Comment Re:Speed limits are not always obeyed. (Score 1) 475
As I read it, it uses traffic speed, not individual car speed, so if everybody is speeding they are punished.
As I read it, it uses traffic speed, not individual car speed, so if everybody is speeding they are punished.
Didn't a group already make such a license.
I feel it was Cult of the Dead Cow (with peekabooty maybe), or the people behind Freenet or some such, quite a while ago.
It was around the timeframe of those projects being new, I read about it here as a matter of fact.
They're assholes on the turnpike though, they'll sometimes do the strict enforcing they're permitted to in the 65 zone, and pull over everybody.
Or, according to TFA, it's true.
One wonders how they figures that one out initially.
But they don't have the password to other sites, of the password is reused (as most are). It limits the compromise to a single site.
It protects from password re-use attacks.
You'd need to argue that sports is artistic expression.
Like preventing me from doing medical work because I don't have training?
Doctors absolutly want government to meddle in healthcare, it allows them to charge more for things we all could do.
They'll have to claim the fix the games to make them interesting, and that it's performance art and not competition perhaps.
By obama care do you mean private health plans ?
Or maybe it allows the less intelligent to communicate more effectively, leading to richer discourse overall.
While the more intelligent do not require them to speak effectively.
Except it's exactly what the phrase "begs the question" means.
Begs the question as you want it used isn't really an English phrase, just a group of words given a new meaning due to a historical mistranslation, while the way everyone else uses it is just the English language using actual definitions of words.
They only allowed unlimited tethering for a very brief time.
It's still pretty fair though, I think it's allowed for all capped plans, and my unlimited plan (which they are pretty kind about) comes with 3GB free tethering, with extra for a fair price (looks like this is 5GB now).
Honestly, I've found T-Mobile pretty strait forward with what they include, and it to be generous (compared to others). I get free (slow, but workable for e-mail, yelp, web, and sort-of maps) data worldwide, enough tethering to use in a pinch for most circumstances, with extra available (comporable to other networks price), and and I use data quite high with no issues.
I have the $70 unlimited plan, the $80 that replaced it has 5GB tether.
The price bump from 70-80 came with a reduction in fees too, so it was essentially a wash.
Many people are unenthusiastic about their work.