LOL, I nearly spit out my pre-workout drink. I'm off now to engage in activities that will promote demethylation of energy metabolism DNA in hopes of continuing my transformation into a capybara...
You answered your own question about exercise being good with your remark on moderation. I believe exercise in moderation can be great for your health. Body builders, being gym rats, hardly exemplify moderation.
I don't think the selling point of iPods was ever that they had the most features ("no wifi, less space than a nomad..."), but that it had, and arguably still has, the most intuitive and easiest to use interface, along with incredibly easy synching and the seamless integration with the iTunes music store. The iPod was definitely not just successful due to marketing.
I think the iPhone will be similar: a few core features that are very easy to use, not the most features you've ever seen packed into a phone. The innovation will be in the UI. But people should wait until it comes out before dismissing it as low end or before hyping it as the most high end phone ever. It'll depend on whether the multi-touch interface actually works well, and whether it really has the fully featured safari web browser they claim it does, among other things of course.
Renaming Terminal to something like iTerminal.app will break the example scripts that take advantage of this security hole. The default viewer (quicktime or preview) will be launched instead and produce an error like "corrupt file"
As long as the government agencies don't use them within their own territories against their own citizens then it's fine.
LOL, I nearly spit out my pre-workout drink. I'm off now to engage in activities that will promote demethylation of energy metabolism DNA in hopes of continuing my transformation into a capybara...
You answered your own question about exercise being good with your remark on moderation. I believe exercise in moderation can be great for your health. Body builders, being gym rats, hardly exemplify moderation.
I thought Yahoo search was now powered by Bing, so there shouldn't be any major differences in queries: http://arstechnica.com/microsoft/news/2010/08/yahoo-transition-to-bing-finalized-in-us-canada.ars
feature-crippled iPod? you fell into the trap?
I don't think the selling point of iPods was ever that they had the most features ("no wifi, less space than a nomad..."), but that it had, and arguably still has, the most intuitive and easiest to use interface, along with incredibly easy synching and the seamless integration with the iTunes music store. The iPod was definitely not just successful due to marketing.
I think the iPhone will be similar: a few core features that are very easy to use, not the most features you've ever seen packed into a phone. The innovation will be in the UI. But people should wait until it comes out before dismissing it as low end or before hyping it as the most high end phone ever. It'll depend on whether the multi-touch interface actually works well, and whether it really has the fully featured safari web browser they claim it does, among other things of course.
Renaming Terminal to something like iTerminal.app will break the example scripts that take advantage of this security hole. The default viewer (quicktime or preview) will be launched instead and produce an error like "corrupt file"