No… porque no los dos
No… porque no los dos
By now I should know better
Your queen is never free
So tell me about your little
Gambit on file c
Chesse you can always sell
En passant to me
Bet you didn’t see it with your own eyes…
Phbbbt.
No shit…
Wouldn’t it need to be “dunp”?
Because I haven’t seen it mentioned:
They Live
If they had infinite resources, they wouldn’t need to worry about adblockers.
I find it hard to take seriously anyone who throws the term FUD around with no sense of irony.
Sensationalist journalism. This manifests as clickbait headlines, agenda pieces, and other such tactics.
Through the magic of buying two of them.
Brak, is that you?!
Between the username and the shopping list, I believe we’ve got a Roman on our hands here…
Yup, I’m almost certain it’s an IBM 5160 series, maybe even a 5162.
It sounds like your printer has a true monochrome mode you can specify. Makes and models that are more user-hostile often use drivers that default to grayscale for non-color prints.
I recently found Clearly Canadian in a grocery store and bought one on a whim. It tasted the way I remembered it.
Probably when measures that genuinely protect the right to repair are enacted on a wide scale.
To add to your point regarding additional functions inherent in smartphones: pagers do one thing. They’re relatively simple devices. Simplicity means that there are fewer things that can cause the device to function incorrectly or fail to function altogether. In hospital communications use-cases, this is a huge benefit.
Additionally, pagers are relatively inexpensive. Therefore, it’s much more effective to have multiple spares available for distribution compared to smartphones. If a pager is inoperable, it can quickly be swapped out with a backup while the original is repaired or replaced. Smartphones do not carry that benefit.