Certainly this at least will change with the move to a desktop Windows 8 kernel. As the summary says, Through the Win 8 kernel, WP8 will support native code and multi-core processors. (support here is probably a codeword for require).
Flash had been around for over 5 years until it became the unofficial standard for rich internet applications (right around the time youtube showed up).
Youtube has nothing to do with RIA BTW, Flash was just used for video playback. Flash never became the standard for RIA, because RIA didn't really take off until Javascript performance and browser standardization made AJAX viable.
The little stylish flash players were neat, portable and had good battery life, but only holding 5 or 10 songs made them a complete joke.
Before the iPod nano, flash players almost universally used removable storage (MMC and SD mostly). So they were only limited by the memory sizes available at the time, and it was easy (though expensive) to carry a pile of memory cards just as you would a pile of CDs.
Apple was fully prepared to pay FRAND licensing. Samsung was being the douchebag by trying to essentially extort a cross licensing agreement with Apple to use patents covered under FRAND. Apple rightfully refused to bend over. Samsung had ZERO right to change the rules. Apple let the case run its course through the court system until it was agreed that Samsung was in the wrong for pulling such a stunt.
Apple offered to pay FRAND licensing for only some of Samsung's patents, and only covering devices sold in the Netherlands where the case was being heard. That doesn't sound like fully prepared to me. And having made a cross licensing deal with Nokia a few months before, as well as paying Nokia a premium for access to their FRAND patents, who is being the douchebag now by refusing to do the same deal with other phone manufacturers? Cross licensing is what keeps technology moving forward. Taking your toys and going home is good for nobody in the long run.
I can set it to require unlock, and I may have to, but it does affect the usefulness of Siri.
This isn't really a problem on Android devices, where automation applications such as Llama, Locale or Tasker can disable the lock screen when you are in a scenario (which could be location, time, Bluetooth connection, calendar event....) where you need the voice control.
No, I meant that the presence of a few British restaurants in a list of the top 50 in the world does not mean that British cuisine is palatable in general.
(e.g. see The World's Best Restaurants, and compare the number of UK and US restaurants
1. Comparing your food with that of the US is not setting a very challenging target.
2. The vast majority of British restaurants are not in the list of the Worlds 50 best restaurants.
Probably the dispute link causes a human to review the video. In your case, they see that there has obviously been a cock-up, as there is no music, and the video is obviously not commercially produced. In the TFA case, there is music, and Universal says it is theirs. See the difference yet?
Their low end needs to be divided by 13, as it is possible (though unlikely) that all users that have downloaded these apps have downloaded all 13. And then there are the users who wipe their phones (perhaps because they saw malware symptoms) and redownload. So probably the reality is anywhere between 50,000 and 5,000,000 infections.
Until the Kobe quake in the 1990's, Japan's quake mitigation effort was almost entirely focused on Tokyo. You see the same happening with San Francisco in US, and Wellington in New Zealand until the Christchurch quake in 2010. Because big quakes have happened in a big city in the past, attention is concentrated on a repeat occurrence, and not so much on the same thing (or worse) happening elsewhere.
You obviously aren't familiar with the Israeli response to terrorism. They'll track him down to within a neighbourhood, then send in the army to shoot children, aid workers and journalists at random.
Probably this is the only way they can comply with the court ruling without significant effort to special exceptions everywhere for this one site. Especially since now this has been widely publicised, they can expect certain anonymous sections of the internet community will deliberately attempt to teach this company a lesson they do not want to learn.
Think about this next time you illegally park in a disabled spot. Not only might you get a ticket, and scratches on your car from irate wheelchair users, but you may also be sued by Apple.
The camera I have with me every time is my phone. If I'm going to specifically take a camera, I want a dSLR. Why anyone would buy a compact these days is beyond me. Most of them are as slow, noisy and unfocused as a phone camera anyway. Yes you get 12 million noisy pixels rather than 5 million, but what is the point? If I'm going to print any larger than 6x4 I'll be using my dSLR, and quite frankly the 2Mpx compact I had 10 years ago took better pictures than any modern compact I've seen.
If the cost of a product is higher than the cost of reproducing and distributing that product yourself, the cost of the product is obviously set too high.
That might work when the product is a physical item, where mass manufacturing has enough of a cost advantage over one off duplication that there is still money left to let the artist profit from their work. But for MP3s where the cost of home duplication is practically zero?
Out of interest, why not N9? It seems like a natural evolution of N900.
Perhaps because it is a dead end. Advertised as such since over six months before it launched, which makes the average consumer scratch their head and wonder wtf is going on in Nokia's marketing department.
The Republicans forced this through by attaching these totalitarian provisions to the NDAA
Why is this constitutional? The Supreme Court should be striking down all the laws passed by unrelated riders that your politicians sneak through on the back of other bills.
I would counter, as a handicapped person, that there are too few. While there may be empty reserved slots much of the time, the "subscription rate" is for the busy times. I have been to places during holidays and other usually busy times where the reserved spots are all legitimately used.
I suspect most people's judgement is somewhat clouded by the fact that they pick the park closest to the door, then note that all the normal parks they walk past on their way in are full, while there are plenty of empty handicap spaces, and completely ignoring the rest of the empty carpark that they drove through on their couple of rounds of the carpark to make sure they got the closest park to the door.
The article links to the patent that was found to be infringed. Personally, I'm more interested in the other 5 patents. Are the FAT patents among them? This could affect device manufacturers far beyond Android, smartphones and tablets that have been paying Microsoft for the privilege of not being sued.
Certainly this at least will change with the move to a desktop Windows 8 kernel. As the summary says, Through the Win 8 kernel, WP8 will support native code and multi-core processors. (support here is probably a codeword for require).
95
Youtube has nothing to do with RIA BTW, Flash was just used for video playback. Flash never became the standard for RIA, because RIA didn't really take off until Javascript performance and browser standardization made AJAX viable.
Before the iPod nano, flash players almost universally used removable storage (MMC and SD mostly). So they were only limited by the memory sizes available at the time, and it was easy (though expensive) to carry a pile of memory cards just as you would a pile of CDs.
Apple offered to pay FRAND licensing for only some of Samsung's patents, and only covering devices sold in the Netherlands where the case was being heard. That doesn't sound like fully prepared to me. And having made a cross licensing deal with Nokia a few months before, as well as paying Nokia a premium for access to their FRAND patents, who is being the douchebag now by refusing to do the same deal with other phone manufacturers? Cross licensing is what keeps technology moving forward. Taking your toys and going home is good for nobody in the long run.
This isn't really a problem on Android devices, where automation applications such as Llama, Locale or Tasker can disable the lock screen when you are in a scenario (which could be location, time, Bluetooth connection, calendar event....) where you need the voice control.
No, I meant that the presence of a few British restaurants in a list of the top 50 in the world does not mean that British cuisine is palatable in general.
1. Comparing your food with that of the US is not setting a very challenging target.
2. The vast majority of British restaurants are not in the list of the Worlds 50 best restaurants.
Probably the dispute link causes a human to review the video. In your case, they see that there has obviously been a cock-up, as there is no music, and the video is obviously not commercially produced. In the TFA case, there is music, and Universal says it is theirs. See the difference yet?
Their low end needs to be divided by 13, as it is possible (though unlikely) that all users that have downloaded these apps have downloaded all 13. And then there are the users who wipe their phones (perhaps because they saw malware symptoms) and redownload. So probably the reality is anywhere between 50,000 and 5,000,000 infections.
But it says it's from a DMCA agent, doesn't that make it illegal not to believe it?
Until the Kobe quake in the 1990's, Japan's quake mitigation effort was almost entirely focused on Tokyo. You see the same happening with San Francisco in US, and Wellington in New Zealand until the Christchurch quake in 2010. Because big quakes have happened in a big city in the past, attention is concentrated on a repeat occurrence, and not so much on the same thing (or worse) happening elsewhere.
You obviously aren't familiar with the Israeli response to terrorism. They'll track him down to within a neighbourhood, then send in the army to shoot children, aid workers and journalists at random.
I remember using Slackware when the current Linux kernel was 0.96. It's what pulled me from BSD to Linux.
Probably this is the only way they can comply with the court ruling without significant effort to special exceptions everywhere for this one site. Especially since now this has been widely publicised, they can expect certain anonymous sections of the internet community will deliberately attempt to teach this company a lesson they do not want to learn.
Koha is Maori for donation. Treasure would be taonga.
Think about this next time you illegally park in a disabled spot. Not only might you get a ticket, and scratches on your car from irate wheelchair users, but you may also be sued by Apple.
The camera I have with me every time is my phone. If I'm going to specifically take a camera, I want a dSLR. Why anyone would buy a compact these days is beyond me. Most of them are as slow, noisy and unfocused as a phone camera anyway. Yes you get 12 million noisy pixels rather than 5 million, but what is the point? If I'm going to print any larger than 6x4 I'll be using my dSLR, and quite frankly the 2Mpx compact I had 10 years ago took better pictures than any modern compact I've seen.
That might work when the product is a physical item, where mass manufacturing has enough of a cost advantage over one off duplication that there is still money left to let the artist profit from their work. But for MP3s where the cost of home duplication is practically zero?
Perhaps because it is a dead end. Advertised as such since over six months before it launched, which makes the average consumer scratch their head and wonder wtf is going on in Nokia's marketing department.
Why is this constitutional? The Supreme Court should be striking down all the laws passed by unrelated riders that your politicians sneak through on the back of other bills.
I suspect most people's judgement is somewhat clouded by the fact that they pick the park closest to the door, then note that all the normal parks they walk past on their way in are full, while there are plenty of empty handicap spaces, and completely ignoring the rest of the empty carpark that they drove through on their couple of rounds of the carpark to make sure they got the closest park to the door.
Doing it like you describe, it is effectively a cleartext password, albeit a different one than the user typed.
The article links to the patent that was found to be infringed. Personally, I'm more interested in the other 5 patents. Are the FAT patents among them? This could affect device manufacturers far beyond Android, smartphones and tablets that have been paying Microsoft for the privilege of not being sued.
Intel?