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That's standard practice for Vodafone. We bought a pay as you go phone for my son when he started going to school on his own, just for emergencies. Obviously he doesn't need to use it much. One time we did try to use it, we couldn't make any calls. We found out from Vodafone that they block your number if you don't use it for 3 months. This is their way of getting back numbers that aren't in use.
The worse thing is that Vodafone is Number 3rd in our country. So other two, O2 & T-Mobile respectively are even worse. I remember, when I had just Oskar (predecessor to Vodafone) back in 2000-2004 (at least I think), it was underdog operator, but was the best.
Because of that I think.
For example O2 mobile internet connection, they had charging per 10 seconds, so for example your IM client in mobile phone connected to internet, downloaded statuses and that was all. Or your email-client. Now, if you connect, they take this for 10 minutes. So if you're on the internet for let's say 30 seconds, you pay as you were there 10 minutes.
And they haven't even feel the need to tell people, except some hidden bulletin on their pages.
There's a point where "avant-garde" and "experimental" becomes "terrible" and "pointless,"
Joined: May 26 2008
Location: Declined
Status: Offline
Points: 16715
Posted: January 17 2010 at 22:15
Marty McFly wrote:
OK, my turn now if I may:
I hate certain parts of internet culture. You know, lolcats (most of them) are good, owl with shocking stare and all caps saying: O RLY is funny too, but overusing it is terrible.
And even worse, some of things that one can found on 4chan or encyclopediadramatica, well, I'm exploring it right now and have to say that I'm shocked, pleasantly (ranting on emo kids, stupid people, trolls), but confused and disgusted (majority of things).
Went there by accident, it changed my point of view. Internet can be sinister place.
Oh, how innocent I was when I thought 4chan and ED were the worst things on the internet...And ED are giant trolls, you can't take their hatred of trolls seriously. Try reading some of the Weekend Web on Something Awful. Eka's Portal will blow your mind. It's all real (well, most of it, some of it is out of context/trolls), and I don't know if it's the worst thing on the internet, but it's far worse than average the callous, lazy, stupid, unfunny /b/tard who's only posting the horrible things for a laugh. And /b/ is a lot less horrifying than it used to be in the old days, now that all the cool kids want to hang out at the worst place on the internet they can't get away with nearly as much crap as they used to. Not that I know from personal experience, but 4chan is now one of the largest websites around so it stands to reason.
Ctr-Alt-Delete is one of the worst, laziest webcomics to ever waste bandwidth space.
Edited by Henry Plainview - January 17 2010 at 22:19
Still, I've spend quite a lot time last, let's say four years on these comics. And it wasn't wasted time for me.
Checked, know, not bad, not good. Everything in this way (sites you've said, I've saidis simply twisted. Unfunny mostly, sometimes funny (everyone understands joke differently).
It's good to know that we can find calm haven in these rough waters of "internets".
There's a point where "avant-garde" and "experimental" becomes "terrible" and "pointless,"
Joined: November 26 2009
Status: Offline
Points: 34
Posted: January 26 2010 at 19:42
So Gordon Brown changed his name did he....? His full name James Gordon Brown, many people in the UK don't use thier first names....however Gideon Osbourne deliberately changed his name to George to make him seem less upper class....he's a tory for christ sake he will always be at worst middle or worse upper class.......seems the blacksword kept that one quiet. Still no comment from him about osbourne having to lower his squeak though.
Remember the tories would not have done anything at all when we went into financial meltdown, and more people would be bankrupt and out of work if they had been in power. Also unemployment would have been worse than 1 in 10. And the worst affected would have been small business people who are now going to vote for they upper class twits that are the tory party...talk about turkeys voting for xmas....i hope they all rot to hell.
Joined: March 13 2006
Location: Londinium
Status: Offline
Points: 4252
Posted: January 27 2010 at 06:11
alphawave10 wrote:
.
Remember the tories would not have done anything at all when we went into financial meltdown, and more people would be bankrupt and out of work if they had been in power. Also unemployment would have been worse than 1 in 10. And the worst affected would have been small business people who are now going to vote for they upper class twits that are the tory party...talk about turkeys voting for xmas....i hope they all rot to hell.
well said!
the Tories want to take us ahead into the 19th century
Joined: July 29 2005
Location: None
Status: Offline
Points: 24429
Posted: January 27 2010 at 06:38
Well, if you want to see examples of turkeys voting for Xmas, you should visit the South of the USA. There, it seems that the poorer you are, the more you are likely to vote for those who are doing their best to keep you that way. Not to mention what my own fellow countrymen and -women have been doing for years when believing Berlusconi's lies.
Joined: July 13 2005
Location: Essex, UK
Status: Offline
Points: 20031
Posted: January 27 2010 at 06:51
alphawave10 wrote:
So Gordon Brown changed his name did he....? His full name James Gordon Brown, many people in the UK don't use thier first names....however Gideon Osbourne deliberately changed his name to George to make him seem less upper class....he's a tory for christ sake he will always be at worst middle or worse upper class.......seems the blacksword kept that one quiet. Still no comment from him about osbourne having to lower his squeak though.
Remember the tories would not have done anything at all when we went into financial meltdown, and more people would be bankrupt and out of work if they had been in power. Also unemployment would have been worse than 1 in 10. And the worst affected would have been small business people who are now going to vote for they upper class twits that are the tory party...talk about turkeys voting for xmas....i hope they all rot to hell.
My comment about Gordon Brown was a joke - I'm aware of his real name, but it would be much cooler to have James Brown as PM.
Regarding your second paragraph, how do you know all this? I'm no great fan of any party, just tell us a few good things that Labour have done for us.
Joined: June 22 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 16130
Posted: January 27 2010 at 11:56
chopper wrote:
alphawave10 wrote:
So Gordon Brown changed his name did he....? His full name James Gordon Brown, many people in the UK don't use thier first names....however Gideon Osbourne deliberately changed his name to George to make him seem less upper class....he's a tory for christ sake he will always be at worst middle or worse upper class.......seems the blacksword kept that one quiet. Still no comment from him about osbourne having to lower his squeak though.
Remember the tories would not have done anything at all when we went into financial meltdown, and more people would be bankrupt and out of work if they had been in power. Also unemployment would have been worse than 1 in 10. And the worst affected would have been small business people who are now going to vote for they upper class twits that are the tory party...talk about turkeys voting for xmas....i hope they all rot to hell.
My comment about Gordon Brown was a joke - I'm aware of his real name, but it would be much cooler to have James Brown as PM.
Regarding your second paragraph, how do you know all this? I'm no great fan of any party, just tell us a few good things that Labour have done for us.
NuLab done three good things. They gave us..
Robin Cook (deceased)
Mo Mowlem (Deceased)
Tony Banks (not the Tony Banks) - (Deceased)
They were the last bastions of common sense within the party. With these meddling lefties out of the way, NuLab have been able to get on with the job of destroying the country.
There was of course the minimum wage, which has been undercut anyway by unscrupulous employers, taking advantage of NuLabs shambolic lack of immigration control, and exploiting desparate new comers to our shores. There was increased social mobility, with 50% of kids now being shoe horned into university, saddled with huge debts, only to emerge into one of the most aggressive and competitive job markets ever seen. The poor buggers have gone through a school system, that forbids competition, and any negative feedback, only to find themselves in the real world, where they will face rejection at every turn.
Then there was the illegal invasion of Iraq...and the state sponsored murder of Dr David Kelly. 17,000 applications for assylum 'lost in the system' and the biggest gap between the richest and poorest in 40 years. I could go on, but I should probably make some dinner now.
Edit: Before anyone jumps on me, Im NOT suggesting the three Labour MP's I mentioned were 'bumped off'
Joined: March 13 2006
Location: Londinium
Status: Offline
Points: 4252
Posted: January 28 2010 at 02:03
I can't understand why the invasion of Iraq was "illegal" - it was a rescue, wasn't it? didn't Saddam kill all those Kurds with gas? what about his "illegal" invasion of Kuwait? what about all the people he illegally murdered - that's illegal.
I agree Blair went in hanging onto Bush's coat tails, and should have told him whoa, there cowboy - but any Government that received absolute confirmation from its secret intelligence services about WMD's in a hostile country that could fire them at said Govt. would do exactly the same today. ..no permission sought, though there should be a better system in place that doesn't DITHER for 10 years...
I sometimes wonder, if it's possible to have everywhere human conditions, like in most of Europe, or USA. I mean there are charitable acts for people in Africa, poor ones from Haiti, there are invasions to Islamic countries, there are even still living (really?) communism regimes.
I don't judge, I just raises the question, knowing that this topic is very, very difficult and can't generalize here.
However, is it right for them to have conditions like we have here (I consider my country quite peaceful and calm, I like it that way), is it something that every country wants to achieve ?
And I haven't even started yet about the fact that for over six decades, there is threat that some madman will wipe me from the face of the Earth with blink of my eye with some nuclear device. Only now it's far worse, more nations possess this threat. How can one live with knowing this ? I do one trick, I don't think about it so often.
Martin McFly inspired by Steve Trowbridge's post
Edited by Marty McFly - January 28 2010 at 03:33
There's a point where "avant-garde" and "experimental" becomes "terrible" and "pointless,"
Joined: June 22 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 16130
Posted: January 28 2010 at 03:57
mystic fred wrote:
I can't understand why the invasion of Iraq was "illegal" - it was a rescue, wasn't it? didn't Saddam kill all those Kurds with gas? what about his "illegal" invasion of Kuwait? what about all the people he illegally murdered - that's illegal.
I agree Blair went in hanging onto Bush's coat tails, and should have told him whoa, there cowboy - but any Government that received absolute confirmation from its secret intelligence services about WMD's in a hostile country that could fire them at said Govt. would do exactly the same today. ..no permission sought, though there should be a better system in place that doesn't DITHER for 10 years...
It seems virtually everyone testifying at the Chilcott enquiry, had doubts over the wars legality, Steve. Even Lord Goldsmith had said he initially had serious doubts, but changed his mind at the last minute...probably because he had no choice, and found himself in a position of being more or less threatened by Blair.
The rights and wrongs of the war are for another debate, but all the evils of Saddam Hussein do not justify the killing of as many as 600,000 people (according to a study by The Lancet) predominantly civillian, which occured as a direct and indirect result of the conflict. The fact is, resolution 1441 didn't directly permit military action, and was worded ambiguously. Most felt a further and more explicit resolution was needed to invade. But, the machinary of war was in place, and so was the will for war in the US.
The toppling of Saddam seemed a happy day, albeit slightly stage managed by the BBC, and our military high command; making sure that the thousands who had taken to the streets in support of Saddam were kept out of shot. But to be honest, in light of an actual distinct lack of WMD, no conection to the events of 9/11, and no link to Al Queada whatsover, it seems the most likely reason to have invaded Iraq was a move to prevent them trading their oil in Euros, which they were preparing to do within six months.
Joined: June 22 2004
Location: England
Status: Offline
Points: 16130
Posted: January 28 2010 at 04:01
Jim Garten wrote:
Blacksword wrote:
NuLab done three good things. They gave us..
Robin Cook (deceased)
Mo Mowlem (Deceased)
Tony Banks (not the Tony Banks) - (Deceased)
Not forgetting just before Labour became NuLab, the best prime minister we never had:
John Smith QC 1938 - 1994
Incidentally, whilst looking for the above image, I found this one taken at his funeral:
(Enter ascerbic caption here)
I remember the day he died. Naievely, although saddened, I felt confident they would replace him with someone of equal integrity. How wrong I was.
Was it before or after his death, they abolished clause 4 of their constitution? I imagine it was after, possibly after Blair had won the leadership contest. This clause had been the back bone of the parties socialist principles.
Joined: March 13 2006
Location: Londinium
Status: Offline
Points: 4252
Posted: January 28 2010 at 05:25
Marty McFly wrote:
However, is it right for them to have conditions like we have here (I consider my country quite peaceful and calm, I like it that way), is it something that every country wants to achieve ?
And I haven't even started yet about the fact that for over six decades, there is threat that some madman will wipe me from the face of the Earth with blink of my eye with some nuclear device. Only now it's far worse, more nations possess this threat. How can one live with knowing this ? I do one trick, I don't think about it so often.
Martin McFly inspired by Steve Trowbridge's post
as you well know your country has had a very turbulent history Marty - you have earned your peace and there is no reason you shouldn't continue to do so, but we must all stay on the alert...
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