@Kamran Ayub: Yes, but I'll bet that you, like most people, are judging it based on how fast you type, and how long it takes you to craft the words. It's called projecting; and your comment is just oozing its results, in your case.
@Kamran Ayub: Yes, but I'll bet that you, like most people, are judging it based on how fast you type, and how long it takes you to craft the words. It's called projecting; and your comment is just oozing its results, in your case.
@Swing Doom: It's not the 150GB of AT&T DSL bandwidth primarily used by a laptop/desktop computer in one's home or office that's in jeopardy by the kind of streaming from the cloud that is the subject of this article. The issue is streaming from the cloud to a phone...
@DukeOfURL: First, see what I wrote, above, to @Jason De Nys. You are obviously similarly both motivated and immature. Get some professional help figuring out what it is in your psyche which makes you want to lash out at those who actually... you know... KNOW things.
I'll see your 60 to 80 gigs of songs, and raise you my nearly 300GB of them. I've recently acquired, in fact, an older 1TB USB drive onto which I'm going to move said 300GB of songs, and then likely fill-up the other 700GB over time.
@Jason de Nys: What'r you... 12? Mine was an obvious typo... the leaving-off of one single character in the typing rush, as everyone in the universe — including you — occasionally does; and spell-check and grammar checkers usually don't catch such things because both the right and the wrong word are in their…
@jpgreennbaum: Many universities, now, include a notice, right in the package of paperwork that they give to new students (the receipt of and agreement with which they must usually acknowledge with their signature), informing them that they could be photographed or videoed while in any public areas of the campus; and…
The term is "cut and dried," not "cut and dry." (2nd graph, 3rd sentence)
@Improbus: Actor? For one episode... what... six or seven years ago, of "Stargate: Atlantis?" (And don't think for two seconds that I'm not embarrassed that I knew THAT?) Don't get me wrong, he did a bang-up job in it, but calling him an "actor" — the implication being "professional" — because he was in one episode…
Follow the money. Find Brian Dunning's sponsor (or funder or whatever) who has skin in the game of poo-pooing that BPA is harmful It positively is; and the amounts in certain kinds of plastic bottles is far from negligible.
@ERIFNOMI: Ha! Very funny. [grin]
@GuileKlein: Actually, that's sorta' what the guy in the CBS video is saying. So, then, not that far-fetched.
@anomalytea: Which, of course, I'll discover in my aforementioned further research. [grin]
@computermix: Good questions... thanks for asking.
@PixelSnader: Why is it any of your concern? Is it printed on paper, wherein it would be killing trees? And though it isn't, is the around 100 bytes — not even one-tenth of one measly kilobyte — involved actually making a substantive difference in the master bandwidth usage or disk space storage scheme of things? …
NotifierPro (regardless of version) has some weirdness to it, as some others, here have already commented. I, personally, don't like it. Simply training oneself to always check the upper-leftmost corner of the screen — the notification icon area of the status bar — every time one looks at the phone is really all one…
Okay, here's my take/advice on it all...
@wjglenn: For me, it was "Ann Charles." Go figure.
This is interesting, but, I'm sorry: The right way to do it is to, at minimum, save to, and read from, one's Skydrive account (since that's where Microsoft's free cloud version of "Office" is located, and where it saves to, and reads from, by default. Android apps which "talk" to the whole Windows Live world…
I've read both the Lifehacker article, and that to which it links; and I've now read all the comments, below it (as of this writing), and here's my thought (rolling around in my little pea brain like a BB in a tunafish can), for whatever it's worth...
@Geoff: Agreed! Wholeheartedly. Wiser, truer words rarely written (or uttered).