>When I took the school filter off for him to go browsing about it, he Tweeted to his friends that he'd "hacked the network". This was a top-class, privately-educated kid.
You know full well the last thing he wants to do is change his machine. Identifying the best theme for his browser is the last thing he wants to HAVE to do.
The Wikipedia link in the summary says "Despite its size and density, the patch is not visible from satellite photography."
I'd suggest that's nonsense, and it's precisely the lack of density that prevents it being noticeable as a defined area in satellite shots.
Actually, there's a loophole here. If you don't pay your phone bills, your BT service will be disconnected, but the broadband line continues to work. (Optional for the conscientious: Then settle the outstanding debt with BT, but don't ask to be reconnected.) I've done this in all my last three places, worked fine until I moved out, two years in one case, nearly a year in the other two. Bethere.co.uk in all cases.
Homebuilders' merchants Bricks R Us, Inc. today announced that in future all bricks they sell will come with a licensing agreement under which purchasers commit only to use their bricks for home-building purposes.
Bricks mis-used by their purchasers, for example in breaking into vehicles or in bar brawls, will automatically be turned into overpriced cellphones.
> I'd be quoting $44.50 bid and $45.50 offer
That's $55.50 offer, no?
>When I took the school filter off for him to go browsing about it, he Tweeted to his friends that he'd "hacked the network". This was a top-class, privately-educated kid.
;-)
Social engineering, still counts
Of course you should leave. With 3 years experience and evidently being reasonably articulate, you'll stroll into a junior contract role on 200+/day.
You know full well the last thing he wants to do is change his machine. Identifying the best theme for his browser is the last thing he wants to HAVE to do.
Well, if he thinks Warwick is near London, maybe he's literally having trouble *finding* his girlfriend?
>Num8 (pronounced as "new mate") Well, you've cleared up the pronunciation question, anyway - that was my other big WTF about this nonsense!
What a crap article. GPS is a one-way technology. What does this thing actually DO? Is there a GSM transceiver in there too? A SIM card?
Fo shizzle!
It recognizes "rtyrty5233" as a word too. Is that a Microsoft product too? Or do you think it could just be that the digits turn off checking?
The Wikipedia link in the summary says "Despite its size and density, the patch is not visible from satellite photography." I'd suggest that's nonsense, and it's precisely the lack of density that prevents it being noticeable as a defined area in satellite shots.
"Law"
30 seconds? Acrobat Reader takes longer than that to fire up!
Actually, there's a loophole here. If you don't pay your phone bills, your BT service will be disconnected, but the broadband line continues to work. (Optional for the conscientious: Then settle the outstanding debt with BT, but don't ask to be reconnected.) I've done this in all my last three places, worked fine until I moved out, two years in one case, nearly a year in the other two. Bethere.co.uk in all cases.
>Because they might not need them
Yeah, 5 should be plenty...
Oh yeah, it's fine. As long as your usage pattern doesn't involve anything intricate like copying files...
You're doing it wrong. Change at Cannon Street, it's far closer to Bank than Monument is.
Damn right. It should be 20 *fewer* photos.
No, it's a type of shellfish. The Saint Pan Crustacean.
There's something special about spelling Nazis who don't know how to spell 'proofread'...
Word 2 (skip 3,4,5 to equalise with other products under the "Office" banner), 6, 7("95"), 8("97"), 9("2000"), 10("XP"), 11("2003"), 12("2007").
You're just confusing version numbers with marketing names.
They may well all be useless, but it isn't because the version numbers aren't sequential...
Given this won't be happening for decades yet, how about Feb 29, 2100... What are the odds he'll know?
It's an American take on his name - no middle initial, no "Sr." or "III" suffix, there's not much left - hence, almost anonymous...
Thousand million. The million million meaning is obsolete.
Or to put it another way, "because the market will bear it". Microsoft like money.
Homebuilders' merchants Bricks R Us, Inc. today announced that in future all bricks they sell will come with a licensing agreement under which purchasers commit only to use their bricks for home-building purposes.
Bricks mis-used by their purchasers, for example in breaking into vehicles or in bar brawls, will automatically be turned into overpriced cellphones.