The article is literally about how there is precedent for eliminating a country’s TLD when that country no longer exists, in the .su and .yu domains (for USSR and Yugoslavia respectively).
It won’t happen overnight, but it’ll happen.
The article is literally about how there is precedent for eliminating a country’s TLD when that country no longer exists, in the .su and .yu domains (for USSR and Yugoslavia respectively).
It won’t happen overnight, but it’ll happen.
You must have watched some other video than I watched then. He blathers about (paraphrasing) “if you link to any firearm accessory, even a holster, they will delete the video and your channel.” That’s just not true.
Maybe OP did that, but that’s exactly what Rossman is saying in the video.
Maybe he’s saying that those people have an unusually short distance between their armpits and their hips?
Rossman apparently doesn’t know how to read.
“Structured” refers to the query language.
It sounds like your hate in this instance is misplaced, because “someone” set things up in that stupid way.
Do people avoid Chromebooks for the same reason?
Libraries also make a ton of copies and give them out for free.
This is just wrong.
If a library has purchased two copies of a piece of digital media - an ebook, for example - which patrons can check out online, only two people can have it checked out at once, and when the checkout period expires, the content is no longer available to the patron. Now a copy is freed up for the next person to check out.
You had one chance to use 420 and you squandered it.
I hear they’re also declaring that pi equals three.
Or when you’re having a problem with a piece of accounting software that nobody has ever had, so you call in for phone support, and they’ve never had it, but they can reproduce it on their side, find a solution, and thank you very much for letting them know.
Of course, but people still want to put ink and toner into them.
I wonder how this will affect HP printers.
ICANN controls TLDs. Nobody can “register it.”