In most cases, there’s no point contacting the transporter. They have no contract with you, so your opinion on their performance is fairly irrelevant. The one they have a deal with is the seller. So that’s who you have to get information back to.
Just use hot air. Lots of that to go around.
Fools! You have to expire the whole system!
Reinstall everything every 90 days. It’s the only way.
So it should be considered differently from all the other attacks on civilians that they’ve been doing all the time?
Judging by the url, they’re noodles designed to boost your ham. Which is probably worth it to someone. I suppose.
From reading online, it seems to be a feature of some segments of the US market.
I’m currently using my first Samsung device in a while (handed down by someone who didn’t like it) and it’s just like any other phone.
I’m not in the US though.
What I could hold against them is how some of their devices have extra features enabled within the brand’s ecosystem. I understand it’s a basic way to keep users with the brand without being too harsh (everything still works with another appliance after all), but it’s still a bit crummy.
Maybe someone ought to rewrite rust in C.
It depends a lot on your location on the planet.
I suppose it’s so you can take them home and cook them the way you like them.
It can often make a semi decent summary of a long text that helps you decide if it’s worth reading or not. I’ve found it relatively useful for that.
From now on, cars will only be allowed to run windows 11.
In the gulf of Mexico?
They’re coming after our balls!
They still have to cook the rice.
That’s guilt right there!
Sounds like a weird “we’ll finance you but you’re going to have to agree to our wacko conditions” kind of deal.
Odd that he found nobody else. Or maybe he found the challenge interesting.
No, it’s still touché.
Wouldn’t it be simpler to have Mexico pay for groceries?
So, would you rather fight one skyscraper sized child or sixteen thousand regular children?
Israël: hmmm…