Personally I have always been disgusted by any wargame based on historical events, and I don't play them. However, free speech is one of the many things these real men and women died to defend (to take the WWII example so oft cited), and so no 'war' or war should be off-limits, IMHO.
Yes they are "bizarre" in that we do have rights in exactly this sort of case, and very useful they are too.
IANAL but the original poster should immediately ask for a refund (after you have removed your personal data), and if they refuse get the manager's name, and write to the H.O. saying you will make a claim through the Small Claims Court. I would be surprised if they don't cave immediately. The OS is immaterial, and it is just going to be easier for them to give in than have you drag them through a civil court, whilst giving us juicy gossip to talk about on/.
I worked in retail for 20 years and refunds/repairs/goodwill go to the loudest and most relentless customers - sad but true.
When you get your refund, I hope you will have learned your lesson about shopping at PCWorld
and we routinely ignore the alarm going off, because more often than not it is some other stores security tag that sets off our alarms. As a technology they are worse than useless. I hope RFID actually works.
You insensitive clod! Do you not know what spastic actually means? Get a clue and just don't use it in this context, and certainly not on t'internet. It is offensive. That is all.
Keyword there is "essential" - this may come as a shock to some but we do not have a God-given right to cars. In fact being too poor to run one is an eye-opener. Wasting effort on protecting 'liberties' like driving your car at 45 in a residential street is not very sensible when real liberties are under threat.
The article is from Chapter 3 of Francis Spufford's "Backroom Boys". I enjoyed the book immensely.
As the subtitle suggests it is unashamedly British in outlook, but celebrates engineering with six anecdotal stories that would warm the heart of any geek (or at least allow them the odd knowing chuckle).
As well as Elite, it covers Britain's space program (Black Arrow, Blue Streak etc.), Concorde (topical), cellphones, the Human Genome, and a reprise on Britain's space program with Beagle 2. Not a proper review I know, but a recommendation all the same.
âoeVanillasâ I think I understand (normies?), but what are âoepinksâ in this context?
..not one is up on eBay. Not one. They must really like the capes, or they're so dumb they don't have the tiniest flare of entrepreneurial spirit.
Personally I have always been disgusted by any wargame based on historical events, and I don't play them. However, free speech is one of the many things these real men and women died to defend (to take the WWII example so oft cited), and so no 'war' or war should be off-limits, IMHO.
They corrected sloppy journalism http://royalsociety.org/news.asp?id=8004
"Stay on the leader!"
Who the hell is modding this guy informative? For those people who have never seen a coin, it is topologically a cylinder and has two sharp edges.
Yes they are "bizarre" in that we do have rights in exactly this sort of case, and very useful they are too. IANAL but the original poster should immediately ask for a refund (after you have removed your personal data), and if they refuse get the manager's name, and write to the H.O. saying you will make a claim through the Small Claims Court. I would be surprised if they don't cave immediately. The OS is immaterial, and it is just going to be easier for them to give in than have you drag them through a civil court, whilst giving us juicy gossip to talk about on /.
I worked in retail for 20 years and refunds/repairs/goodwill go to the loudest and most relentless customers - sad but true.
When you get your refund, I hope you will have learned your lesson about shopping at PCWorld
You mean none of you have heard of Boggs?
Actually at http://www.sitepoint.com/books/dhtml1/toc.php
is that incoming calls are charged at the call-to-a-mobile rate even if the recipient is at home.
and we routinely ignore the alarm going off, because more often than not it is some other stores security tag that sets off our alarms. As a technology they are worse than useless. I hope RFID actually works.
a novel the bible is not, and it only rates adult 'cos of the sex.
You are slightly missing the point. The Republican administration is toeing the Murdoch party line.
So, "May you live in interesting times." should be updated to be, "May you be a 'person of interest'."
If it was more than or equally profitable as BA's and Air France's other operations then it would still be in service.
..the quote you have to love.
You insensitive clod! Do you not know what spastic actually means? Get a clue and just don't use it in this context, and certainly not on t'internet. It is offensive. That is all.
Now that is what I call a learning algorithm.
and the rest
www.evesham.com for a few days
Keyword there is "essential" - this may come as a shock to some but we do not have a God-given right to cars. In fact being too poor to run one is an eye-opener. Wasting effort on protecting 'liberties' like driving your car at 45 in a residential street is not very sensible when real liberties are under threat.
..Xerox
a trilby
Books in the UK are not subject to VAT (more accurately VAT is charged at 0%).
The article is from Chapter 3 of Francis Spufford's "Backroom Boys". I enjoyed the book immensely.
As the subtitle suggests it is unashamedly British in outlook, but celebrates engineering with six anecdotal stories that would warm the heart of any geek (or at least allow them the odd knowing chuckle).
As well as Elite, it covers Britain's space program (Black Arrow, Blue Streak etc.), Concorde (topical), cellphones, the Human Genome, and a reprise on Britain's space program with Beagle 2. Not a proper review I know, but a recommendation all the same.