Phishfi
Phishfi
Phishfi

THIS, for the love of god THIS!

Or a 6- AND 8-pin, as is the case with my XFX 7970 Mining rig...

It's been mentioned ad nauseam, you're just not paying attention...

I completely disagree. I think that adding solid technology to watches without the user having to do anything is what's going to make watches like this still relevant in our world. I've had a lot of watches, at least for my pay grade. As a teenager, I had an "atomic" watch, which I'd have to set on my windowsill at

You... I like you!

If I'm not mistaken, Net Neutrality would mean that telcos would be prohibited from engaging in QoS management because they wouldn't be treating every packet in a "neutral" fashion. IMO I think we should let the customers ultimately decide what it is that they want. For Cable companies, they have some heavy incentives

He wouldn't get attacked again, at least not in the same manner, if he fixed all the issues he brought up near the end of this post... It's really not that difficult. My mind is blown as to why he didn't bring everything to GoDaddy and have them lock the site until things could be ironed out. Somewhere in their

The thief had to guess the first 2 of the last 6 digits. So he was guessing the 11th and 12th digits of the card number. Those numbers aren't standards at all, so it was just random guessing.

There are AT&T-specific sim cards for Straight Talk, which is what I'm planning on using. If they can beat $45 a month, I'll try T-Mo out before switching to Straight Talk, but that's a while out anyways.

The government says it, so it must be true!

Manhattan, KS... Works pretty solid when I'm in town, only issues are in certain areas outside town (and a lot of my trips through Missouri I lose almost everything). Data speeds are really good in town though!

You aren't being defrauded if you know the costs up front, whether they're fair or not.

First off, no I'm not paying for that "lie". I'm on an unlimited plan and not burdened with any of the garbage (at least not yet).

If you buy a service and are told ahead of time what fees and charges apply (arbitrary or not), then there's no fraud. You're acting like this is some insanely fraudulent activity, while it's clearly not...

Don't get me wrong, their data speeds seem really great in big cities. The issue is when you get off the beaten path. I travel all the time and I just CAN'T use T-Mo (as much as I'd love to). I guess maybe I'll try them next chance I get, but Wal-Mart's StraightTalk service just seems too cheap to pass up.

And you're living in some fantasy-land where you can legislate away greedy behavior. What I'm saying is that good service costs money, I have unlimited, unthrottled data through Sprint (at least, they say it's unthrottled). The take-away, though, is that my data isn't the most reliable in the world. In fact, I kinda

How does that make any sense? When Sprint first ran configuration tests and proof of concept trials for the LTE and their Spark networks, they were showing at least three times the data speeds that we see now. And that's even based on their own hardware. Just cause you say it's a myth doesn't make it a myth. The

Just because its arbitrary doesn't make it wrong. You have to understand that the general logic behind data caps (besides charging more money for heavy users) is to try to get people to spread out their data usage over the month, which allows for faster data speeds for all their users.

What are you going on about? They provide a service, and they have so much of it to give. If a company charges a feee and users are willing to pay it, then there's no fraud, no con, no scam, no lie, no criminal activity.

OR you could not get T-Mo and actually HAVE usable data.