Subscriber in a sentence as a noun

From a subscriber perspective this is most undesirable, now I have to deal with two sites. 4.

As a card carrying yearly CheddarApp subscriber, I can say that I've used it for a week and meh. I'm hoping he gets enough press to get enough people to put $20 on the table to build out that spartan feature set.

For some reason, this paragraph irked me more than it should have: If the subscriber has tabs but they didnt opt to include the Promotions tab, Gmail will deliver to Primary instead. Thats good news.

From subscribers. This is part of an effort to curb that and has likely gone awry. It only affects subscriber -> subscribee comments.

[1] "Gee, isn't the electronic subscriber number [ESN] of your Chief of Staff repeatedly going over to that place where we just busted a prostitution ring? Were they part of that investigation?"

WoW's fluctuating subscriber numbers reflect the natural state of a 7 year old game that is in a down period between expansions, so I'm not worried about that. Instead what I think is going on is that they've spent so much time growing their staff to accommodate WoW, the new Battle.

Their support wouldn't say anything except point me to the subscriber agreement, which says that they could send you a copy of notepad instead of the game you purchased and you'd still be out of luck. I considered doing a chargeback, but thankfully I researched it first and found out that if you do a chargeback, Valve will disable all of your games, including the ones not under dispute.

>> "the authority to order an online service provider to disclose expeditiously to a right holder information sufficient to identify a subscriber whose account was allegedly used for infringement" They can order your ISP to give up your identifying information. Which may or may not even be relevant.

Today, most of their subscribers are paying $17+/month via bundling with cable TV, and every major cable provider in the country is heavily advertising them for free. The moment they can go independent and accept subscribers without going through a cable company is the moment the trickle of people dropping cable TV in favor of internet media turns into a tide. It's not today. If they split from cable today, they'd lose free advertising to hundreds of millions of people a year, and they'd likely earn far less per month from each subscriber they pick up.

While I understand that running a magazine in the internet era is hard and subscriber revenue constitutes a smaller part of the total, I feel that the fact that this content is paid-for had absolutely not been made explicit enough and, as a subscriber, I feel that such blatant hijacking of Atlantic's identity betrays the trust of your readers and violates your journalistic duty to inform and enlighten. Best regards, Paul Milovanov

Quote Examples using Subscriber

Like other HN members, I'm also a Strafor subscriber and my details and credit card information were leaked, so I have a vested interest in this issue. At first I was pretty supportive of Stratfor, and thought that Anonymous attacking Stratfor was completely stupid. However, a couple of things from the news release caught my eye. I guess I was naive, but I believed that Strafor was more like a news agency, and they would do their best work to uncover information, analyze breaking situations, and supply information to its members. However, from reading the news release from Wikileaks, I get the vague sense that maybe Stratfor was gathering a lot more information than I thought, using it to their advantage, and then throwing a bone to its subscribers every now and then, just enough to keep them subscribing and generating income. It certainly seems like there's a lot more going under the covers than I anticipated. The comment about "Control means financial, sexual or psychological control... This is intended to start our conversation on your next phase." makes it seem like Friedman is more than willing to make anyone their pawns, including subscribers.

Anonymous

Subscriber definitions

noun

someone who expresses strong approval

See also: endorser indorser ratifier

noun

someone who contracts to receive and pay for a service or a certain number of issues of a publication

See also: reader

noun

someone who contributes (or promises to contribute) a sum of money

See also: contributor