No, but according to my wife they are family heirlooms. They start with her great-grandmother, her grandmother, her mom, and her’s.
The one that drives me insane is using the touchscreen on my Surface:
Right-click, inspect, delete element
There can be only one…well that unless we can milk more money from the franchise
Just like there is no Blues Brothers sequel and Terminator ended after T2.
Nope! Still singing it in my head
You and me both
Clicking Next redirects you to the App/Play Store
It’s really sad because the artists have little to no control over this. It is the venues who are contracted through Ticketmaster.
I remember Pearl Jam suing them for this in the 90s. Unfortunately, Pearl Jam lost and here we are 30 years later still dealing with their monopolistic tactics.
Sadly, I tried desktop mode in Firefox and still got the pop-up
You’re talking about the same company that charges a “convenience” fee for ordering online. Then if you decide to go to buy them in person you charge a “facilities” fee.
Trying to view them through your browser will bring you to this pop-up. And it says you can’t use screen shots or print outs.
The only other option is to use a mobile wallet, but that prevents me from sending my friends their tickets, since I purchased them all together.
That doesn’t work anymore. If you follow those instructions you’ll receive the pop-up I posted.
I think this is a fake quote that somebody made up for an Internet comedy bit
You can tell by the pixels
This was the early to mid 2000s. I honestly don’t remember the specifics. But I do remember the emails coming from somewhere in Eastern Europe, so it may have been some crap system on their end that treated each reply as a unique conversation. Which could be why our Exchange server kept replying.
I’m old enough to have experienced an Exchange server being brought to it’s knees due to two out of office replies fighting back and forth with each other.
So, I’m old enough to have driven in that forgotten time before smartphones. A lot of directions were based on landmarks. Like…
Go down the street until you see the house with the big tree with a swing in it. Take the second left after that and follow until you get to the corner where the Stop and Go used to be (it’s a 7-11 now). If you hit the highway you went too far.
Basically if you couldn’t read a map well, you got lost a lot. That and you could pull into any gas station or even better a pizza place and ask them for directions.
It’s actually Mountain Home, Idaho. I have no idea who came up with that system. When I lived there 20 years ago they were talking about changing it. But it still remains to this day.
No confusion you say
I have my concealed carry license so I take the bottom one. The shorter length makes it easier to conceal.