Phishfi
Phishfi
Phishfi

Not exactly, since Aereo couldn't get anything that regular consumers could use without having to connect to Aereo's network. Aereo should have turned around and sold the hardware to regular users so they could just put this on the side of their house and have the exact same service but from their home internet as the

That, and the fact that the second is an amendment, while the All Writs Act is only a law...

Not entirely. That was the case in one court decision, but that doesn't necessarily mean that it's the law throughout the US (yet).

Not quite. You're glossing over the point here. If I buy a safe and I put something in there that proves I committed a crime (the bloody knife or smoking gun), then the feds should use their legal might to make me unlock the safe. They shouldn't go to the safe manufacturer and make them unlock the safe for them.

Would that have even stopped anything? The police wouldn't release the video until it's been through a pretty thorough examination process, and it probably would have stayed hidden from the public until after the grand jury's decision. Based on their decision to let Officer Wilson go, we can only assume that the video

You can't stop the signal, Mal...

Not going to lie, I'd still watch it. Just on BluRay instead of at the theater.

Made me think of Star Wars, for some reason.

Except the "sort of" should be bolded, italicized, about font 52, and a different color...

Mine was happyjungle659 ... I left it that way for about 14 months, even after switching to DD-WRT, I made the network password the same again. Just couldn't get over how hilarious it was (and memorable, considering that was 3-4 years ago).

The problem with guest networks in this day-and-age is the interconnectivity that you may want to give to guests, but lose by keeping them on that separate guest network. For example: Chromecast. If you want to allow someone onto your network so they can push their music or videos across your Chromecast, they can't do

The lack of competition is thanks to the ISP practices of making deals with localities to install high speed internet with the understanding that other ISPs will not be allowed to install their infrastructures later on down the road. The real solution to the issue is to avoid any FCC regulatory control and instead

Welcome to 2013, Microsoft!

Why?

I can't agree with you there. The iPhone sells at about the same price as the flagships (at least at release, then the Android devices steadily drop in price before the next iteration comes out).

Maybe integrate a voice control feature? Adding a mic and a touch of software shouldn't be too difficult.

Also, there's a theme for Kodi that's designed for in-dash systems.

I actually doubt it, and here's why: Amazon has been working on features that integrate with your media choices for a long time now. They're like a more advanced (though less-preferred) version of Netflix. By that I mean that they are very smart about their integration with your media options. When it talks about

Is there anywhere else to view the scorecard? Ironically enough, my work computer won't let me view the site because they intercept all https connections :(

CurrentC doesn't use NFC at all, so it's just using the phone's screen and camera... Which means standing in a line of people all trying to open the app, scan a QR code, wait for the app to process that code, then turn the phone around and expect the scanner to scan your phone's screen, then wait for the payment.

I don't know if you've ever had any other "gaming" laptop, but they aren't exactly the most lasting pieces of hardware to begin with. If you actually use it for gaming, it heats up like an oven, which is terrible for just about every internal component on the board. I hate to say it, but my guess is that you had a