I tried 1.5 briefly before, but uninstalled it again. I tried saving a page and the browser froze up completely. Others have told me it's like a buggy beta, so, no, I'd say Dell's doing a wise thing sticking with 1.0.6 for a while longer. Let 1.5 sort itself out first.
I haven't seen any billiards, rugy, golf, or hockey games involving bills, rugs, cars (of any brand) or hocking, but I *have* seen football involving, you know, football.
From the source:
The measures will require firms to store:
* data that can trace fixed or mobile telephone calls
* time and duration of calls
* location of the mobile phone being called
* details of connections made to the Internet
* details, but not the content, of internet e-mail and internet telephony services
There's nothing said about regular internet traffic except at the top of the article; "Police will have access to information about calls, text messages and internet data, but not exact call content."
But there's lots of different kinds of internet data, internet telephony and email being two of a multitude. I presume they are simply neglecting to mention that they intend to store all data, but doing some hasty calculations, in order to store all internet traffic in Sweden alone for 2 years would cost up to $2,500 million US in storage media alone. Possibly more. Probably much more.
I tried 1.5 briefly before, but uninstalled it again. I tried saving a page and the browser froze up completely. Others have told me it's like a buggy beta, so, no, I'd say Dell's doing a wise thing sticking with 1.0.6 for a while longer. Let 1.5 sort itself out first.
I haven't seen any billiards, rugy, golf, or hockey games involving bills, rugs, cars (of any brand) or hocking, but I *have* seen football involving, you know, football.
From the source: The measures will require firms to store: * data that can trace fixed or mobile telephone calls * time and duration of calls * location of the mobile phone being called * details of connections made to the Internet * details, but not the content, of internet e-mail and internet telephony services There's nothing said about regular internet traffic except at the top of the article; "Police will have access to information about calls, text messages and internet data, but not exact call content." But there's lots of different kinds of internet data, internet telephony and email being two of a multitude. I presume they are simply neglecting to mention that they intend to store all data, but doing some hasty calculations, in order to store all internet traffic in Sweden alone for 2 years would cost up to $2,500 million US in storage media alone. Possibly more. Probably much more.
I read that too. :/