Since it dissolves in water, won't chewing for a long time mean it'll slowly dissolve in your mouth and disappear?
At least accidental ingestion shouldn't be a problem anymore.
I will never, EVER, get broadband where I live. I live too far away from an exchange, even though a 'high speed digital line' runs up the valley I live in. I'm quoting Telecom New Zealand there, who have some twisted logic and try to confuse customers trying to get broadband. In a way it's good that I can't get it, because it's one of the most expensive broadband services in the world and it's pitiful.
I've found that certain hosts can be just as bad. For example I took over a website that was hosted with Web-Mania and the previous owner had registered the domain through them and I've been trying to transfer the domain for a number of weeks now. They never respond to the transfer requests and they refuse to reply to my e-mails asking them to. Even the previous owner gets ignored. So now the domain will expire and I risk losing it. That's why I always make sure I own my domains, because that seems to happen a lot.
Are they really that sore about losing customers?
Since it dissolves in water, won't chewing for a long time mean it'll slowly dissolve in your mouth and disappear? At least accidental ingestion shouldn't be a problem anymore.
Talk about whinging over nothing.
I will never, EVER, get broadband where I live. I live too far away from an exchange, even though a 'high speed digital line' runs up the valley I live in. I'm quoting Telecom New Zealand there, who have some twisted logic and try to confuse customers trying to get broadband. In a way it's good that I can't get it, because it's one of the most expensive broadband services in the world and it's pitiful.
I've found that certain hosts can be just as bad. For example I took over a website that was hosted with Web-Mania and the previous owner had registered the domain through them and I've been trying to transfer the domain for a number of weeks now. They never respond to the transfer requests and they refuse to reply to my e-mails asking them to. Even the previous owner gets ignored. So now the domain will expire and I risk losing it. That's why I always make sure I own my domains, because that seems to happen a lot. Are they really that sore about losing customers?