Be careful of the character limit on each viewer, as they can “trim” your title in the middle of some markup tag and just display part of it as the title.
Not sure - a reverse image search says “KLM stewardess in 1959”. Apparently the AR-10 was licensed to Artillerie-Inrichtingen in that era, so maybe it’s plausible for the Dutch airline to have had one. But 1959 might be a bit early for down coat and mittens though?
“Good enough is perfect”
Credit cards for anything over £100 online, for the built-in fraud protection - https://www.moneysupermarket.com/credit-cards/guide-to-credit-card-protection/
That’s how cities work - a 300-home apartment building isn’t going to have 300 generators on the balconies and expect each family to maintain one - it has a single grid connection with specialists to maintain the electric.
Knew that he wouldn’t persevere with it - very forward-thinking!
If it was Ender’s Game, you might be better off starting with book two…
It’s definitely possible to have a hardware token which allows confirming the transfer details - https://www.manua.ls/nationwide/card-reader-security-for-internet-banking/manual
They can’t book 75 people for a train which can only seat 50
The official statistics lists how frequently that occurs.
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+1. “oh you’ll surely be good if you are early, the train can’t possibly already be overcrowded when it arrives”
I suspect the sales website can’t actually reserve seats itself, but just passes along the request to some other system, which enters “LOL, NO!” in that field for a train that was long-since fully booked.
My guess is that it printed this “null” reservation slip to let you know that the reservation had failed, because otherwise people would think that the printer wasn’t working? It prints the ticket(s), then the reservation(s), then the receipt listing how many things were printed.
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They only issue as many tickets as seats
That’s… optimistic?