Prefer my 30 stone + personally If they can't get out of the house using a crane, then I'm not interested.
I’m happy to admit I’m wrong - when somebody proves that I’m wrong, not just has a different opinion to me.
well, he legitimately won 'poster of the year' iirc, but making him a mod would mean he'd be the only unbanned member on the forum.
You was wrong the other day when discussing the Wolves result. You said that even if you had won, City's likely win would put them into second place. When it was pointed out that you still would have retained second place by a point, you replied semantics. That's not a difference of opinion, you were wrong but wouldn't accept it?
No. I replied semantics to the difference between 6 & 7 points. Both are,a considerable advantage in the context of what was being discussed. I.e. bottling it.
NSIS Once argued with me that iCloud was safe. Despite the fact that literally thousands of celebrities have been openly embarrassed by hackers, he still maintained it was safe. He simply will not admit when he is wrong. But he’s still a decent bloke so no hard feelings.
I believe it is safe, or as safe as anything on line. I’ve used Apple for several years and never had one single problem.
But ultimately mate, you’re wrong, as evidently it is not safe. Nowhere near as safe as not using it.
No. I have a different experience. You’re claiming it’s unsafe, I’m saying that my experience, and that of all I know who use iCloud, says completely different. Therefore my opinion is different to yours, not wrong.
No mate yours is wrong because I’m being objective and you’re being subjective. I have never had a bad experience in getting raped but it doesn’t mean being raped is safe.
No it isn’t!... 1. If the Cloud is Secure, How was Apple’s iCloud Hacked? After the well-publicized attack on Apple’s iCloud, polls showed an immediate drop in the popularity of cloud storage. Users reported feeling more vulnerable, and began questioning the security of their own personal data. But what really happened? The headlines said that the cloud had been hacked, that nude pictures had been stolen from the private accounts of 26 celebrities. While the photos were indeed stolen from the victims’ personal accounts, the important distinction that the popular media never made was that the cloud wasn’t hacked. The breach was a result of vulnerabilities in Apple’s password security system, enabling persistent hackers to guess the passwords and security questions of select users. The cloud itself was never actually breached.