AmphetamineCrown
AcetyleneCrown
AmphetamineCrown

I’m another one in favor of hand dicing the chuck. With all the spices in chili, seems like it kind of turns ground beef into paste. At least see if you can find chili grind.

Finally got around to making the Lucky Peach ramen dip. That stuff is awesome. I usually will only use about a 1/2 packet in ramen itself—stuff is too salty for me—so now I’ve got a reason to save my leftovers...

I’m going out on a limb and saying “make sure you’re going to a place you can trust” applies to consumption of any oyster, whether $1 or not...

In the opening sequence of Louis Malle’s Atlantic City, Susan Sarandon taught me you get rid of the fish smell using lemon juice.

I can’t imagine why, if you took the same holier-than-thou tone over there. You threaten them with the ban hammer too? Life might be easier if you spent some time rethinking how you present yourself.

Given how WiFi and cellular speeds vary considerably in my house, which is a lot smaller than an airport terminal and probably constructed with materials that involve a lot less attenuation of radio signals, I’d like to see more about their methodologies. Are there enough sample points measured? Are they comparing

The points I raised are not “very minor points.” They are fundamental the the actual telecom business—selling RF limited capacity, investing in infrastructure, and still making money. At this point, I’m not sure what you are calling “the idea,” but nothing you’ve said so far—in my mind—has any merit. It is either

Jesus effing christ. More stuff I’ve already answered or should be obvious to anyone who has looked at RF or business. But here we go.

I get frustrated when dealing with stupidity. It took me several tries to make you understand that “unlimited” isn’t really unlimited and that if you really wanted it, you could sign up for a business “unlimited” plan—all to make you understand that what you really wanted was an uncapped, unlimited plan at the same

Oh fuck off—you’ve been doing nothing but acting all superior, moralistic and faux offended, so you have no place to bitch about acting like a dick. From what I can tell, you are a computer network/IT flunky. You are also an arrogant little shit who doesn’t understand when he is out of his depth. Your implication

Airtime fairness? Like that little softswitch on your home router? Oh good lord. Once again you are proving you don’t know about radio networks. Not everyone has an “equal” connection to the cell because of Rayleigh fading, antenna coverage, multipath, priority, terrain, clutter, interference, and a hundred other

How old are you? Seriously, your response to me calling you out on stupid statements you are making is to threaten a banhammer? How cute. I haven’t seen a banhammer on LH in probably a decade.

First, the original post was about mobile, as was the comment—which asked what people were doing “to even be hitting 200 GB/mo on their mobile plans.” The reference to home use was saying that he couldn’t even get to those numbers in that context, so the debate strikes me as sort of besides the point. That said, my

Look, you’re the one styling yourself as an expert—”I do telecom for a living” and “I’m ahead of the curve”—so you shouldn’t be too offended when people call you out for spouting bullshit. If you can’t take it, get off the Internet. And color me unimpressed by your credentials—anyone who built a home network can

Look dude, you apparently don’t know shit about networks, but seem to think you are some kind of messiah about the future. Saying you are “ahead of the curve” is laughable. Learn something if you want people to take you seriously.

For someone who purports to “do telecom for a living,” you don’t seem to really know that much about it. AT&T didn’t buy AIO, AIO was a house brand that pre-dated the Cricket acquisition. AT&T bought Cricket and merged it into AIO and kept the Cricket brand. Not the other way around.

Since there is no difference between “business grade” and “consumer grade” when it comes to US wireless, you are saying you want a business service (i.e., unlimited data—if this mythical unlimited business plan even exists) at a consumer rate.

That all being said, I don’t think the availability of home fiber will change the statistics—I think the highest tier users are those that are using it as a substitute for home service. Fuck, I have WiFi at home and at work, and it is a rare month where my capacity exceeds 300 MB (that said, I don’t tether and

Well, I did start my statement with “I can’t find more recent stats, but a 2012 study...” I was aiming at finding something of more recent vintage, but my google-fu was suffering and I got bored with it. I’m sure there are differences now given the changes in use, but the reality with every network—wired or