Hmmm, I emailed Glyde to tell them that two items I received never got updated as delivered by USPS, and thus I couldn't accept them online. They fixed them both and gave me a $5.00 off coupon for my next purchase. :D
Also, I finally got Amazon to issue my refund on an old order; they gave me an additional $30 from what was supposed to be refunded. ^_^ Today's a good day.
It's not defrauding. They refunded the entire amount of five products for the inconvenience, rather than issuing a price difference. It's a respectable thing to do on behalf of Amazon (considering I had to deal with them for two weeks to get the refund in the first place).
It's cool, other dev. Please keep checking your old, local Visual Source Safe metadata files in to a completely different source control system when you make changes. That makes a lot of sense.
I need some fast and easy downloader for RapidShare. All I want is just to paste the links into the program and return to my job. Will you recommend me the good one?
@Fosco Hahah. Not the first time that's happened either...if you can't even be bothered to put in any effort yourself, what the hell are you going to class for?
Well, I guess if it's this easy to catch people cheating there's really no threat. I did have a number of take home exams for my classes, but I don't remember any of them being finals.
Hmm, instead of eating actual food, I could just have more of these delicious cookies that were brought to me...
Why can "Which of the following languages or technologies have you used significantly in the past year?" be answered with "jQuery", but not "JavaScript"? — Rob W2 hours ago
I'd love to see some stats in report about this year's user survey results about users who care too much about details that are minor at best. (Just kidding, please don't flame me.)
"Experience with standard revision control (SVN)" [from careers.se]. The company who posted that job offer should reword that to "Experience with lame revision control (SVN)"
@jadarnel27 Sure, if you're not going to buy that software/book/CD anyway you may as well steal it right off the store shelf. — dash-tom-bang10 mins ago
That's a ludicrous argument, right? Or am I missing something?
@jadarnel27 that's kind of like when someone wants a bounty refunded after not getting any good answers. The contract is for increased exposure, not necessarily results. With ads, the advertiser is paying the site owner for a promise that the site will attempt to serve the ad X times (and, I believe, for click-throughs, but that's a separate issue). Visitors never sign a contract with the advertiser, promising to view the content.
My response: You're contributing whenever you use a site because you raise its all-important click count, which allows them to get more money from advertisers
@PopularDemand Thanks for putting that into words better than I could. There was something fishy about that line of reasoning, and you hit the nail on the head.