In France coca is a bit generic term for coca cola and pepsi
But if you have a brand that sell coke we use cola
Like breizh cola or a <supermarket brand> cola
Same issue than one of the guy in the thread, when I was fresh I didn't really need to ask the basic questions as most of the time they were already answerd. And then when I felt confident to reply to some questions, The system just shut me down for not having enough point. Never tried again and just kept it as a read-only source since that time (like 7-8 years ago)
Well living in Lille (North of France), if i take the eurostar, it takes me 30mn to go to saint Pancras (1h30, but there is the time difference, brussels is 2h away from London so 1h if you add the time difference)
Didn't know that ! It may explain why french bank (like société générale) are starting to offer a way to check other french bank account from their mobile app/website
Strictly speaking a credit card is a "carte de credit", however between the simple translation with english, the similarities between the form factor etc, A LOT of French (especially not used to the US credit card) will call their debit card 'carte de crédit'
Their is a lot of confusion on this, but most of the time french people use debit card. In fact I think banks almost don't advertise credit card, only companies offer this (airlines/supermarket)
On the technical side, there is no difference most people have visa/mastercard
mtw's message was in reply to someone talking about credit cards, as opposed to debit cards ("most people use the CB, but"). But maybe he didn't notice. And I don't know if the figure quoted there is good. Elsewhere [1] I found 20 million credit cards, instead of 34.
Especially now that they are moving into full HD screens and 4/32 configs instead of 2/16. That was a horrible idea. Oh, and away from those Atom processors. This most recent gen and next gen should (IMO), be significant upgrades.
But it just gpu with uninspired name =O