crichton007
crichton007
crichton007

Vote: Find My iPhone

I realize that this is slightly off topic but I have Atomic and on my iPad I actually prefer Diigo on my iPad. But then again I'm not all that bothered by mobile Safari; I mainly use it because the speed is pretty even compared to Atomic and Safari is the only browser that can act as the default browser.

I'm not seeing Time Clock as free. Both the web page and iTunes store page show $2.99. Kind of a bummer...

Yes.

I highly recommend Wolfram | Alpha. I don't use it often but when I do it is spot on. Heck, I even used it once to help me write a report for one of my kids when I could find the information NOWHERE else.

Honestly, I doubt a seat belt is going to do much on a plane unless there is an accident on the ground. When that plane gets going more than a 100 I doubt that it will make much of a difference. Besides, if I'm reading from my Kindle with the wireless turned off is that really so similar to an iPod or laptop that it

Wow, that picture takes me back. Obsession for men was my cologne of choice in high school.

The original point I was making was that Amazon's whole ecosystem does a lot of what you;re talking about within a dedicated e-reader without end users having to do anything. What you're doing (apparently with a Nook Color) is getting into the territory of tablets and that's a whole other discussion.

Not necessarily. With wireless delivery I never have to connect my Kindle via USB. Heck, if I don't mind paying I can download files sent from Calibre to my Kindle anywhere I can get an AT&T signal.

Neither Sizer not What's On Air are showing up as free in iTunes when I look them up. Curse me!!! If I had only been faster!!!

I think this is a pretty natural choice for most people. I'm a little envious of the new Nook but I still enjoy my Kindle and the ecosystem behind it puts pretty much everyone else's to shame.

No mention that it would ever be a possibility either. AT&T is changing the terms and the user has no recourse but to change providers.

I think there's a difference between a buffet that is so popular they can't keep up and a wireless carrier that bargained for an exclusive on the most popular phone model/line in the world and didn't spend enough of those profits to keep up with demand.

I would put it more simply: when the user signed up for "unlimited" there was no mention that there would EVER be throttling.

I think he meant through the app itself. I know you can still do that via iBooks but not through any of the other major ebook apps.

No joke. Wave bogged down my computer after the Waves got too large and it took over two weeks on a cable connection to upload a very small fraction of my music to Google Music.

Vote: Kindle

I was so unimpressed with Google Music that I can't think of anyone that would even be interested. If I'm being honest I think Google Music is an even bigger letdown than Google Wave was and if Google wanted their music offering to even have a chance of catching on they should have opened it up long before now.

Good point. I still do too much that relies on an actual desktop computing environment to be willing to switch to Chrome OS or Firefox OS or anything like that.

I'm glad it worked for you but I think that's why they mad a change because some people were using it but not nearly as many as Dropbox or something similar.