Tell that to my old Nexus One which didn't get an update to 4.0. Or anyone who has a Nexus S. Google supports its phones for around two years, no longer. Of course you can install custom ROMs, but they can hardly be called stable in case of the N1.
Surely there is something different about Microsoft's approach to it.
Something seems to me like we're not getting the whole story here. Maybe it's something with Googles terms that Microsoft won't agree with, thus Google denying them access? I bet it has something to do with ad revenue...
Had that, too, but I thought it was due to the crappy digitizer used by the N1 (and the HTC Desire). TBH, I loved my N1 to death, but looking back from my GNex it really was a piece of shit device. I always thought that's why Google went away from HTC and launched the Nexus S so fast after the N1.
In some countries to have those *are* rights already. Americans usually call them "socialist". Here in Germany it is your right to ask for housing, food and money, in case you currently can't provide for yourself, no questions asked (well, very little and you can lose the money, but you're still being fed).
I wouldn't call that "human right", though. A "human right" should be limited to severe issues, like not being killed.
Really? I got my Kindle six months ago and I couldn't find a way to pay for a ZEIT subscription without credit card. TBH, that was the only worthwhile thing I saw back then. Was thoroughly surprised by The Magic Catalog of Project Gutenberg that contains searchable Links to all the Project Guttenberg books in one E-Book. Once the novelty wore off I realized that electronic reading isn't for me, though.
Don't have a credit card, so I can neither obtain Books for Kindle, nor Apps from Google Play Store. Schizophrenic thing is, I can obtain anything from Amazon.de with my debit card easily, but I can't buy Kindle books with it. I guess I'm the minority, but since I don't want to deal with credit cards (long story, I just don't) I have no means of obtaining said books or software other than by piracy. Which I have to admit I don't do very often... my Kindle collects dust in some corner since I noticed that I rather like real books made from real paper and there's very little stuff in the Android Market that I need that isn't free.
Hooray for motion interpolation that makes movies look like cheap 80s porn. No, thank you very much, I prefer my movies in native 24p, if possible. My LCD doesn't have 3D, motion interpolation and that other crap, but displays what it's supposed to do and what's actually being delivered via HDMI. Not more, not less.
Way to drive home your point. So, what exactly is it in the Wikipedia article to Higher order thinking skills that makes you think it's "a policy of teaching children to have a pavlovian "yessum massa!" response to politically correct buzzwords"? Not obvious to me. I think you're a Troll.
I've just seen the season one finale last week, I knew about that head and had been actively looking for it, but other than seeing a couple of heads on spears in that particular scene I couldn't make out which one was the Bush head. This was blown way out of proportion, I agree with the GP, if the directors hadn't said anything on the cemmentary nobody would've known.
That's because the subpixel density is high enough with the Galaxy Nexus. On my previous cellphone (Nexus One) and a friends Galaxy S the AMOLEDs Pentile matrix looked atrocious.
I don't think the previous poster knows what they're talking about. My WP7 works flawlessly with my corporate Exchange Server (and the company issues iPhones by the way - I prefer my WP7 phone). I entered my user credentials once to set it up and haven't had so much as a hiccup...and I get push mail whereas my coworkes using iPhones/Android phones have to sync regularly to retrieve messages.
Really? Same for my Android phone (Galaxy Nexus on 4.04), entered my credentials once and everything worked fine out of the box. I'm getting my mail/calendar entries, etc, pushed the second it enters my Office 365 Exchange account, same for every iPhone in out company. I guess your coworkers phones must be misconfigured.
What's the German word for "the boner you get from too much Schadenfreude"?
I guess I'd call it a Schadenfreudelatte, analog to Morgenlatte, which is the boner you have right after waking up. Since I think there's a special place in hell reserved for Kim Snitch^WSchmitz I wouldn't ever have such a thing over his case, though.
TBH, I would expect a Thermostat to be working worldwide, too. It's fairly obvious that they forcefully locked it to work in the US only, that's kind of a dick move from the manufacturer, IMHO. They actually used resources for locking it down, instead of just let it work anywhere in the world.
I just wish it was possible to add those purchases to Market apps (or Play Store or whatever it's called now), so I can automatically receive updates when they are released.
Oh, and, btw, on a completely unrelated note, does anyone have an Idea why Toki Tori from the last bundle won't work on my Galaxy Nexus? It always crashes with a "this Application had to be stoppped" message. I loved that game on GBC back in the days, would very much like to play that once again in an updated form.
Now, there's plenty of automatic algorithms that already improve this in popular videoprojectors and TV sets, but I haven't experienced it first hand so I can't vouch for it.
Be glad you haven't seen that yet. Those "upscale" (for the lack of a better word for it) algorithms make the picture look absolutely horrible, much like a cheaply produced VHS Porno. Now, there's nothing wrong with pr0n, but I'm not especially a fan of the cheap 80s porn esthetic. I'd rather scratch my eyes out than watching a complete movie that way.
But there's one result that sticks out. The Arch wiki [archlinux.org] provides a nicely organized richly linked list of things you might want to configure, and how to configure them. This is how you collect and present useful information. I figured, if I find myself consistantly using the documentation for a distro, maybe I should check out the actual distro.
That's what happens to me a lot, too, lately. Previously it used to be the Ubuntu Forums where you could find a lot of useful information, but nowadays it's the ArchLinux Wiki that sticks out a lot in search results. May give it a try in a VM soon.
Modded you down personally as "overrated" on said Firefox post, I still remember that I thought that your writing made it clear that you lack the technical skills to judge what you wrote about. I still remember that I wanted to write an answer to your post, but that would've undone all my previous moderation. What you posted *was* highly overrated, IMHO, so I rather modded you down instead of correcting you. Not everybody is out there to get you. You seem to be pretty vocal, though, looks like it's pretty easy to get annoyed by your posts. Don't take that as an offence, just as an outside observation.
it's unknown whether or not his delaying the surgery lead to his death.
It's not a matter of too soon, it's a matter of we don't know what ultimately did him in. We don't know if it metastasized or if something else was going on.
Well, I believe he had expressed regret about taking time off pursuing alternative medicine. (Heard it from someone who heard it from someone, take with a grain of salt, confirm yourself. But it fits with someone going to alternative medicine and then returning to modern medicine.)
Only if you distribute binaries, which Google never did.
You could probably argue this point either way. Samsung may have physically made the phones but the Nexus series phones are Google branded and ship with Google's Android binaries. [...]
And there has never been a Honey Comb for any Nexus device so far, so what's the point?
Since they quit using the way we used to mount drives, I don't know what drive is what any more. I know that all my drives have long ass character strings, but I don't even know how to get a list of drives any more as "sudo mount" doesn't do shit.
Not sure if you're referring to UUIDs, but a ls -Al/dev/disk/by-uuid should take care of that... shouldn't it? Been a while since I've used Ubuntu, but Debian lists all devices by UUID this way.
Well, judging by the cheerleading tone and the "Tour Groupon, The Funniest Startup We've Ever Been To (PHOTO TOUR)" link at the bottom it looks like msnbc has some issues staying objective on Groupon, so I'd take that article with a grain of salt.
Got a Notebook I bought June 2006 here with a built-in Webcam and I'm pretty sure that was already standard back then. Webcam is defnitely no indicator of a two year old computer.
Tell that to my old Nexus One which didn't get an update to 4.0. Or anyone who has a Nexus S. Google supports its phones for around two years, no longer. Of course you can install custom ROMs, but they can hardly be called stable in case of the N1.
Surely there is something different about Microsoft's approach to it.
Something seems to me like we're not getting the whole story here. Maybe it's something with Googles terms that Microsoft won't agree with, thus Google denying them access? I bet it has something to do with ad revenue...
Had that, too, but I thought it was due to the crappy digitizer used by the N1 (and the HTC Desire). TBH, I loved my N1 to death, but looking back from my GNex it really was a piece of shit device. I always thought that's why Google went away from HTC and launched the Nexus S so fast after the N1.
In some countries to have those *are* rights already. Americans usually call them "socialist". Here in Germany it is your right to ask for housing, food and money, in case you currently can't provide for yourself, no questions asked (well, very little and you can lose the money, but you're still being fed).
I wouldn't call that "human right", though. A "human right" should be limited to severe issues, like not being killed.
Really? I got my Kindle six months ago and I couldn't find a way to pay for a ZEIT subscription without credit card. TBH, that was the only worthwhile thing I saw back then. Was thoroughly surprised by The Magic Catalog of Project Gutenberg that contains searchable Links to all the Project Guttenberg books in one E-Book. Once the novelty wore off I realized that electronic reading isn't for me, though.
Don't have a credit card, so I can neither obtain Books for Kindle, nor Apps from Google Play Store. Schizophrenic thing is, I can obtain anything from Amazon.de with my debit card easily, but I can't buy Kindle books with it. I guess I'm the minority, but since I don't want to deal with credit cards (long story, I just don't) I have no means of obtaining said books or software other than by piracy. Which I have to admit I don't do very often... my Kindle collects dust in some corner since I noticed that I rather like real books made from real paper and there's very little stuff in the Android Market that I need that isn't free.
Hooray for motion interpolation that makes movies look like cheap 80s porn. No, thank you very much, I prefer my movies in native 24p, if possible. My LCD doesn't have 3D, motion interpolation and that other crap, but displays what it's supposed to do and what's actually being delivered via HDMI. Not more, not less.
Way to drive home your point. So, what exactly is it in the Wikipedia article to Higher order thinking skills that makes you think it's "a policy of teaching children to have a pavlovian "yessum massa!" response to politically correct buzzwords"? Not obvious to me. I think you're a Troll.
I've just seen the season one finale last week, I knew about that head and had been actively looking for it, but other than seeing a couple of heads on spears in that particular scene I couldn't make out which one was the Bush head. This was blown way out of proportion, I agree with the GP, if the directors hadn't said anything on the cemmentary nobody would've known.
That's because the subpixel density is high enough with the Galaxy Nexus. On my previous cellphone (Nexus One) and a friends Galaxy S the AMOLEDs Pentile matrix looked atrocious.
I don't think the previous poster knows what they're talking about. My WP7 works flawlessly with my corporate Exchange Server (and the company issues iPhones by the way - I prefer my WP7 phone). I entered my user credentials once to set it up and haven't had so much as a hiccup...and I get push mail whereas my coworkes using iPhones/Android phones have to sync regularly to retrieve messages.
Really? Same for my Android phone (Galaxy Nexus on 4.04), entered my credentials once and everything worked fine out of the box. I'm getting my mail/calendar entries, etc, pushed the second it enters my Office 365 Exchange account, same for every iPhone in out company. I guess your coworkers phones must be misconfigured.
I guess I'd call it a Schadenfreudelatte, analog to Morgenlatte, which is the boner you have right after waking up. Since I think there's a special place in hell reserved for Kim Snitch^WSchmitz I wouldn't ever have such a thing over his case, though.
TBH, I would expect a Thermostat to be working worldwide, too. It's fairly obvious that they forcefully locked it to work in the US only, that's kind of a dick move from the manufacturer, IMHO. They actually used resources for locking it down, instead of just let it work anywhere in the world.
I just wish it was possible to add those purchases to Market apps (or Play Store or whatever it's called now), so I can automatically receive updates when they are released.
Oh, and, btw, on a completely unrelated note, does anyone have an Idea why Toki Tori from the last bundle won't work on my Galaxy Nexus? It always crashes with a "this Application had to be stoppped" message. I loved that game on GBC back in the days, would very much like to play that once again in an updated form.
RTFA and find out more about your "argument".
Be glad you haven't seen that yet. Those "upscale" (for the lack of a better word for it) algorithms make the picture look absolutely horrible, much like a cheaply produced VHS Porno. Now, there's nothing wrong with pr0n, but I'm not especially a fan of the cheap 80s porn esthetic. I'd rather scratch my eyes out than watching a complete movie that way.
That's what happens to me a lot, too, lately. Previously it used to be the Ubuntu Forums where you could find a lot of useful information, but nowadays it's the ArchLinux Wiki that sticks out a lot in search results. May give it a try in a VM soon.
Why didn't you link to Wikipedia? It's explained much better there, IMHO.
Modded you down personally as "overrated" on said Firefox post, I still remember that I thought that your writing made it clear that you lack the technical skills to judge what you wrote about. I still remember that I wanted to write an answer to your post, but that would've undone all my previous moderation. What you posted *was* highly overrated, IMHO, so I rather modded you down instead of correcting you. Not everybody is out there to get you. You seem to be pretty vocal, though, looks like it's pretty easy to get annoyed by your posts. Don't take that as an offence, just as an outside observation.
Have you actually watched Fox News? Compared to their venom spouting gibberish fake news BILD would be a quality newspaper.
And I hate BILD with a passion...
it's unknown whether or not his delaying the surgery lead to his death.
It's not a matter of too soon, it's a matter of we don't know what ultimately did him in. We don't know if it metastasized or if something else was going on.
Well, I believe he had expressed regret about taking time off pursuing alternative medicine. (Heard it from someone who heard it from someone, take with a grain of salt, confirm yourself. But it fits with someone going to alternative medicine and then returning to modern medicine.)
Says so in his official Biography.
Only if you distribute binaries, which Google never did.
You could probably argue this point either way. Samsung may have physically made the phones but the Nexus series phones are Google branded and ship with Google's Android binaries. [...]
And there has never been a Honey Comb for any Nexus device so far, so what's the point?
Not sure if you're referring to UUIDs, but a ls -Al /dev/disk/by-uuid should take care of that... shouldn't it? Been a while since I've used Ubuntu, but Debian lists all devices by UUID this way.
Well, judging by the cheerleading tone and the "Tour Groupon, The Funniest Startup We've Ever Been To (PHOTO TOUR)" link at the bottom it looks like msnbc has some issues staying objective on Groupon, so I'd take that article with a grain of salt.
Got a Notebook I bought June 2006 here with a built-in Webcam and I'm pretty sure that was already standard back then. Webcam is defnitely no indicator of a two year old computer.