

Newsweek is particularly bad with this. According to them, Trump “loses it” or “explodes” every time he makes a critical comment about someone else
Newsweek is particularly bad with this. According to them, Trump “loses it” or “explodes” every time he makes a critical comment about someone else
The sentencing is in the article. 20-45 years, largely because they showed no remorse and claimed they would do it again
I don’t know. Usually the people who are upset by women as financial providers also criticize men who do “women’s work”. They don’t see the men as a threat to their egos though and don’t get as openly angry about it.
She is a narcissist, talking herself up and putting down the people around her. Constantly bulldozing over clearly established boundaries by deliberately misnaming Worf, harassing Picard and Odo after they’ve made it very clear they aren’t comfortable with her advances, and just completely dismissing almost everything her daughter says. It’s clear she just does what she wants and expects everyone to go along with it, making a dramatic scene if anyone objects.
She’s a rich bitch that doesn’t care about anyone except herself and only really seems to help people when it already aligns with what she wants. It’s understandable that Deanna only talks to her mother when pushed into it.
Such a small max length is a good indicator they aren’t handling passwords correctly. A modern website should be able to send and hash kilobytes of text without the user seeing a significant delay. Having a max size like this sounds like they are storing the password as text instead of a hash.
Or some dumb project manager said passwords longer than 24 characters look bad in the UI and wanted the limit.
To make the setup work, aye
Sphinx: You there, knight. I am the guardian of this place and cannot allow you to pass without a battle.
Me: My name is Ender, Sir Ender to you. And I’m a bit weary from my long journey here, would you accept a pun battle?
Sphinx: Aye, Sir Ender.
Me: Thank you, please move aside
I think either “to” or “on” would be acceptable in that context. English likes to use “to” with attention, like in the phrases “pay attention to” or “draw attention to”, often emphasizing the change in focus. But you can also keep your attention “on” something.
As a native English speaker from the US east coast, I would probably have chosen “on”. Just sounds better to me to use “on” instead of “to” when there is no associated verb like “pay” or “draw”. Not sure why.