may not be a good time to switch to it.
I'm with you there.
I started on Red Hat and moved to SuSE Linux. I left SuSE because their repositories were horrible, there were official "factory" packages that had dependencies not in ANY of the available repositories. I moved to Debian in the Etch era because of it and I've been in one Debian down-stream or another ever after. (Once Ubuntu started to get big Debian stopped trying to be an actual desktop distro). I understand SuSE has gotten way better since, but it's hard to go back to RPM once you've gone Apt.
I'm in search of the perfect distro, and it doesn't exist. I've found Maui to be super-well curated and managed, though it's typically a little out of date and upgrade from one release to the next isn't always simple. It WAS Netrunner based on KUbuntu, but Maui and Netrunner split and the current Netrunner is going back to the Debian roots, which seem to have ease of use issues. I'm not sure but I think Maui is now down-stream of Mint. The customizations from Maui are very "average user" focused, my wife uses it just fine. A lot of the normal KDE stuff isn't enabled by default, most of it's stuff I don't use, and that's part of what makes it less confusing. That being said I'm thinking of going Mint for myself simply because it's geared more towards making standard stuff work better without stripping it down.
When it comes to EU decision-making, the prevailing view in five of nine European nations is that Germany has too much influence. This view is most common in Greece, Spain and Italy.
There's the general state of things.
This pretty much came from Germany, and they're trying to fine nations not doing it
On top of that the U.N. is really trying to put the screws to us to do the same. It was happening under Obama, outside of our own law through end-runs and dictates. It's not happening anymore The U.N. is not happy about it.
There's your one.
Not to mention:
My rent is about $1,300 a month, two bedrooms with a study, two baths, 30 miles away. For $1,300 close to my last job I could get a small one bedroom with an expectation of it getting broken into and robbed while I was at work approximately three times a year. I know this because I had a friend who lived in an upscale apartment close to where I worked with badge controlled doors on the building and he got robbed more often than that. On top of that the schools where i live are among the best in the state, top 5%. The public schools near my last job are among the bottom 10% in the state, but the expensive private ones are among the best.
So if I were to double (or more due to insurance differences in that zip code) my cost of living I could have cut the commute, put in double-bunk beds so my wife and I could share a one bedroom with the kids, and live in a neighborhood mostly by people who are the furthest from my personal values! (they wouldn't like me much either)
Germany is pretty much the center of the globalist movement. What Germany does is pretty much imposed on the rest of the EU. What the EU does is bullied onto everyone else through the U.N. Up until the current administration whatever the U.N. wanted the U.S. would not only implement but pay for it, then be the enforcer on everyone else.
What Germany does affects us.