I'm not sure if that's what it says. The way I read it "could care less" was used in the 1800s but with the negation in another part of the sentence. Modern usage simply omits it.
That's what the article says, but I can't see negation in the 1865 example:
> His bearing towards male acquaintances, of whom he knew little or nothing and could care less, was marked by an affectation of gushing friendliness, which overdid itself.
Along the same lines, city intramurals ("beer leagues") could be an option too. In most places you can sign up as a single and be placed on teams that need more people. It has the advantage of getting you out of the house, doing something physical which can also help, and you get to consistently meet people? It's also harder to slack off and quit since you're part of a team.
> Playback Region B/2: This will not play on most Blu-ray players sold in North America, Central America, South America, Japan, North Korea, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Southeast Asia.
Not if you update the content. When reading up on interfaces that change rapidly, I'll often throw $CURRENT_YEAR into the search bar. If your post has been updated with current content, I'd like it to be included in my results.
It depends on the content and the type of updates you make.
As long as I do a significant update to an article, and make sure it's generally up to date and still entirely relevant, then I'll update the date to match.
When people look at the dates (in SERP) they generally want to know if the article is still relevant or if they are likely to find outdated information there. At least that's how I think.
Automatically updating dates without actually revising the content on the other hand... That's not something I'd want to endorse.
But is the bulk of that lowered cost due to the removal of the cap and trade, or is it mostly unrelated?
I'll be the first to admit that I'm not sure, but looking at the average gas price in Ontario (no cap and trade), Quebec (cap and trade) and Canada on [1], the same kinda of savings existed all around, so we can't really credit the removal of the cap and trade. Overlaying the price of cure, it does seem to have had more to do with the massive price drop in crude.