![]() Tap your QuickBooks Online subscription, enter your new credit card information, and save your changes.In Account Settings under Subscriptions, tap Manage.Tap your Apple ID (top right side of the screen).Open your iPad's Settings and tap iTunes & App Store.IPad: If you paid through iTunes on your iPad, do the following from your iPad: The way you'll update your credit card information for your QuickBooks Online subscription depends on how you originally paid. If you only had the free trial and it expired, you'll continue to have read-access to your data for up to 90 days. Note: If you had a paid subscription that expired, you'll continue to have read-access to your dataįor up to 1 year. Turning auto-renewal off prevents your card from being charged at the start of the next cycle.įor more about managing your auto-renewing subscriptions, go to ITunes charges your account in advance of each period, so you can continue to access QuickBooks until the currentīilling period expires. Select your QuickBooks Online subscription, then set Auto-Renewal to Off.Tap the Apple ID button (first button on the right side of the screen).Open your iPad's Settings, then choose iTunes & App Stores.If you purchased your subscription from your QuickBooks Online iPad app, here's how to turn off the auto-renewal setting from your iPad: ![]() ![]() ![]() When you're prompted to confirm you want to subscribe, tap Confirm.Tap the subscription button and sign in to iTunes. ![]()
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![]() As to the Pi, this is the first JAMMA board we’ve seen with video, but we’ve featured another board using a Pi to bring console controllers to JAMMA boards in the past. We’ve featured ’s work before here at Hackaday with a joystick that faithfully replicates arcade items. What it does though is open up the huge world of emulation on the Pi to owners of classic cabinets, and if you don’t mind forking out for one then we can see it might make for a very versatile addition to your cabinet. He’s launching his Pi2Jamma as a commercial product so sadly there are no schematics or Gerbers for you to look at, but if you’d prefer to roll your own it probably wouldn’t be beyond most Hackaday readers to do so. has created an interesting board supporting the JAMMA connector, one that interfaces it with a Raspberry Pi and offers full support of the Pi as a video source. The Japan Amusement Machinery Manufacturers Association was the name the Japanese trade body was known under in the 1980s, and they originated a specification for both wiring and connector that would allow hardware to be easily installed for any game that supported it. Arcade operators demanded running costs as low as possible, and the industry responded with the JAMMA wiring standard. In fact, there is a standard for the wiring in arcade cabinets. ![]() We’ll know in principle what kind of hardware we’d expect to see if we were given the chance, but the details are probably beyond us. Most of us who play an occasional arcade game will have never taken a look inside a cabinet however much its contents might interest us. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() In 2014, after the episode "Dream Job" was released, Mondo Media announced plans to produce a feature film based on the series, but in 2016, Kenn Navarro tweeted that he was unaware of work being done on a film, but that his team were "in talk to do more shorts". I envision kids watching Happy Tree Friends 20 or 30 years from now the same way that they watch Tom and Jerry now. He has created something that is pretty universal. "He had a clear vision for that show and he's just a brilliant animator. Mondo Media CEO John Evershed attributes the success of the series to animator Kenn Navarro. From there, Mondo gave them their own Internet series, which they named Happy Tree Friends.Īfter its internet debut in 1999, Happy Tree Friends became an unexpected success, getting over 15 million hits each month along with screenings at film festivals. They came up with a short named "Banjo Frenzy", which featured a dinosaur (an earlier version of Lumpy) killing three woodland animals, a squirrel, a rabbit, and a beaver (earlier versions of Giggles, Cuddles, and Toothy) with a banjo. In 1999, Mondo gave Aubrey Ankrum, Rhode Montijo, and Kenn Navarro a chance to do a short for them. ![]() Rhode hung the drawing up in his workstation so other people could see his idea, and eventually the idea was pitched to and accepted by the Mondo Media executives. He then drew a yellow rabbit that bore some resemblance to Cuddles, writing "Resistance is futile" underneath it on a spreadsheet poster. While working on Mondo Media, Rhode Montijo drew a character on a piece of scrap paper who would later become Shifty. ![]() |
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