Sentences with phrase «if course timers»

If no course timers are required, as is the case in California, you could literally blow through this thing in 30 minutes.
If course timers are required, it might take you 6 hours or more.
If course timers are required, it'll take you hours to finish.

Not exact matches

The complication that arises from any toasting of buns, of course, is that it increases the risk of burning them, even if the equipment is set on a timer.
I remembered pumping for an hour in a mall's parking lot when I went out with Big J. Well, of course I wouldn't know it was only 20 minutes if it weren't for the timer!
The wagon has all the «cool shit» from the sedan, like race mode, a locking rear differential, a lap timer app and of course, drift mode, because if you are going to drop this kind of coin on a 600 + horsepower wagon you better be able to get it sideways.
So, if your online traffic school is supposed to take 6 hours to complete, a course timer will make sure you actually spend that much time on the course.
If a timer is used in the Improv course, it'll be used in any other course you sign up for.
If you sign up with a course that uses course timers, you'll have to go through 6 full hours of the course and each page will have a timer.
I really like the way they set this course up because if you are stuck using a course timer, you only have to deal with the timer once for each section.
Basically, if you sign up for an online traffic school that doesn't require course timers (like the two I posted above), you can just blast through each page as fast as your browser and internet speed will allow.
Some states, such as the state of California, do not require course timers if you take a comedy traffic school online.
If you opt for an online traffic school, timers will be integrated into the course to make sure you fulfill the required hours.
If you complete the course online, timers will be used to verify that you fulfilled the required hours.
If there's no use of timers in the course, you can take as much or as little time as you need before your completion date (the date you must have it completed by, determined by the court).
This course requires NO course timer if your states laws don't require one.
The only exception to this is if the county that issued your ticket requires the use of timers, which means you have to take a certain amount of time to complete the course before it will pass in court.
One of the great things about taking this course in California is that the state has no timer requirements, so not only can you break the course up into sections if you want or need to, but you can also fly through it in as little as an hour if you really want to get the experience over with as quickly as possible.
There is an exception, however — if the county issuing the ticket requires the use of timers, you have to take the course in a certain amount of time in order for it to pass in court.
This information should be available by your court, if not the course itself, and even if you do have to wait on a timer, there are several ways in the course itself to pass the time so you aren't just stuck waiting.
Just go through the course at your pace and if you timer makes you wait to move forward, click play on whatever movie you're simultaneously watching!
With iDriveSafely, you either will not have a course timer if one is not required, or you will get the fastest timer allowed by law.
If you decide to take the online course, there is a timer that starts once you start that will make sure you have the required minimum hours.
On the other hand, if you live in a state that DOES have course timers, such as the state of Texas, feel free to use the video - based online traffic schools.
If your timer has stalled while taking your course, you can clear your cache on your internet browser.
For your security, the course will automatically save your place and log you out if there has been more than 5 minutes of inactivity after a page timer has expired.
Of course, if serious belt - tightening takes place, first - timers and the nontraditional buyers who've provided a boost to home sales the last couple of years — minorities, moderate - income buyers, and immigrants — may face hard times in 1999.
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