Vengefu1 Tuna
Reddit refugee, married with kids, mainly interested in gaming.
It’s fascinating reading your side of this, everything you said tracks with getting paid by insurance carriers as well. I’m a revenue analyst for an insurance agency. There are no established rules or SOPs they follow. They each make up their own thing. For each established rule one carrier follows, there’s another one who does something completely different. Some of their websites are really good and helpful while others are the oldest looking sites I’ve seen in years. We have a team of people who are assigned carriers, and only work with those carriers, so we can keep track of how each one operates and pays us. It’s a mess. I couldn’t imagine trying to navigate all these carriers by myself in order to get paid, on top of managing a practice.
This car is perfect for getting out of awkward conversations. Anytime you want to leave, just say, “I have to pea” and drive away.
The ankle bands. lol
I don’t see the big deal here. Mozilla relies on advertising for its revenue. They’re incorporating a new method which prioritizes user privacy first and foremost, even preventing the advertisers from accessing user information. Isn’t this an improvement for both Mozilla and their users?
I can’t for the life of me decipher this. I looked up 2 Timothy 3:15 and it just gave me more questions, “and how from childhood you have been acquainted with the sacred writings, which are able to make you wise for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus.”
The issue with the water block is massive to me. Testing a prototype product on a GPU that it wasn’t made for, giving it a negative review, doubling down on that negative review when called out, promising to return the prototype to Billet Labs, then SELLING the prototype to the public at their LTX expo. As Steve points out, if a competitor gets their hands on that prototype, it could put Billet Labs out of business. This is wild, and LMG should absolutely be called out like this.