Then why don't we have fiber in all our cities? And your use of "economies of scale" is literally the opposite of what it actually means. The larger the entity the greater the economies of scale. While we spend $1 trillion+/year on our military, it would take $200 billion to cover the country in fiber. Or $20 billion/year over 10 years- probably less as subscriber revenue would pay for it as the network expanded. That's pocket change for our government.
Uh, no. The bigger the country and its GDP the greater the economies of scale. The density issue is stupid as well since we don't have FTTH in all the cities.
The US government has given the telcos hundreds of billions of dollars in USF fees over the last 15+ years. No one in the world has subsidized broadband as much as we have.
Meanwhile the past few CEOs who drove the company into bankruptcy still get paid millions every year. Must be nice to be paid more than almost everyone else in the country for utter incompetence.
I have the Z10 and my biggest beef with the OS is that's not even smooth. Use iOS or WP and you'll see pixel perfect smooth momentum scrolling in the browsers. BB10 can't manage this, despite supposedly being a modern OS. So annoying to deal with the kind of lag you normally experience on an underpowered Android smartphone. Meanwhile my backup Lumia 520 doesn't have any lag issues.
In fact it wasn't until BB OS 10.2.1 (it's at 10.3 now) that you could scroll the settings menu smoothly. Until then they ran everything on top of Adobe AIR. Ugh.
I don't think a lot of people "want" Android. Just its apps. Most other OS's will get better battery life than Android. They won't lag, won't run in a VM, etc.
Uh, no. The deregulation happened under a republican FCC chairman who decided to axe local loop unbundling and reclassify ISPs from Title II to Title I.
It sounds to me like the actual 3d printing was less important than the 3d model. I'm not sure what the first doctor's problem was. Usually an MRI gives you a detailed model that you can look at from multiple angles. You don't just measure the size from one point of view. That doesn't even make sense.
You are truly clueless. Greece's economy is in a nonstop recession. Going back to the Drachma would let them devalue their currency and improve their exports, manage their finances and stimulate their economy. If debt is denominated in your currency you never have to default because you can always print more. Investors realize this, which is why Japan with its 300% of GDP debt still has near 0 interest rates.
Interesting point, in the 1930s the US almost passed through a 30 hour work week law. The House passed it but the Senate voted against it. Or vice versa.
If you exercise plenty every day and keep your brain focused on something productive all day, you can kind of sort of fight the depression. But yes there are better alternatives.
Feels like getting upgrades in a RPG. Pretty awesome.
It's also nice to see actual real world battery density improvements, rather than just hear about it. Of course 31% over 7 years is a lot less than the 7%/year improvement people like to say lithium ion experiences.
If they weren't opting for a trashy "hybrid" approach designed specifically to avoid preventing ISPs from abusing consumers, and instead were going for full bore Title II reclassification, they wouldn't need so much time to create a legal defense.
Uh... carbon pollution from coal plants will in fact destroy the environment. We have plenty of historical evidence to suggest tighter environmental regulation that limits the expansion of coal plants will result in new investments that bear fruit to future technological innovations. It's happened every single fracking time.
Then why don't we have fiber in all our cities? And your use of "economies of scale" is literally the opposite of what it actually means. The larger the entity the greater the economies of scale. While we spend $1 trillion+/year on our military, it would take $200 billion to cover the country in fiber. Or $20 billion/year over 10 years- probably less as subscriber revenue would pay for it as the network expanded. That's pocket change for our government.
Uh, no. The bigger the country and its GDP the greater the economies of scale. The density issue is stupid as well since we don't have FTTH in all the cities.
The US government has given the telcos hundreds of billions of dollars in USF fees over the last 15+ years. No one in the world has subsidized broadband as much as we have.
Whoever modded you flamebait didn't get the humor. That was actually funny.
Well Google releases "fixes" that break their own Android OS all the time. I guess they think that's standard procedure.
Meanwhile the past few CEOs who drove the company into bankruptcy still get paid millions every year. Must be nice to be paid more than almost everyone else in the country for utter incompetence.
I have the Z10 and my biggest beef with the OS is that's not even smooth. Use iOS or WP and you'll see pixel perfect smooth momentum scrolling in the browsers. BB10 can't manage this, despite supposedly being a modern OS. So annoying to deal with the kind of lag you normally experience on an underpowered Android smartphone. Meanwhile my backup Lumia 520 doesn't have any lag issues.
In fact it wasn't until BB OS 10.2.1 (it's at 10.3 now) that you could scroll the settings menu smoothly. Until then they ran everything on top of Adobe AIR. Ugh.
Or maybe he just, ya know, wants to do something to help the environment?
But the homerun needs to connect to a router or PC anyways.
You can still compare it to other devices with the same chip.
I don't think a lot of people "want" Android. Just its apps. Most other OS's will get better battery life than Android. They won't lag, won't run in a VM, etc.
Can you connect a USB cablecard tuner to these things and use them to replace your cable company provided STB?
Uh, no. The deregulation happened under a republican FCC chairman who decided to axe local loop unbundling and reclassify ISPs from Title II to Title I.
It sounds to me like the actual 3d printing was less important than the 3d model. I'm not sure what the first doctor's problem was. Usually an MRI gives you a detailed model that you can look at from multiple angles. You don't just measure the size from one point of view. That doesn't even make sense.
You are truly clueless. Greece's economy is in a nonstop recession. Going back to the Drachma would let them devalue their currency and improve their exports, manage their finances and stimulate their economy. If debt is denominated in your currency you never have to default because you can always print more. Investors realize this, which is why Japan with its 300% of GDP debt still has near 0 interest rates.
You realize money doesn't disappear into thin air? If everyone spent it they'd just end up trading the money for goods with each other.
Oh right automation. Well that explains why the unemployment rates keeps dropping. All those robots are taking the jo... oh wait.
Interesting point, in the 1930s the US almost passed through a 30 hour work week law. The House passed it but the Senate voted against it. Or vice versa.
If you exercise plenty every day and keep your brain focused on something productive all day, you can kind of sort of fight the depression. But yes there are better alternatives.
Feels like getting upgrades in a RPG. Pretty awesome.
It's also nice to see actual real world battery density improvements, rather than just hear about it. Of course 31% over 7 years is a lot less than the 7%/year improvement people like to say lithium ion experiences.
They must have learned from our republicans.
How did that "more" end up 3 words down from where it's supposed to be?
If they weren't opting for a trashy "hybrid" approach designed specifically to avoid preventing ISPs from abusing consumers, and instead were going for full bore Title II reclassification, they wouldn't need so much time to create a legal defense.
Uh... carbon pollution from coal plants will in fact destroy the environment. We have plenty of historical evidence to suggest tighter environmental regulation that limits the expansion of coal plants will result in new investments that bear fruit to future technological innovations. It's happened every single fracking time.
The last IPCC report suggested policy changes that would subtract from future global GDP values by .006%/year. That's not 15% of your paycheck.