AFAIK, this is with the N900 only, though. Probably a parody of the Apple thing. In fact, I have no idea where the N9 was manufactured, it doesn't appear anywhere on the phone.
We don't trade with them as much as bribe their leaders to allow western companies to shuttle natural resources out of the country for ridiculously low prices. When leaders try to nationalize oil/banana/ore production, they are suddenly branded dictators/communists (see Venezuela, Guatemala, Congo, etc).
It was leaked because Obama wants to show he wasn't weak on Iran so he can get reelected. Leaks like this usually happen because the people in charge want it to be known (with the exception of the Bradley Manning leak, ofcourse).
Because they tried this before, with the <object> tag, which could support any possible codec (quicktime, realvideo, wmv,...). This ended up being such a huge mess that web developers decided to just go with flash instead, because for all its failings, at least it worked on most computers (and you didn't need to deal with the ugly default controls media players insisted on at the time).
there are a million and one legitimate reasons why voting in person may be difficult to impossible for a lot of people...
You could take away many of those reasons by holding elections on a sunday, like pretty much every other country. I still don't understand how people need to take time off from work to go voting in the US. No wonder only old people vote, they've got time to do this.
Some places don't have reliable power, and it would be pretty beneficial for Nokia if they could sell a phone that had this advantage over other phones aimed at the 3rd world market. As it is now some people now charge their phones by going to special charging shops where you hand over the phone and they hook it up to a charger fed by a generator.
Except in the case of countries like Iran and China, where they can easily do a permanent MITM attack for webmail providers if they wanted to for the first and any subsequent connections. I'm not saying the current system is perfect or even good, but your alternative is worse in many respects.
There are phones that cost more than a $1000? I've never heard of such a thing, excluding those gimmicky luxury phones that have diamonds laid into them and have some fashionable brand on them.
I don't see why the US government wouldn't subcontract these sorts of things. In fact, it makes a lot of sense to offload the hosting of an anti-piracy site to the private sector as you know it's going to get DDOSed and attacked.
The fennec process lingering happens only sometimes, I think it has to do with whether I'm running other apps, and because i closed it because it appeared to be hanging. I'll try to find a way to reliably reproduce it and file a bug when I do.
Luckily the phone gets pretty hot when fennec doesn't close properly, so I know something's up when it happens:p .
Use the hardware volume keys to zoom in and out in increments.
Which pisses me off as I want to use those keys to change the volume (but this isn't just Firefox doing this, MicroB and the photo viewer use them as zoom buttons too).
I wish Mozilla implemented the swirl thing for the n900, though, but maybe Nokia patented it or something.
I've installed it on my n900, but it's unusably slow, especially compared to MicroB, which is the default browser on Maemo (which also uses the gecko engine). It takes ages to start up, uses up all the CPU, and it takes 5 minutes before you finally managed to load a page. Also, after you close the browser, there's a 'fennec' process still using all the CPU cycles and draining your battery.
Too bad, because I do like its feature set: Firefox sync, addons, etc, but I'll stick to MicroB until they find a solution to the CPU use issue.
This is a preference in compiz. If you install compiz settings manager (ccsm), you can change this. Start it, click the 'move window' button, and uncheck 'constrain Y'.
This is the bug report on the default setting, if you want to vote for it..
Why do you even need to prefetch images? I haven't needed to do that in years. If you use it for rollovers, look into using css sprites. If it's for some fancy javascript stuff, use the javascript image object. If it's something else, please share.
It's probably the final, unless a bug crops up at the last minute. Don't forget that Release Candidate means: this is the version we'll ship, unless we find there's something wrong with it.
No, it's a skill. Most of IE's bugs are well-documented with workarounds and everything. It's really possible to write css-based layouts and have them work in IE, we do it all the time.
Still, I don't get why the OP bitches about it crashing on empty select boxes. If your select box is going to be empty, don't display it. How hard is that to do?
Sure, IE shouldn't crash when it encounters one of those, but what's an user supposed to do with an empty select box?
The solution is to make any dialog related to display settings smaller than 320x240. It really can't be that hard, can it? The window in Ubuntu is 470px high currently (which already is way better than Windows' 800px or whatever), but I guess if you could still make it 240px high if you got rid of the preview thing. Maybe this could be conditional, based on the current screen resolution.
A great example of how not to do it is 'Envy' (which is a tool you can use to install the latest ATI and NVIDIA drivers on Ubuntu). The developer decided to add a huge 'Envy' banner at the top of his application (the banner takes up about 200px of vertical space). Not only is it generally a bad idea to add a banner like that to you app (that's what the 'about' dialog is for), it's especially bad if not a small part of your userbase is using your app because their graphics adapter isn't working properly, thus they're stuck a low resolution.
Also aboard the upgrade train is automatic crash recovery Kind of funny, you'd think they'd work on not making it crash. Or at least spin it a little better. Firefox has the same feature too. Browsers have to accept tons of different types of input (html, js, css, different image formats,...) and try to make sense of it all. Third-party extensions and plugins can cause the browser to crash.
I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy, but that was low, even for Slashdot.
AFAIK, this is with the N900 only, though. Probably a parody of the Apple thing. In fact, I have no idea where the N9 was manufactured, it doesn't appear anywhere on the phone.
We don't trade with them as much as bribe their leaders to allow western companies to shuttle natural resources out of the country for ridiculously low prices. When leaders try to nationalize oil/banana/ore production, they are suddenly branded dictators/communists (see Venezuela, Guatemala, Congo, etc).
Wait, aren't you supposed to use that every time you park your car?
It was leaked because Obama wants to show he wasn't weak on Iran so he can get reelected. Leaks like this usually happen because the people in charge want it to be known (with the exception of the Bradley Manning leak, ofcourse).
I've opted out every time, and they never force you to do it or even ask you why. Just be polite about it and don't be a dick.
Because they tried this before, with the <object> tag, which could support any possible codec (quicktime, realvideo, wmv, ...). This ended up being such a huge mess that web developers decided to just go with flash instead, because for all its failings, at least it worked on most computers (and you didn't need to deal with the ugly default controls media players insisted on at the time).
You could take away many of those reasons by holding elections on a sunday, like pretty much every other country. I still don't understand how people need to take time off from work to go voting in the US. No wonder only old people vote, they've got time to do this.
Thanks for ruining Die Hard for me, asshole!
Some places don't have reliable power, and it would be pretty beneficial for Nokia if they could sell a phone that had this advantage over other phones aimed at the 3rd world market. As it is now some people now charge their phones by going to special charging shops where you hand over the phone and they hook it up to a charger fed by a generator.
Except in the case of countries like Iran and China, where they can easily do a permanent MITM attack for webmail providers if they wanted to for the first and any subsequent connections. I'm not saying the current system is perfect or even good, but your alternative is worse in many respects.
There are phones that cost more than a $1000? I've never heard of such a thing, excluding those gimmicky luxury phones that have diamonds laid into them and have some fashionable brand on them.
I don't see why the US government wouldn't subcontract these sorts of things. In fact, it makes a lot of sense to offload the hosting of an anti-piracy site to the private sector as you know it's going to get DDOSed and attacked.
The fennec process lingering happens only sometimes, I think it has to do with whether I'm running other apps, and because i closed it because it appeared to be hanging. I'll try to find a way to reliably reproduce it and file a bug when I do.
Luckily the phone gets pretty hot when fennec doesn't close properly, so I know something's up when it happens :p .
Which pisses me off as I want to use those keys to change the volume (but this isn't just Firefox doing this, MicroB and the photo viewer use them as zoom buttons too).
I wish Mozilla implemented the swirl thing for the n900, though, but maybe Nokia patented it or something.
I've installed it on my n900, but it's unusably slow, especially compared to MicroB, which is the default browser on Maemo (which also uses the gecko engine). It takes ages to start up, uses up all the CPU, and it takes 5 minutes before you finally managed to load a page. Also, after you close the browser, there's a 'fennec' process still using all the CPU cycles and draining your battery.
Too bad, because I do like its feature set: Firefox sync, addons, etc, but I'll stick to MicroB until they find a solution to the CPU use issue.
This is a preference in compiz. If you install compiz settings manager (ccsm), you can change this. Start it, click the 'move window' button, and uncheck 'constrain Y'.
This is the bug report on the default setting, if you want to vote for it..
Why do you even need to prefetch images? I haven't needed to do that in years. If you use it for rollovers, look into using css sprites. If it's for some fancy javascript stuff, use the javascript image object. If it's something else, please share.
It's webkit. See page 12 of the comic.
It's probably the final, unless a bug crops up at the last minute. Don't forget that Release Candidate means: this is the version we'll ship, unless we find there's something wrong with it.
http://www.asoftsite.org/s9y/archives/140-Firefox-3-to-be-released-next-week-Tue,-Jun-17.html
No, it's a skill. Most of IE's bugs are well-documented with workarounds and everything. It's really possible to write css-based layouts and have them work in IE, we do it all the time.
Still, I don't get why the OP bitches about it crashing on empty select boxes. If your select box is going to be empty, don't display it. How hard is that to do?
Sure, IE shouldn't crash when it encounters one of those, but what's an user supposed to do with an empty select box?
The solution is to make any dialog related to display settings smaller than 320x240. It really can't be that hard, can it? The window in Ubuntu is 470px high currently (which already is way better than Windows' 800px or whatever), but I guess if you could still make it 240px high if you got rid of the preview thing. Maybe this could be conditional, based on the current screen resolution.
A great example of how not to do it is 'Envy' (which is a tool you can use to install the latest ATI and NVIDIA drivers on Ubuntu). The developer decided to add a huge 'Envy' banner at the top of his application (the banner takes up about 200px of vertical space). Not only is it generally a bad idea to add a banner like that to you app (that's what the 'about' dialog is for), it's especially bad if not a small part of your userbase is using your app because their graphics adapter isn't working properly, thus they're stuck a low resolution.
I hate Microsoft as much as the next guy, but that was low, even for Slashdot.
"Liberal" means something completely different outside of the US.