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DBeta
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I pay for LastPass and it is all I need. I don't need bookmark syncing because every browser I use has it, and I'm not much of a bookmarker anyways.

@phquaryn: My experience freezing yogurt has been sub-par. Perhaps plain yogurt would work better, but the flavored single serving ones freeze too hard and don't turn out nice once a little thawed.

Has anyone else ever tried freezing apple sauce? It makes a great summer treat for pretty cheap. Just buy the store brand single serving apple sauces in a plastic container. Many of you might think buying the store brand is just for cost saving, but in this case it is because the store brand seems to be higher in

@Frisbee: Also, you could probably create a batch script to install a scheduled task if GPOs can't do it already. Just create one task for stopping and one task for starting. That's actually a pretty good idea, I might have to look into it for our office.

@Frisbee: The slow down issue is likely caused by having "Microsoft Update" enabled. Try turning it of and going back to standard "Windows Update". This can be done from the windows update website. We had a problem for about a month where many workstations would grind to a halt every afternoon for over an hour. Come

@MxPxRobbie: Does "OneClickLagFix" work for it? It works on some other Galaxy S phones.

@teh1andonlym0: I know, right. It's so terrible that other people may have wants and needs besides your own. Everybody should be just like you, there really is no other reason to be any different.

For Linux there are many alternatives, but I like tilda the best. After playing with this a bit, I almost feel like it should be a standard feature of all *nix OSs.

@crashedjava: Exactly. It's not the browser it's the designer. Microsoft has shown that they are unworthy of the dominate position, and I'm not about to hand it back to them.

@radio.one: If you are tab crazy like me Chrome eats way more memory than firefox. I currently have 13 tabs open and Firefox is using 187MB of RAM and 225MB of swap. Chrome with the same number of tabs takes about ~300MB of RAM, and I didn't count the swap.

@aj_robins: Nope, it uses the gTalk Voice and Video plugin to handle the call.

@AlienSix (WeComeAlive) ver.: I think that is the plan. The new redesign of Gmail to include the Mail/Contacts/Task switcher seems to be a move to consolidating interfaces.

@John T. Haller: I fixed that by installing the Indicator Applet Application Menu for OSX style file menus.

Why had I never thought of a desktop Shred Bin before? You already have the Recycle Bin, a Shred Bin for drag and drop destroying makes so much sense. I'm not talking about a sidebar thing, but just a desktop icon for any OS. I'll have to look into the options.

@Grewal: I can see why you wouldn't like that, but I decided to let it have all that access because it was an app that a lot of people trusted, and a lot of people who actually have a valid opinion on these things. That said, if ADW was as quick as LauncherPro I wouldn't hesitate to use it.

@Grewal: I tried ADW and it was just too slow for me. Although the OSS part of it really appealed to me I just couldn't get over how slow it was. Coming from the Samsung homescreen on my Vibrant even LauncherPro is slow, but it is way better than ADW. For some reason the default launcher on the Vibrant was very fast,

Doesn't appear to work on my Samsung Vibrant running Android 2.1. The page loads and I can scribble with the default brush, but trying to change doesn't work. Oh well, it's still pretty cool.

I built one and it worked pretty good, but the only place in my apartment that could get any signal was the front window, on the other side of the apartment from my living room. When I want to watch broadcast TV I have to run a cable through the hall. It isn't bad though. It helped me transition off cable and now I do

I love the way Ubuntu Netbook handles full screen windows. It probably wouldn't work on most other interfaces, but on UNR it gives a few precious pixels back to the user.

@Numbersyx: I don't see a need for drag and drop installs. You can double click on a deb, then click install on it. Then you are done. Well, you have to enter you password, but I'm sure OSX needs that too. Point is, although it isn't drag and drop, it's just as easy.