RandySinger
RandySinger
RandySinger

@Ducttape-Guru: I wanna learn how to make a flux capacitor!

@Almightywhacko: Hey! I have no problem if you want to pay $800 to avoid wearing a $20 helmet. Enjoy.

@rujoesmith: Why would I get a BMW with a straight six when I can get a Chevy with a V-8 for less? I mean besides that the BMW looks sexy?

Software developers are likely to *love* the app store, especially if it becomes mandatory, regardless of whether or not there is some censorship.

@Almightywhacko: Check out the latest bicycle helmets. Some of them are so nicely vented that its almost like they aren't there.

So, I have a choice of putting on an insanely expensive collar thing before I go for a ride on my bicycle, or putting on an inexpensive helmet.

@Madfall: I'm an attorney in California. I don't know anything about Canadian law (assuming that is what is being applied), but U.S. and Canadian law are similar, both being broadly based on English law. I can tell you how California law has evolved in this area. Maybe Canadian law is somewhat similar, as this is

@gelatinous_d: Steve Jobs' liver *is* proprietary. Livers were never designed to be interchangeable between individuals.

@simplekismet: I want to state this more emphatically. Nasal sprays get you addicted to them because the more you used them, the worse the rebound effect is, so you end up using them more and more in a never-ending-cycle.

@DarthSnuggles: The iPod had a revolutionary physical interface and a revolutionary software interface.

The Simpson's version:

I'm sure that WebP will do at least as well as Microsoft's similar JPEG XR.

@fskhalsa: There are several of them. They just don't come from Microsoft:

I'm an attorney. I don't know the applicable law in England, but since English law is very similar to American law, and since "Innkeeper Liability" in the U.S. evolved directly from English law, the two may be very similar.

@JoeOfTexas: This was ages ago, but some folks used to use police scanners tuned to the frequency used on the low power radio that each police officer carried on their person. There would be a repeater in the officer's car to relay the signal (on another frequency) back to the police station. The low power signal

This isn't anything new. A number of years ago, as part of its "war on drugs" a law was passed that allowed the police to confiscate the possessions of those arrested for possessing illegal drugs.

@MifuneT: Absolutely. Because we all know that law firms don't need clients to file lawsuits. They just sue where ever they like.

This article indicates that a Verizon iPhone isn't in the least too late: