As someone who read a lot as a child I still find myself saying hyperbowl. I'd certainly heard the correct pronunciation but it wasn't until very late that I made the connection to the word I'd learned by reading.
StudioLE
And then farmer gets stiffed with increased insurance premiums. I really hope that's not how it works.
Hopefully the farmer can directly sue the owner for actual and emotional damages with Farm insurance covering the legal costs.
You can long rest pretty much anywhere out of combat so does it make any difference when you can prepare?
The obsession with Shakespeare puts a lot of students off literature
How many people are actually returning this product though? Nobody is going to any effort to return a product that costs so little.
And everything I've read about this recall makes the reason clear so I can't see anyone opting not to just consume it - which more than likely they already did immediately on purchase.
Yes, included in the 12 month license is the entitlement to that version forever.
12 months of uninterrupted subscription payments qualify you for receiving a perpetual fallback license.
https://sales.jetbrains.com/hc/en-gb/articles/207240845-What-is-perpetual-fallback-license-
Also worth noting that unlike every other subscription service they reward loyalty with large discounts on renewing annually.
I heard she was running a twitter account that tracked her father's private jet movements
My subscription expires in two days so this has worked out rather well for me.
What phrasing are you saying is dishonest? A quick search of proton student discount doesn't even bring up any results from them
My mantra has always been to bring solutions not problems. Applying that to code reviews makes for a far more productive experience.
Rather than just pointing out errors in code help the developer with prompts towards the solution.
Or, if you're too lazy to explain why something shouldn't be done then why should another developer have to act on your criticism?
I wish this had been my experience. I pushed for so long in my last company for standards to be written, code formatters implemented and objectivity to be brought to reviews but it was always ignored.
Instead I had to endure every employee who claimed seniority (in a non hierarchical company) subjecting their opinion on style in reviews. It came up the point that I dreaded having to work with specific people because they kept triggering my PTSD with their moving target of micro management.
Only afterwards did I truly appreciate how poor a lot of their opinions were. Now one of my first questions when approaching a new project is what standards we're following. If they look at me blank faced that's a pretty solid red flag.
They only require permission to write to the password field, they don't necessarily need to read passwords. Although it does change the work flow for some users.