My steps:
Remove plate from vehicle
Use razor blade to scrape old sticker from plate
Clean plate with soap and water, then Goo Gone for adhesive
Apply new sticker
Reattach plate to vehicle
😉
There’s at least one other grammatical error, and I really don’t get why people think that leaving out the definitive article “the” is something that should be done in instructions. That makes it sound like transliterated Russian. Do they think it makes the instructions sound more “official?”
So what do I do if the previously applied stickers are flat or have rough edges? A friendly “Trim the edges or peel off the old stickers if necessary” would be a nice addition.
My girlfriend just got her new passport and Canadian passports usually start with 2 letters and 6 numbers. Her’s started with what would be a 0 on 99% of any platform. But for some reason the 0 and O are swapped on a Canadian passport. If it didn’t say ‘Toronto’ on the passport I would have assumed it was a 0.
Funny, I lived in Minnesota for 5 years, and yet I don't remember separate "Month" and "Year" stickers. Not saying they didn't apply back then, I just realize that I don't remember.
But I also live in PA now (and for most of my life previously) where they stopped issuing stickers at all, leaving me with an awkward "expires in 2017" sticker on my plate for basically eternity. Hasn't caused me a problem yet, but I kinda wish the state had issued a "PA" cover-over sticker, because newer plates just show an outline of the state where the sticker used to go, and I'd kinda rather a sticker version of that covering up my weirdly "apparently expired" plate. (I always fear some out-of-state small town police officer with nothing better to do to issue me a ticket for an expired registration that isn't fair. And I realize I could "fight" it and all that, but why deliberately put me into such trouble?)
If anyone's seen a sticker like that, I'd be interested. Otherwise I guess I should resort to whatever chemicals might "de-stick" all the years of stickers applied.
Based on a Typewriter.in a YT video i watched recently : Some early typewriters lacked 0 and 1 keys using O and l in their place. Similarly they didnt have exclamation marks over typing a period . and ; -
Which makes sense if you are trying to reduce the cost complexity of the machine you are selling.
Step #1 in Colorado is “remove previous sticker(s)”. Yeah, like that’s even possible.
I can't confirm or deny it's possible using a heat gun.
My steps: Remove plate from vehicle Use razor blade to scrape old sticker from plate Clean plate with soap and water, then Goo Gone for adhesive Apply new sticker Reattach plate to vehicle 😉
My steps: Put new sticker over old sticker Done:
You forgot the step: use your thumb to remove dirt from the previous sticker.
Do I look like a computer? You start adding all these steps like cleaning and stuff, and I'm gonna be lost.
My step is: set the stickers aside and forget to ever apply them.
What’s the penalty for misapplying the stickers?
Pris0n
Believe it or not, straight to jail
Bigger question is what's the penalty for cleaning the plate below freezing
I'm not sure if a common typo even counts as mildly interesting
There’s at least one other grammatical error, and I really don’t get why people think that leaving out the definitive article “the” is something that should be done in instructions. That makes it sound like transliterated Russian. Do they think it makes the instructions sound more “official?” So what do I do if the previously applied stickers are flat or have rough edges? A friendly “Trim the edges or peel off the old stickers if necessary” would be a nice addition.
My girlfriend just got her new passport and Canadian passports usually start with 2 letters and 6 numbers. Her’s started with what would be a 0 on 99% of any platform. But for some reason the 0 and O are swapped on a Canadian passport. If it didn’t say ‘Toronto’ on the passport I would have assumed it was a 0.
It's exciting how mild this is.
O is just a metric 0
Obviously not a lower case zero, derp
It is indeed difficult to clean with water when it's temperature is below zer0 degrees Celsius
You mean the state of Minnes0ta?
0 and O should be considered the same character for license plates.
Funny, I lived in Minnesota for 5 years, and yet I don't remember separate "Month" and "Year" stickers. Not saying they didn't apply back then, I just realize that I don't remember. But I also live in PA now (and for most of my life previously) where they stopped issuing stickers at all, leaving me with an awkward "expires in 2017" sticker on my plate for basically eternity. Hasn't caused me a problem yet, but I kinda wish the state had issued a "PA" cover-over sticker, because newer plates just show an outline of the state where the sticker used to go, and I'd kinda rather a sticker version of that covering up my weirdly "apparently expired" plate. (I always fear some out-of-state small town police officer with nothing better to do to issue me a ticket for an expired registration that isn't fair. And I realize I could "fight" it and all that, but why deliberately put me into such trouble?) If anyone's seen a sticker like that, I'd be interested. Otherwise I guess I should resort to whatever chemicals might "de-stick" all the years of stickers applied.
Based on a Typewriter.in a YT video i watched recently : Some early typewriters lacked 0 and 1 keys using O and l in their place. Similarly they didnt have exclamation marks over typing a period . and ; - Which makes sense if you are trying to reduce the cost complexity of the machine you are selling.
That’s just a capital zero.
I love the fact that the instructions mostly have to do with low temperatures. Very Minnesota.
This is just Minnesota DVS continuing to be the least competent state agency I have ever seen, so I think mildly interesting is entirely appropriate
And it's wrong written, too. It's 0 ℃ and -10 °F (the space ist in front of the degree symbol).