You know, because ticking a single box to enable IMAP is hard. And because you wouldn't want to allow pretty much every device under the sun, rather than a few in the exclusive have-paid-microsoft/are-microsoft club to connect.
Enabling IMAP won't do a bit of good if it's not open through the firewall. Opening the hole in the firewall requires change control documentation for SOX purposes, good governance, and security sanity, and no change request gets approved without business justification.
YMMV.
I don't think this is so revolutionary for existing Pidgin users. I've had the Facebook plugin (http://code.google.com/p/pidgin-facebookchat) for Pidgin for a while now. What reasons are there to switch from this to XMPP?
I've never used Firefox Mobile, and probably won't for a long time. Your insistence that Safari and Opera are complete web browsers, however, is laughable. Mobile Safari is by no means a 'complete' browser: no support for add-ons, missing Flash support, etc. Opera Mini isn't even a true web browser - it's a redisplay app like Skyfire, and neither of them are all that great. I can't talk about Netfront because I've not used it either. Got a download link?
If FF3 is being used before a v1 release, it ought to be used in order to find bugs so that the development team can fix them for the release version./quote
This is what baffles me about the 8.04 release of *buntu. Why they would include the beta of FF3 is beyond me. If you do a dist-upgrade, it's going to break more than you want pretty much every time.
I used to have this problem after hitting a few porn sites, either directly or through NSFW links from different aggregators. After ten or fifteen minutes, any IP traffic destined for their network (DNS, etc.) would fail, disrupting everything else. I could repeat it on-demand (and enjoyed doing so!). it happened whether connected either through a router or directly to the modem from multiple machines and operating systems. i don't remember if it was time-dependent, though. (haven't been a customer for almost a year)
i'm not a big fan of them doing this, but the '59k word user agreement' is a little disingenuous.
in fact, it's extremely unlikely that the entire 59k (58,521, actually) would apply to anyone. You'd have to subscribe to every service they offer, and register domains in.tw,.biz,.eu, and a myriad of other TLDs for the entire agreement to apply to you.
For the record, it's found here: http://www.networksolutions.com/legal/static-service-agreement.jsp/
The offending statements are in paragraph 11 of Schedule A, and are at about the 9800 word mark./just sayin'
Isn't the Nexus One Google Voice enabled?
You know, because ticking a single box to enable IMAP is hard. And because you wouldn't want to allow pretty much every device under the sun, rather than a few in the exclusive have-paid-microsoft/are-microsoft club to connect.
Enabling IMAP won't do a bit of good if it's not open through the firewall. Opening the hole in the firewall requires change control documentation for SOX purposes, good governance, and security sanity, and no change request gets approved without business justification. YMMV.
I don't think this is so revolutionary for existing Pidgin users. I've had the Facebook plugin (http://code.google.com/p/pidgin-facebookchat) for Pidgin for a while now. What reasons are there to switch from this to XMPP?
I've never used Firefox Mobile, and probably won't for a long time. Your insistence that Safari and Opera are complete web browsers, however, is laughable. Mobile Safari is by no means a 'complete' browser: no support for add-ons, missing Flash support, etc. Opera Mini isn't even a true web browser - it's a redisplay app like Skyfire, and neither of them are all that great. I can't talk about Netfront because I've not used it either. Got a download link?
You can get it here: http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/m/
I hate to burst your bubble, but Safari on the iPhone/iPod Touch is not a 'full mobile browser'.
I used to have this problem after hitting a few porn sites, either directly or through NSFW links from different aggregators. After ten or fifteen minutes, any IP traffic destined for their network (DNS, etc.) would fail, disrupting everything else. I could repeat it on-demand (and enjoyed doing so!). it happened whether connected either through a router or directly to the modem from multiple machines and operating systems. i don't remember if it was time-dependent, though. (haven't been a customer for almost a year)
...Windows Mobile users unite!
i'm not a big fan of them doing this, but the '59k word user agreement' is a little disingenuous. in fact, it's extremely unlikely that the entire 59k (58,521, actually) would apply to anyone. You'd have to subscribe to every service they offer, and register domains in .tw, .biz, .eu, and a myriad of other TLDs for the entire agreement to apply to you.
For the record, it's found here: http://www.networksolutions.com/legal/static-service-agreement.jsp/
The offending statements are in paragraph 11 of Schedule A, and are at about the 9800 word mark. /just sayin'