cakestapler
cakestapler
cakestapler

Yes, still faster-than-they-were-before speeds, like going from 3G to 4G, but not as fast as they are now.

I want to know who makes it to 18 without seeing a squirrel.

Squirrels are awesome. I think the entire point of having a "squirrel-proof" bird-feeder is the entertainment it provides rather than actually feeding birds. My mom had one when I was growing up (the one below) with an outer ring that if a bird sat on it would stay open, but a squirrel being heavier would cause it to

But who's monitoring Club Penguin? That's where all the real terrorist activity goes down.

One of my "friends," more of an acquaintance really, on Facebook posted this video with a tirade about how messed up it is that New York is doing this. I had a good laugh at his expense.

1:58

Like making it impossible to follow one conversation by having all the replies show up together in chronological order?

Couple of clarifications, Verizon tripled their CAPACITY. Currently this is leading to super fast speeds because the capacity of the network far exceeds the demand on it. It's a good move by Verizon that will lead to increased speed overall, but the reason they aren't making a huge deal about it is because eventually

impossible: not able to occur, exist, or be done

First, I picked a 'generic $600 smartphone' as prices fluctuate, especially Cyber Monday week.

Everyone has a different situation, I was just giving a very common scenario and showing how AT&T has gotten closer in price to T-Mobile. No one that has commented to far seems to understand the part where I said, "You can't expect AT&T will ever be as cheap as T-Mobile either, but overall this is a good step towards

AT&T has a prepaid plan that costs $60 a month for 2 GB of data and unlimited/talk text. Obviously everyone's situation is different, but I was just giving a pretty common example that shows AT&T is getting closer in price to the budget carriers.

Your first point is solid, and as I said AT&T will never be as cheap as T-Mobile, but your math is quite wrong on the second point.

T-Mobile for 5 GB of data on two phones is $120 a month (60 + 40 + 10 + 10). AT&T is now $130 for 6 GB (80 + 25 + 25). The T-Mobile phones include insurance, which is basically what the mandatory $10 Jump fee is, but even if you add that AT&T is only $24 more. That's a lot more competitive than the old $160 price tag

I feel bad for your childhood.

Redskins fan feeling your pain, except we get about 50 minutes of meaningful football, then fall apart and let the other team take the lead/blow out a close game.

This is a move to get people to AT&T Next, which is pretty obvious given how successful T-Mobile has been with this same strategy. I thought the next move would be to get rid of 2-year contract pricing, but this just makes it less desirable by making contract phones more expensive per month. One thing you failed to

I wouldn't call myself enthusiastic about it, nor would I say listening to Google Play Music streaming through an iPhone is even close to "high-fidelity sound reproduction."