There is no wrong in your statement about $12.50 comes under "Up To $15,000,";
So there is no circunstance where you would give me up to $1,000,000 in correllation to proving you wrong on the above.
This is where I could prove you wrong.
But giving me up to $1.000.000 for proving you wrong would prove you right.
Finally, the only possible income of all this. is:
- You have to give me more than $1.000.000 for, proving you are wrong on advertising a reward to an impossible circunstance.
- And the reward has to be more than your "up-to" to save your wrongness or it would cancel itself.
Yay, free cars.
But until the star-trek utopia arrives the people that used to make those cars now need a new job...
Do you mean a corkscrew shaped DNA?
Your proposals sounds really clever.
I deserve you a symbolic +1 Interesting because I have no mod points today.
Geek translation:
Focusing on tablets = You will get more of the Unity crapbloat
redesign Unity for mobile = We tried to sell it on desktop and...
push deeper into the cloud = there are kids reading you know.
faster and cost effective to scale out modern infrastructure on the cloud of your choice = we are going cheap on giving you a choice between clouds and clouds or clouds...
create clouds for your own consumption and commerce = You know who will consume and who will do commerce.
And the guard will happily allow you to try as many random names per second without question, then let you in as soon as it is one on the list.
And one trick he missed that could have been done cheaply... if the video vertical sync pulse had been made available someplace in the I/O space as a bit you could test, then it would have been trivial to know when you were in the vertical blanking interval so that you could flip video buffers cleanly.
$C019
$C041
I thout-off and designed such icons back in 2008
My version is modular, account for color-blindness and can render B&W over white, black or any coloured background..
I released them by-nc-sa
http://www.noiraude.net/notracking/notracking.svg
Genetics explains why you look like your father, and if you don't, why you should.