darkmobius
darkmobius
darkmobius

What's the point? OpenOffice is pretty much dead now in terms of development, leaving LibreOffice the superior product.

I don't know about the USA but here existing sales laws should already cover it. It's "just" a case of enforcing it by pursuing it til the end (civil case to reclaim cost and expenses). They only get away with it because most people will let them.

Don't really work with what I want to do (moving development files to a temp. space, decompiling repositories etc), at least not very comfortable for me, and as for launching applications, I use shortcuts for that anyway. I'm more of a visual person and would rather make use of the multiscreen setup I have

I should point out I use Fences. So I normally have zero stuff cluttering the desktop and bring it up when I need it.

Surely it doesn't take much to hide all your open apps though (Win+M or shake current window)? Hiding everything that's open and opening a folder/shortcut on desktop can be fewer steps than opening a folder from the taskbar etc.

No mention of Scrivener? Especially now it is out of beta for Windows.

Well if you are going to be picky you should be aware that "bi-monthly" can mean either every two months or twice in a month. The ambiguity means it's best avoided altogether, but it also means it is not used incorrectly here. In fact the same ambiguity applies to all "bi-" time periods. There is no "correct" meaning

"silicon based fluid", that's a new one on me. Silicone is very different and certainly not a "silicon/water mix". I mean it's like saying petroleum is simply a carbon/water mix.

"silicon based fluid", that's a new one on me. Silicone is very different and certainly not a "silicon/water mix". I mean it's like saying petroleum is simply a carbon/water mix.

From what I've read they're working on offline support already.

Not so far but then most of any returns etc I've had to make rin recent years have been from online companies anyway.

They'd been tracking them as they'd done it a few times. So they're watching for people returning things multiple times. I'm not too sure what tipped them off to it.

You have to be really really careful. I know someone who returned clothes using newer receipts because they were outside of the return time limit and they ended up arrested and given a police caution for fraud.

I scan all my receipts to Evernote, and pretty much shred most stuff anyway.

I don't respond to my work email account out of hours or if I'm away. I'm paid to work in certain hours not be available 24/7.

Big surprise, entered my main email address and comes up with 1 compromise and it is...... Gawker media's December hack, yay. ;)

You already have a 4S?

Is it any better than VLingo which is available on multiple mobile platforms?

"and presumably other details with that", last time I searched for my email address (it was a google search) I found published my entire name (luckily I'd used a fake name in this instance) and home address from a hacked server. I notified pastebin (where it was put up by the hacker) and had it taken down and notified

I think you've missed the point of the site. It's not checking if your email account has been hacked but whether your email address (and presumably other details with that) has been published. I.e. whether other companies sites have been hacked. It's happened to me a few times (including when Gawker got hacked), this