The reason is given in the article.
They don't want the carcasses to attract grizzlies close to trails where human traffic is expected.
The reason is given in the article.
They don't want the carcasses to attract grizzlies close to trails where human traffic is expected.
my tool bag in which I have a wide variety of capability
Somehow that sounds a bit threatening, like Liam Neeson in that one oft-memed scene.
I notice you didn't mention Drupal or Joomla, and last time I did any webdev (11 years ago as an intern) it seemed like those were some of the big ones (though my perspective was probably very limited back then). Are they no good, have they fallen out of favour?
Don't bring a truck or guns with you. Change some dollars for euros. Remember that the US has an insane tax system that follows you abroad and you still have to file taxes in the US in addition to the country you live in.
Why would he want to? He's funny, SNL isn't. Doesn't seem like a good fit.
no one wants anything better
More like there is nothing better people can agree on. You might like SCION with it's RAINS architecture, where the trust anchors are local to the isolation domains. This way you could build up name resolution where you only depend on the local ISPs that form the core of your isolation domain. In my team we are supporting SCION, in fact we are in the core of one ISD, but the uptake on the customer side is relatively low so far. There are two or three niches that are using SCION more, but not RAINS yet, as far as I know.
even just different
Just different is not really attractive, unless people feel like IANA is really messing things up, or the US is exerting undue influence over it. So far they seem to have avoided making that impression widely.
asking for a cashier?
That would be normal
"I don't work here"
Is a rude response to the question whether they would like to use the self-checkout.
Don't try to go for both main romance options, the outcome isn't worth it. Better to do two playthroughs if you really want to know.
Heh clever. Petite mort.
I think it's more of a historical accident that nobody really finds ideal, but there is also no good alternative solution that has a critical mass assembled behind it.
It all started with Jon Postel just taking on the job of keeping track. This is an interesting topical document: https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2468
It was fixed and now has this comment at the bottom:
An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated that the Berlin Wall fell in 1990, not 1989. We regret the error.
Maybe they saw your comment
Still weird that you call Hessen Hesse in English. Just looks like the end is missing.