I still miss PSA. When I was growing up, if you were flying between Southern and Northern California you flew PSA. They were an institution.
And now that upstart Texas airline dominates inter-California routes.
I still miss PSA. When I was growing up, if you were flying between Southern and Northern California you flew PSA. They were an institution.
And now that upstart Texas airline dominates inter-California routes.
Continental Airlines, way back in the 1960's.
Mid 60's in the US. I've always driven manual transmission cars. Fairly common for folks my age to know how to drive manual transmissions, since most of us had economy cars in the 70's and 80's. At that time, automatic transmissions were an expensive option and had a negative impact on acceleration and mileage.
My daughter is 29 and doesn't know how to drive a manual transmission and I don't think most of her peers can, either.
EDIT: Accidentally a manual.
That is true, but vowels are rarely included in published or written Hebrew. Readers determine the correct word through context, familiarity and grammar rules that can hint at the missing vowel.
Someone on the r thread mentioned that the window in the middle peak doesn't line up with the other windows, and now I can't unsee it. it's making me twitch.
I browse both my subscribed feed and the all feed depending on my mood. If a community is particularly obnoxious it gets blocked, otherwise I just ignore it when I'm browsing all. Most of my blocks are meme, tankie and NSFW communities.
This really has very little to do with consumers and everything to do with a tug of war between processors, banks and businesses. I'm skeptical that any potential savings to businesses is going to be passed on to consumers.
From a personal perspective, I'll miss rewards cards if they go away. I make all my purchases with plastic and pay off the balances in full every month. In 2022, I received $711 in cash back.
Reminds me of Anne Romney trying to relate to ordinary Americans by saying she and Mitt also struggled with living expenses when they were newlyweds. In fact, it got so bad that they were forced to sell some stock to make ends meet.
I knew someone was going to ask that and I'm going to give you the lame answer that I don't remember for sure. It's been a while since I used my Chromebook, but it was a fairly mainstream application that wasn't compiled for ARM. I ended up using the Flatpak version, which worked fine but was a resource hog on an ARM Chromebook with only 4GB of RAM.
The S330 has an ARM processor, so definitely avoid that one (and any other Chromebook with an ARM processor). To be honest, I would buy a cheap Windows laptop and install Linux on that rather than fiddling with trying to get it to run on a Chromebook.
Or, as others have said, leave ChromeOS on the machine and run Linux in Crostini. If you have a reasonably speced machine it runs pretty well. Although again, I would avoid ARM as some Debian applications aren't available for ARM Chromebooks.
I'm not surprised at all.