New Zealand -> Kiwi.
New Zealand -> Kiwi.
Human languages: the words are made up and the rules don’t matter.
Especially true for English.
If it wasn’t for StarOffice/OpenOffice/LibreOffice Impress, is have thought a rename to Impress would be a good name.
I read this a few weeks ago about it.
But to where would they expel the Jews if they did not have some level of support for Zionism and allow Israel to exist?
They can’t fix the bug because it’ll affect the outcome of any experiments.
Always been a fan of it being Hal Finney, regardless of any evidence. It’s poetic symmetry with losing both around the same time.
Local companies may have similar names to others that exist overseas.
To require them to be in a globally common non-regionalised pool of domain names is more likely to increase scam risks.
Should the various regional companies of the Vodafone brand be forced to have all their world wide customers sign in to a global parent organisation Vodafone.com? Is it not better for the regionally specific customer portal be vodafone.com.au and vodafone.co.uk?
How does the use of ccTLDs furthers harms against the countries?
Nothing will top the r/nostupidquestions favourite of [Is Stephen pronounced like Stephen?](https://www.reddit.com/r/NoStupidQuestions/comments/3bmo28/is_stephen_pronounced_the_same_as_stephen/]
Cool. Can’t see that data url. Use an image of pastebin like it did.
Divination with maths is statistics.
Ten years ago sure, the days I’d suggest matrix instead.
data:html,
Might work.
Edit: stupid html stripping. Ugh.
data:html,
data:html,
Fine, a paste bin. https://txt.t0.vc/PDIP
Also, often can right click -> loop.
Heh, I joined a company that used 1Password. Loved it. I set up a personal account to replace my use of browser built in password management.
The company got acquired and the acquirer replaced it with their corporate solution, LastPass. Then the LP breach happened and they switched to Keeper. Still prefer 1Password.
Is it better than a helicopter?
That is, probably limited to comfort, price, operating costs, and fuel efficiency.
When does a colloquial term become a non-colloquial? Usage by government/official contexts?