That's not a British or Irish sign, and they are the only places in Europe that speak English. So I think that's an American sign it certainly looks like an American sign.
The US doesn't seem to do this much to my irritation when I visited but pretty much every other country the crisps are colour-coded for flavour although there seems to be no international consistency on this.
For example at least in the UK blue means cheese and onion (and therefore disgusting), red means salt, green means salt and vinegar, and pink means prawn cocktail.
There was a UK brand that do the same thing although it is black text on a white background and they do have a thin blue line as well, for extra excitement.
It's incredibly cheap stuff and not quality at all, but I suppose it is good if you want to save money. I do enjoy that a bottle of their vodka is just labelled "alcohol".
Okay I've scanned my eyeball and I've got some of their worthless cryptocurrency. What about next month, do they want me to scan my eyeball again, because I guarantee it won't have changed.
I've actually had to turn off YouTube notifications because the thing never shuts up. It's always telling me about new uploads and it's like, I'll see them when I go on YouTube, I don't need to know about it right fucking now
It looks like they're going for natural wildflowers, which means that there will be periods of time where it's basically all just green. What you get in return though is lots of interesting grasses but the image is pretty low resolution so you can't really see all that.
You see some fantastic outfits in Edinburgh. I think it's the inability of the locals to accept that sometimes it's hot. They don't really get the idea.
The best I ever saw was someone wearing shorts, white trainers, and a black bomber jacket. Very much giving off a vibe "it's bloody hot outside but I only own the one coat, so I'm wearing it"
I think the entire thing spins around in a giant circle in the centre of the room in order to generate centrifugal gravity. Seems like the most sensible way
Is usually around this point in time that they admit that they haven't actually got the computer in front of them. I guess they're just trying to memorise the instructions or something.
Personally I would not recommend an iPhone to an elderly person. They are not going to use 99% of the features anyway so what's the point in buying an expensive phone when you can get them a cheap Samsung for 150 bucks.
The justification used to be that IOS was a friendlier interface but I think a combination of Android getting better and iOS getting worse means that that's no longer the case. Hell their new design apparently makes everything transparent and hard to see.
Physical buttons for brightness is a bad idea. People will just press them by accident and then complain that the screen changes brightness all the time. Laptops get away with it because they already have a bajillion buttons, and anyway in most cases the screen brightness buttons are actually multifunctional anyway so it doesn't add to the button count.
That's not a British or Irish sign, and they are the only places in Europe that speak English. So I think that's an American sign it certainly looks like an American sign.