Ucbs Major outage forces Puerto Rico to shutter schools, offices
New data shows that streaming giant Netflix s crackdown on password sharing among its subscribers has led to a jump in the service s subscriber count, making it look like a good choice for Netflix so far.Datafrom a report by analytics organization Antennashowed that in a two-day window after Netflix implemented its new password sharing policy, the platform saw the largest number of new account sign-ups since 2019.A similar spike was seen in Ap
botella stanley ril and May of 2020, but this
stanley cup quencher latest spike went above that one.As Netflix began blocking account sharing, the platform received almost 100,000 daily sign ups on May 26 and May 27, Antenna reported.Data showed the ratio of sign-up numbers compared to the number of cancellations also went in Netflix s favor.SEE MORE: US credit card debt nears $1 trillionIn May, Netflix said the platform would start charging subscribers an additional $7.99 per month to share account login information.Netflix saidit wanted to limit viewers for each accountto those who live in the same household.Subscriberswho want to be a part of Netflix sstandard or premium plans will pay $15.50 to $20 per month, depending on features, and will be permitted to allow others living outside their households to use their password for an additional $7.99 per month. Netflix calls it a $2 discount off of
stanley cup the standard stand-alone basic plan.Netflix also offers a way to check which devices are signed in to a customer s account. Subscribers then have the option to sign out of devic Tnbh CarShield to pay $10 million fine to feds for deceptive advertising
He may be 102 years old, but John Sekulich has the energy to tell you stories about his time in the Army during World War II until youre blue in the face. A lot of things happen during the war, you know Sekulich says from his home in a Denver suburb. A lot of crazy things. He could tell you about working throughout the nights, in blackout conditions, repairing U.S. communication lines cut by the Germans. He could tell you about the time fellow soldiers ran over a nearby hill to warn him of German troops that had just killed doz
stanley hrnek ens of Americans. Rain, shine or snow, didnt matter, he says. We were out there, trying to repair them lines. But the story he remembers better than any othe
stanley canada r was from his trip home, after the war had ended. His father was critically ill, and the military arranged a special flight so he could get home faster.Exce
stanley becher pt the flight鈥攆rom Greenland to New York-- came eerily close to crash and landing in the Atlantic. One engine went out, Sekulich recalls. So, were flying along and about noon, the second engine went out. But despite only having two of the four engines on that bomber, they landed safely.It was his final memory of the war, and its one that now鈥攁lmost 75 years later鈥攈ell get to re-live.Thanks to Colorado-based non-profit Wish of a Lifetime , which finds sponsors to help make seniors decades-old dreams come true, Sekulich was once again face to face with that infamous Consolidated B-24 Liber