He can be sold to a different club, but won't be allowed play there either.
AFAIR, he can't do anything related to football, so he can't be sold or loaned to another club during this period, either.
He can be sold to a different club, but won't be allowed play there either.
AFAIR, he can't do anything related to football, so he can't be sold or loaned to another club during this period, either.
Right. I heard Obama bought a phone and a pencil. Founding fathers oughta have thought of that.
New poll suggestion: How many times should you be caught doing something incredibly stupid at your job before you get banned from working for life?
Well, FIFA is a federation of associations, or an association of federations (DK,DC). The federal government in the US is similarly limited in its powers, I guess. Now, that might be idiotic too, but at least it's not unprecedented.
@JoeCool said:
@Adriano said:@blakeyrat said:It seriously didn't occur to anybody at Feedly that maybe people would want to import their Reader subscriptions after Reader was shut-down?So you wanted them to be able to access an inactive service to retrieve your data? Perhaps we have two different definitions of "shut-down", and yours is way more generous than mine.
Funny how when you take this * completely out of context *, it makes Blakeyrat look dumb. However, if you go back and read that he already had an account with Feedly which was already connected to Google Reader it makes perfect sense that they should have been able to anticipate this and import the subs automatically so when someone logged back in to Feedly, it just worked.
That might be because I agree with the rest of his complaint, and just wanted to point out how the particular sentence makes no sense. If he'd said "...that maybe people would want to read their Reader feeds after Reader was shut-down" I wouldn't have complained.
I'm using Feedly, and haven't experienced his problem. I do remember one time when I was forced to log back in, and actually install a Firefox addon for feedly. Must have been this that really imported the feed.
@blakeyrat said:
It seriously didn't occur to anybody at Feedly that maybe people would want to import their Reader subscriptions after Reader was shut-down?
So you wanted them to be able to access an inactive service to retrieve your data? Perhaps we have two different definitions of "shut-down", and yours is way more generous than mine.
On the plus side, the soundtrack for the outsourcing should be awesome.
@Lorne Kates said:
var a_returner = false;
function a()
{
$.ajax({
url:"snooflecorp.com/WebService/GetDataBaseResultsForA.java",
async: false,
success: function() { a_returner = true; },
fail: function() { a_returner = false; }
});
return a_returner;
}
// Copy and paste for each other variableThat way not only do you have 26 database hits, but you also have 26 asynchronous web requests!
That "async: false," bit makes it a bit less asynchronous than you'd expect, I think.
I've found much the same thing happening for people who want to sell houses or cars through websites. People who want me to pay -say- 100.000 for an apartment. They don't bother to include more than two pictures of the apartment, both from the outside. They don't list the features of the apartment. They "mistype" the area, so on the website it reads "44 sq meters" and when you call it's 54 sq meters. They are offended and all huffy when I call them on the phone they wrote in their ad (I should have magically known to call another number, or contact via email only). They don't reply. They are surprised when I ask them if I can see the apartment outside working hours.
I wonder sometimes if they actually want my money at all.
For the same reason it's a good idea to add braces around the if block body even if it contains just a single line?