Ok, I'll pay you the 1995 price
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If you put this passive agressive bullshit up ima gonna smoke indoors and pay 25c for my drink.
Maybe drink too much, assault a woman and call the bartender the f slur. Feeling cute.
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Portable … toilet?
I too own a bucket.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Porta potty/ porta john
Outhouse on the go
Rolling stench box
Close the fucking lid so it vents right
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Depending on the country, paying like it's 1995 would be the best power move. Here's, dunno, 100 francs? 5 marks?
Oh yes. If you're a Dutch soldier you even get free drinks, and it only costs your honor.
Happy 30th anniversary. Cheers to the Dutch Army.
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Am i the only one who wishes this was common? Put your stupid phones away. How have we not matured enough to not be so addicted to little flashy lights.
i guess i am getting old. but i really think it is sad, when a group goes to the restaurant/coffee/bar and everyone is staring at their individual screen
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Oh yes. If you're a Dutch soldier you even get free drinks, and it only costs your honor.
Happy 30th anniversary. Cheers to the Dutch Army.
what am I missing? why is the picture titled the toast of shame?
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what am I missing? why is the picture titled the toast of shame?
In the middle is luitenant kolonel Thom Karremans, leader of the Dutchbatt peacekeeping force near Srebrenica, to the left is Ratko Mladic the last of the Serbian forces.
Mladic promised the to let there population of the enclave to go free, and Karremans believed him.
They were slaughtered instead.
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what am I missing? why is the picture titled the toast of shame?
The most striking image yet to emerge from the fall of Srebrenica comes in a BBC film to be screened next week. It shows the indicted Serb war criminal General Radko Mladic presenting the commander of the UN peacekeeping force at Srebrenica, Colonel Ton Karremans of Holland, with gifts wrapped in Christmas paper. Mladic was evidently in a expansive mood and he had good reason to be: at that very moment his troops were preparing to massacre the 4,000 men and boys who the UN had handed over to him.
https://www.theguardian.com/theguardian/1999/nov/17/features11
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How much are you paying for that?
50 a month at MetroPCS, it's not rocket science, and I'm not rich. I literally live on the streets.
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100$/month and a one time purchase of a 200$ wifi router
50 a month, you absolute goon.
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50 a month, you absolute goon.
We're assuming a business location here.
This is the maximum it should cost pretty much anywhere in the world.
So, trivial compared with just one day of business expenses.
Functionally free -
Wait are you just using wifi while paying 100/mo for internet?
1200/year isnt insubstantial.
It's a business location and they could be anywhere, this is enough to buy unlimited internet basically everywhere there is unlimited internet to buy.
Compared with daily business expenses this is basically free for them. -
We're assuming a business location here.
This is the maximum it should cost pretty much anywhere in the world.
So, trivial compared with just one day of business expenses.
Functionally freewrote on last edited by [email protected]Why would they need wifi when our phones have 5G /hotspots? This whole conversation is just silly
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i guess i am getting old. but i really think it is sad, when a group goes to the restaurant/coffee/bar and everyone is staring at their individual screen
wrote on last edited by [email protected]and they just swipe around to see stuff that are 95% useless information. It’s nothing but addiction.
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Why would they need wifi when our phones have 5G /hotspots? This whole conversation is just silly
For the people with no service and exploitative ratioed service.
I don't need wifi I have 100 gig of fast data and "unlimited" after that which I never use.
But my brother has 3 gb and then he loses internet access. You do it for him, it's common courtesy if you're operating a business which you expect people to hang out at. They are the content that attract your drink-buyers.
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50 a month at MetroPCS, it's not rocket science, and I'm not rich. I literally live on the streets.
Yeah, 50/mo for unlimited isnt terrible, Im paying half that for 2gb/day, then limited to 365kb/s
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For the people with no service and exploitative ratioed service.
I don't need wifi I have 100 gig of fast data and "unlimited" after that which I never use.
But my brother has 3 gb and then he loses internet access. You do it for him, it's common courtesy if you're operating a business which you expect people to hang out at. They are the content that attract your drink-buyers.
I go to literally the cheapest place what the hell
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Maybe drink too much, assault a woman and call the bartender the f slur. Feeling cute.
What the fuck is the f slur? Other than fuck
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We Do Not Have
WiFi
Use The Hotspot On Your Phone Like A Normal Person
Or Get A Data Card For Your Laptop IDK Or Care
There’s a place near me that I don’t go to very often, and almost never if I’m alone. They have great food and it’s pretty cheap, but they don’t have WiFi.
That normally wouldn’t be a problem, because I rarely use any of my cell data, but it’s a super old building full of interference and I can only get cell signal if I happen to get one of the 3 seats within 10 foot of the front windows.
If I do go by myself, I get weird looks for bringing comic books or video games and just existing by myself, but there’s nothing else to do while waiting for food so..
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I saw this exact same sign in a restaurant in Newfoundland
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i guess i am getting old. but i really think it is sad, when a group goes to the restaurant/coffee/bar and everyone is staring at their individual screen
McDonald's STILL has newspapers sitting in a rack next to the counter where I am. Growing up these places had magazines and newspapers available to read. People "back then" didn't just randomly talk to strangers, they just kept themselves busy with other things.
Yes, there's a problem with people not interacting physically anymore, but it's not cause we have electronics, it's cause people don't have a place to go outside the home anymore. This is a problem with a lack of community centers and walk-able neighborhoods, not a problem with phones.