One more handy trick: On Safari for iPad, just hold the new tab button and you'll see your recently closed tabs!
One more handy trick: On Safari for iPad, just hold the new tab button and you'll see your recently closed tabs!
None! I never had even a single cup of coffee - or tea for that matter.
I don't think there's some person who's posting it! It's done by machines - dumb ones!
A little off track, but I have purchased GoodPlayer. Now, as we know, they recommended to backup their older versions as some codecs removed in the newer version. I lost IPA of the old version. Though I can get a DRM free IPA of older version, would I be able to use it after jailbreak? Currently, I installed it as iOS…
Woosh! That transparent look really appeals! What pen is that?
What is that wallpaper? Seems nice and clean!
You totally misinterpreted me! I exactly meant what you've written. I talked about the system outside the United States. Getting phone from carriers feels totally dumb!
Oh, yeah! Thanks a lot. I'll look into that when I find free time.
Oh, boy! You need to understand this: phones aren't bought from carriers at all. Carries only provide SIM cards which run the service. Phones are bought from the manufacturers. Outside US, we always get HTC phones from HTC retailers and iPhones from Apple retailers.
Ehm... seems like my Windows laptop is out of drivers. I'm running Windows 8 on XPS L401x which isn't officially supported by the Dell. So, I checked with another laptop and got well above 60 Mbits/s - acceptable, right? Then I rebooted my laptop to Arch Linux and checked again. Acceptable results again. So, yeah, I…
Are those as good and trustworthy (stable) as our delicious Raspberry Pi?
I don't get you. How's that supposed to work? I cannot practically chain the processors!
You're hilarious! I understand, you know, being a developer myself.
Thanks a lot for writing back. Now, this is something weird! Without -d switch I only get up to 12 Mbits/s and bidirectional tests capped around shy 3 to 4 Mbits/s. So, network it is then. I hope there's something to do about it. I have already upgraded firmware using rpi-update.
Seems like the fight is already over. Can I have some promo code?
I have USB HDD attached. Speeds are nice according to hdparm. It gave me around 20 MB/s. So, next bottleneck? Is there any information resource?
Are there any plans for Raspberry Pi model C around $50 with a bit more hardware power?
Hey, thanks for the input! I tried it with FTP. Apparently, FTP is suffering through similar problem. The speed is capped at 1.5 MB/s. What now?
Alternatives, you say? I'm interested! Could you link me up to some of those. What I'm looking for is better hardware. I care less about Android support. What I really want is a silent ARM machine powerful enough to run a bunch of console programs at once (and maybe, stream videos to tablets and such). Any links?
Ahh... no! Not at all misinterpreting you. But I really want a device which is a bit more powerful than current version. Main reason for this is Samba. Raspberry Pi provides me with 1.5 MB/s at most. Network isn't the problem - it must be the CPU. Plus, it runs out of RAM when rtorrent tries to do a huge hash check.…