bananafishtoday
bananafishtoday
bananafishtoday

Did anyone else notice the first post on the sidebar was made yesterday and cites the same source?

WP7 looks complicated. I'll just stick with my iPhone.

Fastpencil is a scam. This is not real publishing. This is a combo vanity publisher/editing service. A real publisher approves only the best writing, then handles the publishing at no cost to the author. Fastpencil here charges $200 to put your book on Amazon. And the link at the bottom of this post is their full

I never knew about this feature, but I mean, did anyone actually use it? That'd be like if iPhoto charged you 99 cents to crop a picture.

@ergheiz: Pascal reads Gizmodo?!

@espinha: Imagine, Apple suing someone for not opening up a proprietary system to a 3rd party...

@schunniky: 6. "The Social Network" is hailed as a masterpiece of speculative fiction, asking the question, "What if some Harvard kid designed Apple's revolutionary, magical iNet in his dorm room?"

@JS_Drupal: Caligula added the album "orgy @ my house!!"

If you think that was bad, you shoulda seen the movie!

@QLAB: I tried.

Something to keep in mind: When building a phone, $15 is NOT cheap. Take a look at the iPhone 4 breakdown, from iSuppli. An iPhone 4 costs $187 to make. Its two most expensive parts are the Retina screen ($28) and the 16GB flash memory ($27.) Every single other part costs less than $15. DRAM memory is $13.80. The A4

@ddhboy: It's free. Google restricts Market access to devices that meet minimum compatibility standards, so devs can make apps and know they'll work on any phone hooked into the Android Market. But there's no fee associated with it.

@cynep: Heart click'd, because you replied to two of my comments and both replies made almost no sense. We all need a bit more randomness in our lives.

Ok guys. Lots of haha Sauron/asshole jokes in the comments. But if you want to stop laughing and instead have your mind blown by the immensity of the universe...

@PropertyofSallieMae: I know nothing about hacking and don't pretend to, but I've taken some computer programming, and chatted with a few classmates who dabbled. And my experiences in programming mirror theirs in hacking, in terms of what we got out of it. It's about solving interesting problems. Like solving a