I agree that iTunes is a bit bloated, but I haven't yet found a Windows media manager that can catalog all my music, movies and TV shows—AND work with an iPad or iPod.
I agree that iTunes is a bit bloated, but I haven't yet found a Windows media manager that can catalog all my music, movies and TV shows—AND work with an iPad or iPod.
Me too—excellent spreadsheet I use monthly!
Not at all. Honestly, I'm tethered to my iPad. I use it all the time, for everything. I use my phone for making an occasional voice call. That's it. In fact, I'm on a $25 plan because I use it so little. To me, it's all about the pad...which is why it's more of a struggle to figure out how I should upgrade.
Very nice! I can get rid of Clearly now. This puts both in one—and so much more. Very cool.
I've been struggling with this myself. I have an iPad and love it—it just works perfectly. But I have an Android phone and love the versitility.
I have an iPad 2 with 3G through AT&T...that's GSM, right? Or is it CDMA?
Agreed. I have an iPad 2, and I figure I might as well keep upgrading—and on an iPad 2, most of it is just minor improvements anyway. Still, I'd rather be using the latest and enjoy it than be "stuck" with the last OS.
Microsoft Money was hands-down the best money manager for me. But now that it's gone, I've switched to Quicken Home and Business by default.
Android: In Windows, seeing how fast your CPU is cranking is just a keyboard shortcut away. Android isn't as convenient. Unless you use Usemon.
What's that shortcut in Windows? I've been looking for a decent CPU monitor in Windows since they took away the sidebar, but all have been to complicated thus far (Rain, etc).
This is really interesting. I've seriously trimmed down my life lately. I use Evernote for almost everything and have cut out about 10 other applications because of it. Honestly, as long as I have Evernote, email, music and Safari on my iPad, I'd probably be good. You've inspired me to trim more. I'm loving simplicity.
I'll be honest. I still don't "get" how to use Windows 8. I only have it on my desktop PC and I'm still baffled everytime my screen is taken over by the tiled view and I can't get out (or even switch programs). How can it be that unintuitive?
And that's fine. I'm just saying that it's a full year later. The kinds of improvements they've listed seem like things that should have been released 6 months after initial sales. Not a year later. And if it takes a year, why not include some features that really matter to end users (like a more developed Start…
Wow...still, it's a full year later and the improvements aren't monumental. Glad to have it, but I was hoping for more improvements or a faster deployment.
This seems like a very straight-forward visual tool for my project planning.
Loving the idea, but just like DayOne, I don't see Evernote integration which is a dealbreaker. If someone could make an app like this with all these features PLUS Evernote integration, they'd get thousands of users immediately.
So is Hostgator.
Vote: Namecheap!
I agree. It entirely depends on the context. If the questions is which is better for reading, of course it's e-ink. If it's which is better for working, it's LCD.
Both of course. AppleTV is great for my iTunes streaming, Roku streams Amazon Instant. Then I also use my Blu-ray player to stream Vudu. Looking forward to the day when one device does it all. :)