The emoji is part of the unicode standard. You send U+1F52B [ http://emojipedia.org/pistol/ ], and each platform will display using it native font rending engine.
Yes they appear differently on different platforms. But also as they are unicode you can include them in URLs.
> If they changed the the thumbs up emoji to a goatse would it change in all the e-mails I sent to my boss in the past?
Same as if they changed all the Is to look like little dicks. Or if you changed the font on your bosses computer to a font that used pictures of dicks for each of the letters.
It is all about making what you think are acceptable risks. Kickstart something and you are part of the companies journey. Like everything, don't be silly with it and know what are you acceptable level of risk.
I've risked it on 26 projects. 6 have not yet delivered (but I am very confident they will). I've written off one. Two of the products were not all that great. It was the companies first attempt and it showed. I don't regret helping them have a go. The rest have been a mix of acceptable and awesome.
This is from a mix of board games, films and technology companies. I'm upset that I've had to write one off, but I knew that was a risk and accepted it.
The Galaxy Note PDAs are what I want out of a phone. I've bought into the Android ecosystem, to change that (i.e. get rid of Play Store and the content from that) would leave me no where to go. No other manufacturer currently makes PDAs.
Crap. Yes evaluate the projects first. Do a little internal math and check if the company has asked for enough to complete the project. Do they appear to have the skill set required to get the project out the door? Have they lied in the project description?
I've backed a few projects on Kickstarter (and alikes). I've got some fantastic big name games and cool indy games and the warm glow of knowing I helped them on their way. Its a risk but a risk but one you can do derisk quite a way.
> Anyone who contributes money to a Kickstarter project deserves what they get.
>mostly it seems like it a moot point if it's cheap and offers the functionality specified
I disagree, if the hardware is open source or not is neither here or there but trust in the company providing the product is important and it looks like Anonabox have lost trust.
Or they have figured out what is best for the customer, and it is what everyone else is providing.
Personally I hope the 6C is closer to the size of the iPhone 4/5, as what is good is options. I love my big PDA (don't give a shit about phones and phablets), but I can see good reasons for others to want a smaller device.
$600.99 or $600.99 - the cost of 2 years worth of credit - two years worth of phone usage?
Now this number will be maybe $450. Some "throwing numbers about" puts two years of credit at $85. So that is $515.99 for the phone + mobile contract. Take away the phone ($450.99) and you have a mobile contract at $32.50 a year or under $3 a month.
Many people foolishly think that as they can check their work email while on holiday, they should check their work email while on holiday. By doing so they are doing unpaid overtime (an evil evil thing).
I come from the same camp, hire the best person for the role. Definitely.
But best is not just "technically best" but also "team fit best" and "not a dick" and "can communicate with the team" and various other little things. What this can mean is that the team unconsciously equates "best team fit" as "same as the rest of the team". The management should step in if this happens and look at ways to fixing what is a problem and reports like the one performed by Mr Apple is one quick way to measure if this is happening.
> Have you paused to consider that there might be other lifestyles than your own?
Yeap. And I want a smart watch. Or Glasses (minus the camera maybe), I've not worn a watch since the late 80s when it came with a radio built in.
As long as they don't stop selling watches when they start selling smart watches we will both be groovy. I'll have both a smart watch and you will have a watch. CauseBy may have an even smarter watch then I.
Yes. At least two, a red on and a green one.
The emoji is part of the unicode standard. You send U+1F52B [ http://emojipedia.org/pistol/ ], and each platform will display using it native font rending engine.
Yes they appear differently on different platforms. But also as they are unicode you can include them in URLs.
> If they changed the the thumbs up emoji to a goatse would it change in all the e-mails I sent to my boss in the past?
Same as if they changed all the Is to look like little dicks. Or if you changed the font on your bosses computer to a font that used pictures of dicks for each of the letters.
It is all about making what you think are acceptable risks. Kickstart something and you are part of the companies journey. Like everything, don't be silly with it and know what are you acceptable level of risk.
I've risked it on 26 projects. 6 have not yet delivered (but I am very confident they will). I've written off one. Two of the products were not all that great. It was the companies first attempt and it showed. I don't regret helping them have a go. The rest have been a mix of acceptable and awesome.
This is from a mix of board games, films and technology companies. I'm upset that I've had to write one off, but I knew that was a risk and accepted it.
Or a mouse without a few wires & dongles and shit coming out of it.
While it is a cool hack, without wireless screen I'm not sure it is worth while.
The Galaxy Note PDAs are what I want out of a phone. I've bought into the Android ecosystem, to change that (i.e. get rid of Play Store and the content from that) would leave me no where to go. No other manufacturer currently makes PDAs.
Eurasian Land Bridge does not roll off the tongue. Maybe Bogie exchange?
> Nope, it means you were lucky!
Crap. Yes evaluate the projects first. Do a little internal math and check if the company has asked for enough to complete the project. Do they appear to have the skill set required to get the project out the door? Have they lied in the project description?
I've backed a few projects on Kickstarter (and alikes). I've got some fantastic big name games and cool indy games and the warm glow of knowing I helped them on their way.
Its a risk but a risk but one you can do derisk quite a way.
> Anyone who contributes money to a Kickstarter project deserves what they get.
I agree. I've got naught but awesomeness.
>mostly it seems like it a moot point if it's cheap and offers the functionality specified
I disagree, if the hardware is open source or not is neither here or there but trust in the company providing the product is important and it looks like Anonabox have lost trust.
I use Google Now fairly regularly. Mostly to ask my phone to set an alarm.
Do they run You Tube, Skype (or Google video chat) and a web browser?
If so, I'm sold. Please tell me where I can get a sub 30 GBP tablet.
Where did you get the $35 Android tablets from? The lowest I've seen is in the $50 (£30) range.
Or they have figured out what is best for the customer, and it is what everyone else is providing.
Personally I hope the 6C is closer to the size of the iPhone 4/5, as what is good is options. I love my big PDA (don't give a shit about phones and phablets), but I can see good reasons for others to want a smaller device.
> $600.99
Assuming a $25 contract I guess?
$600.99 or $600.99 - the cost of 2 years worth of credit - two years worth of phone usage?
Now this number will be maybe $450. Some "throwing numbers about" puts two years of credit at $85. So that is $515.99 for the phone + mobile contract. Take away the phone ($450.99) and you have a mobile contract at $32.50 a year or under $3 a month.
I'm not sure I see that as all that bad.
Yes. Or some form of two phase auth. Email followed by SMS for example.
> And WTF does this have to do with overtime?
Many people foolishly think that as they can check their work email while on holiday, they should check their work email while on holiday. By doing so they are doing unpaid overtime (an evil evil thing).
> Most adults who play FPS tend to play offline (i.e. Bioshock).
I disagree, most adults who play FPSes online don't talk.
They do trains so I don't see why not, it is much more moral than the prices they charge on trains.
I come from the same camp, hire the best person for the role. Definitely.
But best is not just "technically best" but also "team fit best" and "not a dick" and "can communicate with the team" and various other little things. What this can mean is that the team unconsciously equates "best team fit" as "same as the rest of the team". The management should step in if this happens and look at ways to fixing what is a problem and reports like the one performed by Mr Apple is one quick way to measure if this is happening.
> Have you paused to consider that there might be other lifestyles than your own?
Yeap. And I want a smart watch. Or Glasses (minus the camera maybe), I've not worn a watch since the late 80s when it came with a radio built in.
As long as they don't stop selling watches when they start selling smart watches we will both be groovy. I'll have both a smart watch and you will have a watch. CauseBy may have an even smarter watch then I.
Wow so they fucked the TV show up then as I don't remember the helicopters in A Song of Ice and Fire.
By running the screensaver on The Cloud we can save each home device from having to process the images.
I pay a flat rate for water as well. :/
Run it in a browser without having to compile it into Javascript.
You could o/c not do any front end interaction have a set of static pages (yeay the 90s) or use Flash (Wooo 2000!).
Find yourself a good REST writing API (I'd go Jersey & Guice, but many go Spring for Java) and then HTML AngularJS as your front end framework.
> virtual machine
VM or emulator?
How about an emulator running on the JavaScript Virtual Machine? You can do that. ;)