Washington state recently (or very soon) passed a law that does away with expiration dates on gift cards. I know this'll reward my forgetful and lazy ass in about 3 years from now...
It doesn't matter. Anyone who seriously needs a decent video card (or even knows the difference for that matter), will opt for the dual-proc system that Apple offers anyways...
If people realise the caller id is spoofable, they wont buy the service.
Why would they stop buying it?
People know that it's possible to spoof email...hasn't stopped that, has it?
Yes, actually I do believe you're right about the transparencies and shadows. I've heard word as well.
As undesirable as Apple's childish interface is, it has brought them moderate success from a niche of users. I think Linux is in desperate need of a little boost in this area...
I prefer the superiority of Outlook 2003 to Thunderbird, but don't care for IE6 at all, that's why I run the individual components. Call it mix'n'match if you will....
Washington state recently (or very soon) passed a law that does away with expiration dates on gift cards. I know this'll reward my forgetful and lazy ass in about 3 years from now...
The boyfriend has no legal connection to the girlfriend, nor does he own the car she's driving. That's the difference.
It doesn't matter. Anyone who seriously needs a decent video card (or even knows the difference for that matter), will opt for the dual-proc system that Apple offers anyways...
If people realise the caller id is spoofable, they wont buy the service. Why would they stop buying it? People know that it's possible to spoof email...hasn't stopped that, has it?
Yes, actually I do believe you're right about the transparencies and shadows. I've heard word as well. As undesirable as Apple's childish interface is, it has brought them moderate success from a niche of users. I think Linux is in desperate need of a little boost in this area...
Yeah, it'll go public... ...and then still be in BETA a year from then. ;)
I prefer the superiority of Outlook 2003 to Thunderbird, but don't care for IE6 at all, that's why I run the individual components. Call it mix'n'match if you will....
Do they explicity block it? Or is it a natural side-effect of using some sort of embedded ActiveX control?