I don't see what's so tragic about the death of a consumer device that don't really sell.
They really said that? That's just utterly delusional in a Wired on push as the future stylee. Anyways, to get at that real world data they crave, they're gonna need tons of users, and if they ever get even one tenth of…
That'll do wonders for UI consistency. It's moves like this that comes back and bites companies in the ass. Now they're gonna be stuck playing keep up with Android for the foreseeable future. And when you're playing…
Maybe it is, but you really can't go around claiming openness when you don't provide it.
If we're gonna have a petition about all the dumb stuff The Huffington Post promotes we're gonna run out of IPv6 addresses.
Only by accident. It stole a longstanding adblock extension keybinding, and I haven't yet retrained my fingers.
Just how often do you start your browser?
I though hardcore FPS players mostly uses high-end PCs rather than consoles.
Perhaps you guys should have taken this as a sign that Vimeo relys way too much on cookies. You can't even search the site if you don't accept cookies, no other site I've used fails that way.
Digg died long ago when the spammers won.
Which is why you have test servers and never ever make live edits to deployed code. I find it exceedingly easy to say that this was kind of incompetent.
$5 for garageband. I already had all other apps I wanted.
So, can Firefox extensions fiddle with referrer info? I think I just got an idea for a new one.
Man, you guys are just busting out with the exotism in this here thread. "People there carry honor in their blood"...
Maybe I'm missing something obvious, but why would rules about subscriptions affect the Kindle store?
Well, the media player market right now is currently split between Apple and the $30 bottom end.
This is a dumb submission, the real headline shoule be some thing like "Flattr Do Not Control What Their Users Say".
There is a world of difference between Apple changing their minds on a switch and Jobs saying that they've done extensive user testing on touchscreens on regular computers and that it turned out to be worthless.
> I'm waiting for a Macbook Air with a full touch screen You're in for a long wait then. Jobs said laptops with touch screens is total bullshit when talking at the new air launch.
Kinda sad. It's the twelfth oldest .com. Registered on the 19th of mars 1986.
Why it won't: requires two fully functional hands to operate.
Free software have always been as much about drama as about making stuff. Emacs, XFree86 and NetBSD are just a few earlier examples.
nytimes.com used to do something like this. It was super annoying.
I dunno, my "Editor's Picks" subfolder seem to have been replaced by a huge button that starts a web browser. If I wanted to browse the web I would have started Safari, wouldn't I?
Of course. Veteran journos probably won't churn out "10 reasons to do X" type crap for a pittance.
I don't see what's so tragic about the death of a consumer device that don't really sell.
They really said that? That's just utterly delusional in a Wired on push as the future stylee. Anyways, to get at that real world data they crave, they're gonna need tons of users, and if they ever get even one tenth of…
That'll do wonders for UI consistency. It's moves like this that comes back and bites companies in the ass. Now they're gonna be stuck playing keep up with Android for the foreseeable future. And when you're playing…
Maybe it is, but you really can't go around claiming openness when you don't provide it.
If we're gonna have a petition about all the dumb stuff The Huffington Post promotes we're gonna run out of IPv6 addresses.
Only by accident. It stole a longstanding adblock extension keybinding, and I haven't yet retrained my fingers.
Just how often do you start your browser?
I though hardcore FPS players mostly uses high-end PCs rather than consoles.
Perhaps you guys should have taken this as a sign that Vimeo relys way too much on cookies. You can't even search the site if you don't accept cookies, no other site I've used fails that way.
Digg died long ago when the spammers won.
Which is why you have test servers and never ever make live edits to deployed code. I find it exceedingly easy to say that this was kind of incompetent.
$5 for garageband. I already had all other apps I wanted.
So, can Firefox extensions fiddle with referrer info? I think I just got an idea for a new one.
Man, you guys are just busting out with the exotism in this here thread. "People there carry honor in their blood"...
Maybe I'm missing something obvious, but why would rules about subscriptions affect the Kindle store?
Well, the media player market right now is currently split between Apple and the $30 bottom end.
This is a dumb submission, the real headline shoule be some thing like "Flattr Do Not Control What Their Users Say".
There is a world of difference between Apple changing their minds on a switch and Jobs saying that they've done extensive user testing on touchscreens on regular computers and that it turned out to be worthless.
> I'm waiting for a Macbook Air with a full touch screen You're in for a long wait then. Jobs said laptops with touch screens is total bullshit when talking at the new air launch.
Kinda sad. It's the twelfth oldest .com. Registered on the 19th of mars 1986.
Why it won't: requires two fully functional hands to operate.
Free software have always been as much about drama as about making stuff. Emacs, XFree86 and NetBSD are just a few earlier examples.
nytimes.com used to do something like this. It was super annoying.
I dunno, my "Editor's Picks" subfolder seem to have been replaced by a huge button that starts a web browser. If I wanted to browse the web I would have started Safari, wouldn't I?
Of course. Veteran journos probably won't churn out "10 reasons to do X" type crap for a pittance.