i've been using minefield for a while now but i don't really care about these r2d2 releases. as long as it doesn't crash and webdeveloper, javascriptdebugger and foxmarks extensions work i'm happy.
win3.1 for workgroups: it took only 13megs on my 83megs hard drive.
only used once or twice i think. the rest of the time i would write qbasic and play duke nukem.
nice times though
It also implies that you can find a working pay phone. Good luck doing that in America. what do you mean? all the payphones at hollywood work. even those in horror movies!
but still: america? snap out of it.
ontopic: I'd switch to pigeons tomorrow if they'd travel in hyperspace and no one would be able to intercept them.
i was thinking the same thing when i read about magnetic keyboard. i wonder how it will interfere with gsm signal? certainly it won't be a boost. i own an eten m700, it has sliding qwerty and is REASONABLE size and i need nothing more (except when new technology arrives will i feel the need to upgrade). when i was doing some before-buy research for pocketpc [that's portable pocketpc] and i saw one of these advantage on utube my first thought was: did he broke the keyboard and found a way to still use it? i'm rather clumsy so anything that comes with more than one piece best not come at all because the pieces will miss each other.
my last thought is that anyone who can afford this is better off with a plain phone and a laptop. you get the bag, the looks, the usefulness of a laptop and the incredibly powerful signal of a simply black on green text phone with nothing but names and numbers in it.
The problem with Linux (and usually large open-source projects) is that the openness of its source encourages everyone to make it better. Unfortunately everyone has these wonderful ideas that instead of meeting into one distribution they spread among several ones and that's why we keep getting these "niche" distros with "great speed", "super package management", "super server performance", "enhanced security", etc. I have to agree with you that eventually all the ideas will be gathered in one place.
you bought a separate router for your laptop?
i've been using minefield for a while now but i don't really care about these r2d2 releases. as long as it doesn't crash and webdeveloper, javascriptdebugger and foxmarks extensions work i'm happy.
win3.1 for workgroups: it took only 13megs on my 83megs hard drive. only used once or twice i think. the rest of the time i would write qbasic and play duke nukem. nice times though
they're right. most of the customer service out there simply sucks.
the plastic eating bacteria will eat the plastic but i don't know about the batteries ...
mmmm "Apple" pie
because the other 68 are taken by java itself trying to interpret itself
but still: america? snap out of it.
ontopic: I'd switch to pigeons tomorrow if they'd travel in hyperspace and no one would be able to intercept them.
It will be bleeding-edge!
i was thinking the same thing when i read about magnetic keyboard. i wonder how it will interfere with gsm signal? certainly it won't be a boost. i own an eten m700, it has sliding qwerty and is REASONABLE size and i need nothing more (except when new technology arrives will i feel the need to upgrade). when i was doing some before-buy research for pocketpc [that's portable pocketpc] and i saw one of these advantage on utube my first thought was: did he broke the keyboard and found a way to still use it? i'm rather clumsy so anything that comes with more than one piece best not come at all because the pieces will miss each other. my last thought is that anyone who can afford this is better off with a plain phone and a laptop. you get the bag, the looks, the usefulness of a laptop and the incredibly powerful signal of a simply black on green text phone with nothing but names and numbers in it.
just put the moon in the same basket with international waters and that's it: problem solved. No more poperty dispute since no one can own something.
I'm pretty sure everyone will start using it very soon.~
The problem with Linux (and usually large open-source projects) is that the openness of its source encourages everyone to make it better. Unfortunately everyone has these wonderful ideas that instead of meeting into one distribution they spread among several ones and that's why we keep getting these "niche" distros with "great speed", "super package management", "super server performance", "enhanced security", etc. I have to agree with you that eventually all the ideas will be gathered in one place.
here in ro[mania] we have a saying: "If it knows how to make coffee also then it's the sh*t!"