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My recipe box is another app that does the same thing. I haven’t looked at a recipe website in ages
My recipe box is another app that does the same thing. I haven’t looked at a recipe website in ages
I used to work with a lot of young people and some of them told me they hated the Beatles. So I would randomly play Beatles songs and occasionally ask them what they thought. Turns out they never even listened to the Beatles except for maybe a couple of pop/radio songs. It was just a fad to hate on them
I literally just finished rewatching this movie 2 minutes ago. It still holds up really well.
Until I read the original comment, I didn’t know that was the symbol for McAfee.
Since windows 7, with defender, there’s not even a use for a third party anti virus for the majority of users.
This must have come pre installed with the system. Nobody installs McAfee of their own volition, right?
Someone who doesn’t understand you can disable all those from starting with your pc
Yeah. I’m sure it’s not entirely legal. I don’t think anyone would want to bring a lawsuit because it could set a precedent.
I was locked out of my EA account for half a week due to a bug on their end. I downloaded a game I own(lease?) so I could play over the weekend.
Is this pirating?
As a developer this seems like a lot of extra work. I would assume that this was a supervisor’s idea.
But I wouldn’t necessarily consider giving the customer every possible option a bad choice. Giving customers the ability to fine tune their email notifications is really a bonus feature.
However, this is a horrible design choice to display 3 pages of multiple options. It’s an asshole design.
It would be pretty easy to group them into a drop down list where multiples in that category can be selected or deselected with a couple of toggles.
I would assume this was some genius executive decision, but there’s a very small chance it was a stupid design choice. Regardless the designer will always be blamed.
Hulu built their entire system on this scam. Before Hulu, the majority of TV shows were available on their channel website for free, with ads. Hulu took this and added a subscription on top of the ads.
After the update it’s been working as intended.
A few months back I had this issue on Chrome, but my ad blocker updated and it went away.
I was under the impression that this was only really an issue when they first introduced OLED. And doesn’t really affect the current gen
Advertisement:
"a notice or announcement in a public medium promoting a product, service, or event or publicizing a job vacancy. "
I’m not sure if a link can be considered an announcement, but otherwise based on the definition I would say it’s a gray area and could be argued either way.
Although I would tend to say it isn’t an advertisement but a link to one.
This all could be solved with a simple toggle for premium users to choose if they want to see these ads or not.
I agree, in my experience it’s usually some higher up making these dumb decisions. It happens to video games daily
If you are on windows 10 or earlier ,you can disable those. Not sure about 11. It’s just a few powershell commands.
I believe if you were to take this to your bank and tell them that someone tipped you this and you just want to check it it’s counterfeit or real, the FBI would suddenly be involved
That would be my first thought. Just mark as spam and keep your rewards.