My own anecdote is that while this winter has been quite a bit milder than usual, the last two years have seen an entire decade's worth of snow in my part of the Mid-Atlantic, not the result of freak storms either but of several moderate storms, the likes of which would be entirely unremarkable in New England, say.
Easy come, easy go.
I'll be the first to admit that tablets aren't my thing, but let's call a spade a spade and an expensive toy an expensive toy. Tablets are pretty much one of those things you own because it does neat and entertaining things, not because (like traditional computers) it is a practical device for any but maybe a few specialized varieties of serious productivity or because (like phones) it provides a means of instant communication most people insist on having on them at all times. Tablets don't really satisfy a specific need. Most people already have a variety of devices which individually offer all the functionality of a tablet, usually with greater effectiveness.
Still, perhaps I did not communicate effectively the tone I intended, which was one of grudging admiration for the accomplishment of a company I generally don't like. No other company could have ever made people want such an frivolous device--few, in fact, are having any real success following the leader, for that matter. Certainly Acer's line of reasoning regarding their comments on tablets reflects some of what I've said. The rest is because the terms 'tablet' and 'iPad' are interchangeable in many people's minds, and that's just not a mountain most companies will successfully scale.
To take what is essentially an expensive toy, an oversized smartphone which doesn't make calls, a laptop which is only barely practical for any serious use, and turn it into a smash success which creates an entirely new sector of portable electronics and dominates the shit out of it.
Apple is the New England Patriots of consumer technology.
All I ever did with my PSP was run emulators on it. Maybe someday I'll get the Vita, when my PSP finally goes tits up and I need a new portable emulation device.
That's also my viewpoint. My phone is thin enough. Thinning it even more is not going to give me any material benefit worth such a complicated (and potentially expensive) work-around.
Of course, in the wider scheme of things, a browser's stock security is probably more important because add-ons and extensions are effective only if a person is aware of them and takes the time to install them. I'm sure a lot of people don't know to do this, or know and don't bother.
My own anecdote is that while this winter has been quite a bit milder than usual, the last two years have seen an entire decade's worth of snow in my part of the Mid-Atlantic, not the result of freak storms either but of several moderate storms, the likes of which would be entirely unremarkable in New England, say. Easy come, easy go.
18 y/o having sex with a 17.9999999999 y/o?.
If you can't wait 1/500000th of a second, you deserve whatever happens to you.
I'll be the first to admit that tablets aren't my thing, but let's call a spade a spade and an expensive toy an expensive toy. Tablets are pretty much one of those things you own because it does neat and entertaining things, not because (like traditional computers) it is a practical device for any but maybe a few specialized varieties of serious productivity or because (like phones) it provides a means of instant communication most people insist on having on them at all times. Tablets don't really satisfy a specific need. Most people already have a variety of devices which individually offer all the functionality of a tablet, usually with greater effectiveness. Still, perhaps I did not communicate effectively the tone I intended, which was one of grudging admiration for the accomplishment of a company I generally don't like. No other company could have ever made people want such an frivolous device--few, in fact, are having any real success following the leader, for that matter. Certainly Acer's line of reasoning regarding their comments on tablets reflects some of what I've said. The rest is because the terms 'tablet' and 'iPad' are interchangeable in many people's minds, and that's just not a mountain most companies will successfully scale.
To take what is essentially an expensive toy, an oversized smartphone which doesn't make calls, a laptop which is only barely practical for any serious use, and turn it into a smash success which creates an entirely new sector of portable electronics and dominates the shit out of it. Apple is the New England Patriots of consumer technology.
Ninja Gaiden will know when it's pissing me off? And then it'll, what, get even harder?
I actually had a picture on the wall fall crooked by as many as five terrifying degrees.
I've finally lived the dream of getting to watch my furniture dance without the benefit of alcohol. I'm about an hour's drive from the epicenter.
All I ever did with my PSP was run emulators on it. Maybe someday I'll get the Vita, when my PSP finally goes tits up and I need a new portable emulation device.
That's also my viewpoint. My phone is thin enough. Thinning it even more is not going to give me any material benefit worth such a complicated (and potentially expensive) work-around.
Of course, in the wider scheme of things, a browser's stock security is probably more important because add-ons and extensions are effective only if a person is aware of them and takes the time to install them. I'm sure a lot of people don't know to do this, or know and don't bother.
I wish you would of let them figure it out on there own.
is collect a group of xkcd readers and "House of Leaves" obsessives. They'd figure it out in about three days.
A tree fell on my neighbor's car last week, destroying it completely and causing as much as 100 kilodroids of waste material.