That would change a lot of things for a lot of people overnight. I'm sure the Telecom's and cable companies would hate it, but I think we should have some free wi-fi in the same way we have free TV if you don't want to pay for cable.
That would change a lot of things for a lot of people overnight. I'm sure the Telecom's and cable companies would hate it, but I think we should have some free wi-fi in the same way we have free TV if you don't want to pay for cable.
Excellent, thank you! It's always been irritating to have to go into your settings just to manually refresh. This makes it MUCH easier!
Um...why isn't Television listed on here? As much as I love the web for about everything, I enjoy watching the first 15 minutes of the news on TV to unwind at night.
@UnMicD: I could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure this is also a way to ensure you don't get sued for much more. That's quite often why businesses repair faulty products for free.
250MB of storage? So...about 50 songs. Sorry, AudioBox, you need to do MUCH better than that if you want to get subscribers. Even online backup gives you 2GB free...
@lifebutbetter: And we should wonder where it's going. A good part of the cost of many books goes toward production and distribution—paper, binding, transport, etc....all of which are entirely eliminated in the ebook market. This should make the book significantly cheaper.
So to restore, you'd just open that folder in your new FF installation and then paste the files back? Seems simple enough.
PCWorld gave it 5 stars: [www.pcworld.com]
Heh, this is worth reading: People's response to the iPod nearly 10 years ago...sound familiar?
@JuryDuty: You all make some EXCELLENT points. I had no idea it didn't have multitasking. Geez, that would be a killer right there for me.
I think a lot of people find it useless because they're not the market Apple is catering to with this product.
Not bad, but I think almost all these features are on [www.dailyburn.com] —and more complete.
@sweenish: You know what—I posted incorrectly. They're using LimeWire, not torrents. I didn't mean to confuse the issue.
@sweenish: They've downloaded zipped files with mp3's inside, but when you unzip the files, a virus is often inside in an executable. At least, that's what the virus scanner showed on several of them I found in their recycle bin.
Good article. One more thing that's great for reading: A good booklight. I did a bit of research on this lately and found an excellent one: The Mighty Bright XtraFlex2. It's only about $20 and has two modes (bright and very bright) and it works great with full book layouts.
While these can be very useful tools, a friend of mine has a teenager who keeps "hiding" his torrent downloads of illegal music with these advances in technology. He wouldn't get caught either, if he didn't keep infecting the machine with viruses. LOL!
I grabbed one of those little stoplights that sense when your car is close to the wall and then throw up a red light. Don't even have to hang anything—just need batteries. :)
@Niscrome: Hey, this one looks like it'll work, too. Seems to be a toss up between Tabberwocky and Tab Utilities. I'll try both out and see which I like best. Thanks!
@Rick-e: I probably should just learn shortcuts...but then again an add-on might make it easier. Hmm....got me thinking...
@vesekhar: Thx! I'll check it out.