Comment Well, really (Score 1) 7
She's bat**** crazy, obviously.
I can't blame either one of them for not bringing grandchildren around for a 'nice visit'.
Ten minutes later, they're in the oven.
She's bat**** crazy, obviously.
I can't blame either one of them for not bringing grandchildren around for a 'nice visit'.
Ten minutes later, they're in the oven.
"I was bored, and my teachers weren't interested in doing things my way, so instead of making a good faith attempt to learn, I cheated."
Wow. No wonder all my students think they're entitled to passing grades just because they show up.
Man up, Nancy. Until the school systems are so well funded that we have a 1:1 teacher student ratio, some kids are just going to have to suck it up and learn the hard way.
Cheating is just an excuse to not work hard. If you can demonstrate serious effort and still have trouble, try finding a teacher/professor during office hours.
Amazingly, we're pretty ameniable to trying to explain topics over again if you'd bother to ask.
Cheat in my lectures, and you get a zero. The end.
Nothing says that they'll pay for the -right- answer.
And personally, I'd be rather wary of paying $100 for a presentation, since if you don't know the material it's going to be pretty obvious anyway. You'll be out a lot of cash, and still look like an idiot when you get asked a question.
So I'm all for it. The creator is right. They'll have to learn the material sooner or later, because nobody will be able to buy answers on exam day. He might as well make some easy money off of anyone gullible enough to do this.
Of course not, but this isn't competition. Bell -owns- this infrastructure, and they shape all traffic going through their lines.
I -do not- agree with this practice, but I also don't see how these small-time resellers should be exempt just because they feel like it.
Somehow, I fail to see how any of that smacks of wanting to reduce competition. Really, I think all of the copper should be owned by government and treated as a community commodity, like power is (at least where I live).
Like a bunch of middlemen whining because they want Bell to stop doing what it's been doing just because it hurts their already shoddy business model. Unless, of course, these are last-mile providers who extend the Bell network into areas it doesn't already service.
While I don't think that they should be traffic-shaping anyway, the fact is that they are, and asking them to stop doing it just for these companies is unreasonable. What they should be asking for is Bell to cease this practice altogether.
OK, so a while back now I was working on a business plan and stumbled across the website of a startup company offering a very intriguing product, a small wind and solar generator system. The product is about the size of a digital satellite dish and the basic unit is claimed to produce 300 watts and includes a 700 watt inverter. Being the impulse buyer that I am, I quickly purchased some of these units but sadly they still haven't arrived. I'm starting to worry that I've been duped. My questio
Love makes the world go 'round, with a little help from intrinsic angular momentum.