Exactly right. And even if I hadn't heard the word before, somehow in arabic you can actually intuitively reach the meaning of the word, based on its structure. It's really an amazing language.
I think the author is confused about what inflation is, vs the benefits reaped from the advancement of technology. The author also seems to have a bias against the people screaming "inflation". That is pretty obvious from the title. To show real inflation, I like using the Burger King whopper as an example. In the early 90's I remember being able to buy 4 whoppers for $1. With the advancement of farming technology, transportation technology, preservation technology, etc.... Why do we see the whopper cost over $7 now?
Thanks so much, you brought up some things I didn't think about. It's kind of a weird situation because the beat that I made has been floating around the internet for about 12 years now and people have used it a lot and it's had 10s of millions of views by now. This overseas manager wants to buy it exclusive. But it has more sentimental value for me and I wouldn't want to tie it to 1 person. I even offered a lease agreement but they want it exclusive. I don't think they can pay what I would want for compete exclusive rights to it. They even sort of "threatened" that they can easily remake it with some changes and get away with it but they would rather "do it the right way".
I don't understand how land masses the size of africa detaches. The map shows africa attached to the US, but this doesn't make sense. I can understand water levels changing, exposing new areas that might have been underwater, drying up and turning into land masses, as well as areas that were previously land, becoming filled with water.
Not sure why everyone is so surprised. This goes hand in hand with apples goals in creating a seamless ecosystem for the customer. It's part of their brand, mission and identity to have this tight/strict policy. It would actually hurt their brand if they derailed from this.
Apple is an end to end ecosystem. It has a straight line vision. I think they would be wrong to not do this.
And this is coming from a privacy / open source geek. I run my own mail servers.
I just put the context in the reply above. I'm a (systemNetwork/admin/engineer) by trade and hobby, I'm not perfect, and I definitely make mistakes but I guarantee you I didn't put anything in the "wrong box". It was pretty straight forward.
Step 1. Turn on new Kindle device.
Step 2. Log into Kindle Device with Amazon account.
Step 3. Go to settings, the "your Account"
Step 4. Look at the last line and it shows your passwword(partially) in plain text.
I dont know how I'd post evidence. I can explain how to recreate. I had a kindle device for a long time. I recently reset my device to factory. Then reattached the kindle to my account by booting up the kindle device and logging in with my Amazon credentials. Next, I went to my settings page to see what my "Send to Kindle" email address was and it was my "<AmazonPassword>@kindle.com" without the numbers and special characters.