I can kinda understand that but I've taken week-long overseas vacations so giving border control extra work verifying a visitor isn't returning home "too fast" seems counter-productive
For countries not on the list, a transit policy allows eligible citizens to enter for 10 days if they depart for a different country they arrived from.
I distinctly recall thinking inner monologues were a "neat idea" after seeing them on TV as a child and thinking it would be a useful skill to learn. I never did though
The fact they chose not to use the (entirely accurate) headline of "US Denies Mads Mikkelsen Entry to US due to Vance Meme" is the most frustrating part
If they're well-received, I would say see if the students/staff naturally come to explore or suggest other options
Some projects still need time to mature and overplaying your hand can reverse some of that goodwill (which is more FOSS acceptance than I ever saw in my school days)
I've not experimented as much with cloud providers or non-American companies so not yet sure if this is a byproduct of industry practice, market pressures on public companies or legal requirements and counter examples could help
I should also point out the good: many of them (like Netflix) are very open about how cancelation works once one goes to that section of their site
In UK English, it's considered proper to write "the 6th of March" as "6 March" and sometimes read as "6th March" which can be jarring to Americans as their shorthand is "March 6th" and when "6(th) March" is encountered in written form, it's expanded to the full "6th of March" when spoken
That doesn't mean this won't be yet another feature American English absorbs from UK English but right now flipping them in speech requires a few extra syllables and people are lazy
I can kinda understand that but I've taken week-long overseas vacations so giving border control extra work verifying a visitor isn't returning home "too fast" seems counter-productive