DesElms
Gregg DesElms
DesElms

Ha! Good one.

This article makes me want to do a rant which begins with the classic, "In MY day..."

@NovusWill: I, too, am beginning to prefer AutomateIt... specifically the "Pro" version (AutomateIt Pro). I'm just curious why YOU do, though; and also what "[o]r partly, at least" means.

@Aeropher: Watching a little too much TV are we? Hmm? [grin]

@marnykino: You wrote, "[t]hat's a pretty good endorsement for purchasing a tracking app in my opinion!"

I have two stories, in both of which cases I got the phone back; and I'll tell you the three magic words that made it happen in both cases: REWARD IF FOUND

On the Sidengo web site, it says: "Additional Note: For a better experience, we recommend using one of the following browsers: Firefox, Chrome or Safari. (In other words, avoid using Internet Explorer, it’s a web designer’s worst nightmare.)"

Okay, here's my take on it all, not that anyone cares (though, that said, this is 35 years in IT speaking, here... for whatever that's worth)...

Everything I need to know about Fandango (and whether I should trust my movie information to it), I can determine from the sheer stupidity of its TV commercials, and its obvious catering to hipsters.

I agree that it's difficult, among apps out there, to improve, much, on the built-in video recorder in most Android phones. One obvious enhancement, though, would be an icon which takes the user straight to the camcorder part of the camera app, just as the "Camera" icon takes the user straight to the camera part of

An impressive relative newcomer (from Spain, but the company is aggressively pursuing English-speaking business, too) to the field is "Save Meeting"...

I love Comodo... er... well... for the most part, at least. But I most definitely do not like Comodo Dragon. It is, indeed, more crash prone; and is less compatible with Chrome extensions, just as you said...

I've been in IT for 35 years, and so I dare say I know a thing or two (though, I admit, perhaps little more than that) about all this; and just in case it will actually help anyone, I'm going to list, here, what I do to block as much stuff as I can (and from my cursory research, I seem to be doing a pretty darned good

Or could it be that Google is a US company still experimenting with and working-out the kinks in Google Voice; and also that the technology to provide free nationwide calling within the US is cost-effective for Google, but, because of tariffs imposed by mostly YOUR country, not so much in Canada? You think maybe it

I've been in this business for pushing 35 years, and every time I tell people what this article is telling its readers, I'm looked at like I'm a dinosaur who hasn't gotten with the wireless generation. Going wired in the workplace is better and more secure, too.

There are more reasons to keep the indoors warm in the winter than merely human comfort; and allowing indoor temperature to go down to 55 degree F is just dumb, in any case. Just because the thermostat will go that low doesn't mean it should ever be turned that low.

This word processor is nowhere NEAR ready. In February, I tried the same version that's still what's available, and posted the following comment about it on the author's web site:

The Sage is a nice product. No doubt about it. I used it, in fact, for years... though I never got used to the little "S" icon in the system tray just up and spinning around every now and then for no apparent reason. I complained and they finally said they'd fix it in a future version, so if any current users don't

Over the past couple of years, Google has been very clear about its plans. It does not want a desktop calling interface. It wants everything to happen in the browser. Period.

What a disappointment that FoxIt was chosen. I've ctually bothered to test pretty much everything out there... including FoxIt; and I'm here to tell you that FoxIt is, by no stretch of the imagination, a particularly good PDF handler. It just isn't.