If you're on a budget and have a family, "six of this one" or "one of the other" can be a pretty compelling argument. Not having to share is kind of nice too.
IBM's market cap has bounced back. Surprisingly they're worth more than Microsoft again. Companies to look at for "Failure to adapt" might include RIM, Nokia, HP.
No. The iPad has half that and does OK. The software is not retarded like the Windows software that you know. It's actually designed to deliver performance, not prevent it. So 1GB is far more than enough.
As a parting gift: It's probably OK to try to dick with other people to push your memes. Don't mess around with symbolset and this would probably have gone better for you. I figured you'd have known that by now though. You've seen this go down a hundred times at least and the end was always the same. I don't have any sockpuppets - this is really me. You don't have to reply to comments.
BTW: Flohawks has openings. I'd look into that before I went your way. It's honest work.
If you can't parse that email and get of it what I said you'll be of little use in your current position. It requires a certain minimum ability to connect dots. It bears directly on our prior discussion and is topical, so no off-topic mods for me. Of course, willingness to understand the lesson despite incentives that contraindicate understanding might be a challenge. But here the truth is plainly writ if you'll read it.
I'm glad you found a good dollar fountain. We all need that. But don't use that to come up in here and try to claim things we know aren't true. You know better than that.
Doesn't it bother you just a little bit that I, some random poster on a blog can point to the the precise executive email that defined your response nearly 20 years ago?
Only with the keyboard, which has an extra battery (frankly for mass to balance the tablet-as-screen). The Transfomrer Prime's commited lifecycle is exactly that of the iPad 2. Completely an accident, I'm sure.
And we'll give our Office team access to these future undocumented APIs, so they don't have to compete on a field that's level. Not that it matters: putting glyphs on a page was a solved problem in 1990 and ever since we're getting them to move to new versions with incompatible file formats and by moving their buttons. I can't believe they're so retarded they're actually still buying this schtick. It's good money though.
Second reply, sorry. No, my use is definitely not stationary. My best use of the thing is catching a whole movie on Netflix, which in my life involves dodging projectiles, feeding children, being evicted from the room several times an hour, and sometimes leaving the house entirely. Before I had the Transformer completing a 2 hour movie in under a week was just not possible. A 12-13.3" screen would be better, and I expect to see it soon.
Because I've got this tablet and NetFlix I've caught up on the cultural context of Weeds and Breaking Bad, which frankly was leading to some awkward conversations among my peers who expect me to know absolutely everything they care about.
It's got a crack in the corner because I dropped it while dodging a nickel rocket and the rocket blasted it. Apparently the Gorilla glass isn't proof against rocket exhaust. I can live with that little crack as it doesn't impact anything and frankly that was my fault. Yes, I've dropped my Transformer a dozen times, and it's daily handled by kids in the 2-9 year old range without supervision. God only knows what they do with it. It seems to be durable enough for my purposes.
I've ripped a number of DVDs, and downloaded some HD videos and played them on it. It's quite capable - it plays nearly every thing I feed it. Even Dell's.wmv's I've been using it to skill up on their latest gear.
I bought the HDMI cable so if a bigger display suits me better I can have my desktop monitor 23", my bedroom 47", or the the family room 55" without any degradation in quality. I'm coming nearsighted, so this happens a lot. My kids totally dig HD YouTube Zelda videos on the bigscreen, which is improving our bonding.
Perfect is an unachievable goal, but these things are "good enough" and then some.
The cheezy touchscreens are resistive and have one point of control. The capacitive touchscreens have to be licensed so the tech costs more, but have up to ten simultaneous touchpoints and things like pressure sensitivity. Buying a license to the patents costs money.
Even if your population is growing to some degree if your population's lifespan is increasing to a greater degree then - fail. You wind up with a huge entitled retired population supported by an ever-decreasing fraction of producers. This leads to inevitable collapse of the system. To restore the system to balance we could increase the burden on the already struggling producers, or encourage the retired population to engage in risky behaviors like bridge jumping or smoking crack. Unfortunately retired folk are cautious of such traps, having seen them before.
Or we could encourage the retired to re-enter the producer class which is already oversupplied with workers and increase our unemployment woes.
For the ultimate solution to this problem I'm going to go with "After preserving the common defense the greatest role of government is to deplete the surplus productivity." We need WPA-style projects that consume huge human resources done in the least mechanized way possible.
By all accounts they sold 1.6 million of 'em, which isn't bad for a few months on a new product - about $2B the first half year. To have the next gen come so soon after is quite awesome. The original one will continue to sell on a long tail for some time, since it's great and has the best port mix of all Android tablets.
I've got one, and it rocks. Updates come quick and I'm really looking forward to ICS. All the apps I bought for my phone just automagically are available on the tablet and work great. Other tablet platforms might have a "limited apps" issue, but apparently Android was well designed to scale to different resolutions since version 1.6 oh, so long ago. If you get one, try "Corby." Google Talk is also nice - it lets me video chat with the kids when I'm away from home on business. Kindle is essential - I just downloaded "At Napoleon's Side in Russia", the journal of Armand De Caulaincourt of the Napoleonic siege of Moscow that many years later disheartened the Nazi invaders as told here. I'm gaining a new respect for the strength of the Russian people's character, which isn't a benefit I expected from a geek toy. The miniHDMI port is handy for giving presentations in conference rooms because the included Polaris Office handles Powerpoints nicely, and for reference docs there's PDF. It does Flash, which is nice when I want to research what the Internet is for.
The launch of the Transformer Prime solves my biggest problem with the Transformer: holding on to the damned thing. Apparently my wife and kids (and grandson) are fond of these apps and want to use my tablet all day. Now I can hand it down to them and get me the Prime. Sweet.
Gordian knot. Alexandrian solution.
If you're on a budget and have a family, "six of this one" or "one of the other" can be a pretty compelling argument. Not having to share is kind of nice too.
I don't find the Kindle Fire sluggish at all. Maybe you got a bad one.
Some planets have moons.
Well clearly we should split the work, so we can pursue all of the above.
IBM's market cap has bounced back. Surprisingly they're worth more than Microsoft again. Companies to look at for "Failure to adapt" might include RIM, Nokia, HP.
Slang term. One of the larger bottle rockets. The body of the rocket is about the same diameter as a nickel.
No. The iPad has half that and does OK. The software is not retarded like the Windows software that you know. It's actually designed to deliver performance, not prevent it. So 1GB is far more than enough.
As a parting gift: It's probably OK to try to dick with other people to push your memes. Don't mess around with symbolset and this would probably have gone better for you. I figured you'd have known that by now though. You've seen this go down a hundred times at least and the end was always the same. I don't have any sockpuppets - this is really me. You don't have to reply to comments.
BTW: Flohawks has openings. I'd look into that before I went your way. It's honest work.
If you can't parse that email and get of it what I said you'll be of little use in your current position. It requires a certain minimum ability to connect dots. It bears directly on our prior discussion and is topical, so no off-topic mods for me. Of course, willingness to understand the lesson despite incentives that contraindicate understanding might be a challenge. But here the truth is plainly writ if you'll read it.
I'm glad you found a good dollar fountain. We all need that. But don't use that to come up in here and try to claim things we know aren't true. You know better than that.
Doesn't it bother you just a little bit that I, some random poster on a blog can point to the the precise executive email that defined your response nearly 20 years ago?
Well it's nice we have your personal word on that, since you guys as a team are historically reliable in this regard.
I know the way forward. You don't. You can buy this secret from me. You won't. And that's the end of that story.
Only with the keyboard, which has an extra battery (frankly for mass to balance the tablet-as-screen). The Transfomrer Prime's commited lifecycle is exactly that of the iPad 2. Completely an accident, I'm sure.
And we'll give our Office team access to these future undocumented APIs, so they don't have to compete on a field that's level. Not that it matters: putting glyphs on a page was a solved problem in 1990 and ever since we're getting them to move to new versions with incompatible file formats and by moving their buttons. I can't believe they're so retarded they're actually still buying this schtick. It's good money though.
Then it's a software thing. Solve it yourself or somebody else will.
Second reply, sorry. No, my use is definitely not stationary. My best use of the thing is catching a whole movie on Netflix, which in my life involves dodging projectiles, feeding children, being evicted from the room several times an hour, and sometimes leaving the house entirely. Before I had the Transformer completing a 2 hour movie in under a week was just not possible. A 12-13.3" screen would be better, and I expect to see it soon.
Because I've got this tablet and NetFlix I've caught up on the cultural context of Weeds and Breaking Bad, which frankly was leading to some awkward conversations among my peers who expect me to know absolutely everything they care about.
It's got a crack in the corner because I dropped it while dodging a nickel rocket and the rocket blasted it. Apparently the Gorilla glass isn't proof against rocket exhaust. I can live with that little crack as it doesn't impact anything and frankly that was my fault. Yes, I've dropped my Transformer a dozen times, and it's daily handled by kids in the 2-9 year old range without supervision. God only knows what they do with it. It seems to be durable enough for my purposes.
I've ripped a number of DVDs, and downloaded some HD videos and played them on it. It's quite capable - it plays nearly every thing I feed it. Even Dell's .wmv's I've been using it to skill up on their latest gear.
I bought the HDMI cable so if a bigger display suits me better I can have my desktop monitor 23", my bedroom 47", or the the family room 55" without any degradation in quality. I'm coming nearsighted, so this happens a lot. My kids totally dig HD YouTube Zelda videos on the bigscreen, which is improving our bonding.
Perfect is an unachievable goal, but these things are "good enough" and then some.
The cheezy touchscreens are resistive and have one point of control. The capacitive touchscreens have to be licensed so the tech costs more, but have up to ten simultaneous touchpoints and things like pressure sensitivity. Buying a license to the patents costs money.
10 hours, near enough. 14 with the keyboard/dock/extended battery. In actual use charging once a week. Nice try though.
Who paid you for this? The thing's as responsive as all hell. I wish my W7 4-core 8GB Windows desktop were so quick.
The battery rocks. It's like "don't worry about it" kind of good. 16 hour flight? No problem.
Even if your population is growing to some degree if your population's lifespan is increasing to a greater degree then - fail. You wind up with a huge entitled retired population supported by an ever-decreasing fraction of producers. This leads to inevitable collapse of the system. To restore the system to balance we could increase the burden on the already struggling producers, or encourage the retired population to engage in risky behaviors like bridge jumping or smoking crack. Unfortunately retired folk are cautious of such traps, having seen them before.
Or we could encourage the retired to re-enter the producer class which is already oversupplied with workers and increase our unemployment woes.
For the ultimate solution to this problem I'm going to go with "After preserving the common defense the greatest role of government is to deplete the surplus productivity." We need WPA-style projects that consume huge human resources done in the least mechanized way possible.
By all accounts they sold 1.6 million of 'em, which isn't bad for a few months on a new product - about $2B the first half year. To have the next gen come so soon after is quite awesome. The original one will continue to sell on a long tail for some time, since it's great and has the best port mix of all Android tablets.
I've got one, and it rocks. Updates come quick and I'm really looking forward to ICS. All the apps I bought for my phone just automagically are available on the tablet and work great. Other tablet platforms might have a "limited apps" issue, but apparently Android was well designed to scale to different resolutions since version 1.6 oh, so long ago. If you get one, try "Corby." Google Talk is also nice - it lets me video chat with the kids when I'm away from home on business. Kindle is essential - I just downloaded "At Napoleon's Side in Russia", the journal of Armand De Caulaincourt of the Napoleonic siege of Moscow that many years later disheartened the Nazi invaders as told here. I'm gaining a new respect for the strength of the Russian people's character, which isn't a benefit I expected from a geek toy. The miniHDMI port is handy for giving presentations in conference rooms because the included Polaris Office handles Powerpoints nicely, and for reference docs there's PDF. It does Flash, which is nice when I want to research what the Internet is for.
The launch of the Transformer Prime solves my biggest problem with the Transformer: holding on to the damned thing. Apparently my wife and kids (and grandson) are fond of these apps and want to use my tablet all day. Now I can hand it down to them and get me the Prime. Sweet.