Every time I am obnoxious enough to correct misspelings, I always intentionally misspell 'misspell'. I don't know why. Maybe to not seem such a jerk ;)
So I would say this was intentional.
Every time I am obnoxious enough to correct misspelings, I always intentionally misspell 'misspell'. I don't know why. Maybe to not seem such a jerk ;)
So I would say this was intentional.
All I can say is, follow your heart. Follow your interests. Only take the job if you want it for the job. Usually (and I talk from experience) you will regret going for the money.
not wanting to be a smartypants, but maybe they wanted to be standards compliant, and last i checked, the 'target' attribute was not on the html 'strict' list. ;)
[quote user="Jivlain"]
I just love how they couldn't manage to create a direct link...
ROFLMAO @ MrMan (sorry, Alex, but I like that one :p)
[quote user="Eggplant"]
4. PriceSoundbuzz and DSE reserve the right, at any time, to change the price and billing methods of the Digital Downloads. For the avoidance of doubt, the prices, promotions, bundles or advertisements posted on the Website by Soundbuzz and DSE is an invitation to treat and shall not in anyway constitute or be interpreted as an offer by Soundbuzz and DSE to you.
As... long as I get to trick, right? So... prices... shown... aren't... necessarily the real prices? Yes? No?[/quote]
Meh, fairly standard contract law. Legally*, prices on the shelves in a supermarket are an invitation to treat, not an offer. They're not actually obliged to actually sell to you at those prices. The offer is made by you, when you take the items up to the checkout and offer to purchase these items at the suggested price.
This is in Australian law, at least. I'm not familiar with contract law in other countries.
*: I am not a lawyer, and this should not be taken as legal advice.
[/quote]
this is very country-specific. here in the netherlands, the price labelled is the price they have to sell it for (even if it was mispriced), and they can't refuse the sale (unless it's totally obvious, like a EUR500 product priced for EUR5).
[quote user="VGR"]
I'm not sure if this will work in XP, and it may not even work in
2000, but in NT, you can delete verifier.exe in (%WINDIR%\system32) and
it will always come back.
[/quote]
Windows File Protection. why should i be trusted to think for myself?