

Some shops opt in to some sort of boosting system, so $0.59 could end up getting you more like $5 off of something. Of course, most of the shops that opt in seem to be selling drop shipped USB cables, but still.
Some shops opt in to some sort of boosting system, so $0.59 could end up getting you more like $5 off of something. Of course, most of the shops that opt in seem to be selling drop shipped USB cables, but still.
You can’t escape Nicole
The secret is I only know it because I have the system and recognized the panel.
Napco Gemini GEM-P800.
You didn’t?
No, at least according to YouTube
At least according to YouTube, the enhanced bitrate option is higher than 1080p normal has ever been
What was the email?
At least Google is adhering to its own policies this time.
I was pleasantly surprised to see Google Messages automatically blocks most political spam now. I’ve only gotten a few that slipped through in the past few months.
Turning yourself into a science fair volcano
Honestly this is pretty funny. As long as they didn’t remove the dog version of crack from these, 25% off sounds good too.
This is exactly as detailed as it is when it’s properly localized
I hate Admiral so much. Just be glad this site didn’t disable the bypass link.
They absolutely do send emails like this. They’ve got a monitoring service if you have a credit card with them to check for data breaches, and most credit cards and even banks I’ve seen do the same. I just got my monthly monitoring update email this morning from Discover, thankfully telling me they didn’t find anything.
When T-Mobile moved to unlimited with the ONE plans, they gave You “unlimited” tethering at “3G speeds”, which turned out to be 0.5Mbit/s, an unusably slow speed in 2018.
The Magenta plans gave you 5GB-50GB of full-speed tethering before dropping you to “3G speeds”. The current Go5G plans are similar, with a limited amount of usable tethering data before you’re, for all practical uses, cut off.
Before the ONE plans, there technically was no hotspot usage limit, but since you had a limited amount of high-speed data, your hotspot was effectively limited to whatever your plan gave you.
All the US carriers limit hotspot usage, partly to prevent someone hooking up a computer to download 50TB of pirated movies while clogging up the bandwidth for everyone else on that tower, and (moreso) partly because they’re greedy.
There are a ton of methods carriers use to detect hotspot traffic, from the device itself handling the categorization, to TTL values attached to requests, to other very clever network sniffing strategies.
From what I can tell, the non-USB OneBlades charge at 4.3V, not 5V.
It’s probably a small enough difference that a 5V charger would work fine for the 4.3V shaver, but it wouldn’t work the other way around.
It’s still a silly comparison, but they tested 10 Windows 10 devices with 6th-11th gen processors and 10 Windows 11 devices with 12th-13th gen processors. You’re supposed to compare the average of all the results, not Device #9 with Device #9.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/legal/windows/windows11-performance-claims