Phishfi
Phishfi
Phishfi

Might as well be the Air Force motto: "Shake, Take, Salute." shake with your right, take with your left, then salute with your right...

This goes to show just how little we know/understand about science...

Yeah, but we won't know until they release the device, most likely. The issue is if there's any note-worthy hardware differences, which I'm sure there is. In most cases it would just be a reformating of the partitions and then everything's fine, but I suspect that Windows Phone OS needs slightly different hardware in

The important questions are A) Can the Windows version be re-configured to run Android, and B) Can the current selection of Android M8s be re-configured to run the Windows version.

Facebook runs an ad campaign, Plex runs a freemium model. There's really no similarity there because Facebook customers don't even have an option to pay for the extra features, so there's a huge difference there.

It has to "phone home" so that it can push the index out to your devices that may not be on the local network. It's a genius design! I understand that you don't trust them, but at least understand that there's a reason for what they're doing!

Right, and the government hasn't done anything that fucks anyone over... I believe that me and you are able to determine what services we want and care about better than the government can, but fuck me for wanting the freedom to decide for myself, am I right?

Well, let's see. Your situation (the net neutrality-favoring one) doesn't stop the same behavior either, so that's kind of a garbage argument, but let's just talk your example through:

I don't understand the brainwashing happening around here Re: net neutrality. There can be so many beneficial services if net neutrality didn't exist. Services like this are just the start, but I really think that having access to a very limited supply of sites/services could be a very good thing for a number of

Vote: Newshosting.com

Wait, so can the business/person only use my money for 10 seconds! Cause I'd totally be down for that.

Sure thing, and I decide to go to the startup broadband service instead, who says they can give me the package I want, and the first 2 months are free! W00T!

Any chance this could work on Roku?

And another thing, since you decided to prove my point: What if a majority of people in a given city, region, country, only want access to certain things. Why should we be forced to pay for access to the WHOLE internet when all we want are certain services. If I want internet access that's as simple as access to

That's being a little dishonest. Google's free fiber service is only 5Mb/s down and 1Mb/s up, and that's at a cost of a THREE HUNDRED dollar installation...

Nobody forces you to subscribe, hence it's a free interaction. When you legally dictate how those interactions can be made, they aren't free either.

First of all, the majority of online services make their money through advertisements, making your counter to #1 pretty flat and completely incorrect (equating Netflix charging you more for their service with the ISP charging you simply for using Netflix services does not equate).

This is where people misunderstand what the free market can/will do to solve this issue on its own, instead assuming that net neutrality is the only solution. Your example is a good one for this point.

There's a 74% chance you double-posted...

Can you tell us what the "six potential ways for this project to crash and burn" are?