The only ones I’ve seen expire in the US are the VISA ones but those are basically debit cards.
The only ones I’ve seen expire in the US are the VISA ones but those are basically debit cards.
I like their first couple albums and they write extremely catchy songs, but their lyrics feel just a little too douchey for my taste. They’re a fantastic cover band though.
Don’t worry the boat plane was taken outside the environment.
The eyes in that one image look cool.
That’s where I first saw the Rexenge of the Sith ultimate edition.
I think that’s definitely part of it. I think another part is that they don’t do ads right away so people will switch to them, then they add them assuming people will either forget to cancel, or just decide that since they’re already there they may as well keep it anyway.
Why deodorant advertisers specifically?
Fallout 4 is an FPS and not an RPG?
You can’t fool me, that’s a right arm!
Sceptre has Non smart TVs. May be the only ones left to be honest
I’m a compact sedan kind of guy, but man a truck would be nice during particularly snowy days trying to get where I’m going before it gets too much that the car gets stuck.
When I think gameplay, I think of someone actively playing the game. Not cutscenes.
I’ve got one progam that I need for work that I cannot get to run on Linux. I’ve tried WINE on both Ubuntu and Zorin (and winlator for android). I have the installer exe file and try to launch with WINE but then nothing happens. Is that a program problem, WINE limitation, or something else? Is there a different program I should try to launch it?
I might call the non-emergency line for things, like if my car was stolen or house broken into. I think the only time I’d call the emergency line is if I felt actively in danger.
Calling the police is a lot like firearm training, never call them on something you don’t intend to kill.
Never break more than one law at a time.
Reminds me of a line out of a book, don’t remember which one, but it was along the lines of ‘if you can’t say yes, then answer anyway, because I’d rather die with the answer than live with the question’
I don’t know what kinds of packets WiFi calling sends, but I would assume a public IP would be in there somewhere and, at least from a law enforcement perspective I can’t imagine it would be too hard to get the address tied to it.