that was watching both disks and streaming, not multiple streams
that was watching both disks and streaming, not multiple streams
one was watching a disk and one streaming.
In America people bought the 360 first because it's cheaper up front, while many people bought the PS3 because it has no service fee and bluray. I bought the 360 because it has a better online service by far that my friends already used. The split is not that wide because the differences are complex to us.
I actually think Microsoft does more or less, from an intellectual standpoint, "get" japan - the problem is they don't have any tact and so they come off as desperate, and even to some extent, like a westerner making fun of their culture. Even if the games themselves are good, I'm sure that doesn't sit well with…
If Waffle House owned all, they'd be on my side of the country. Clearly they are slacking in their domination.
Do you work for AT&T? I'm not on either network but I've never met anyone who thinks AT&T's network is legitimately "better" than T-Mobile's. T-Mobile generally has the coverage they need, better reliability, and much better service. All the data bears this out.
I don't see how AT&T really expects this to make any difference - it doesn't address the fact that either way T-Mobile is gone, eliminating that competition from the playfield. Plus it makes things even worse for the customers, because it means now 1/4 of T-Mobile customers would have no idea what their service will…
No, you just use ticket classes for that purpose, call ticket types that are already labelled by seat.
Thanks for the update Sam. :)
Saying it's worse than Chernobyl is a horrible misstatement that fuels serious and potentially damaging misunderstandings. Please correct your article, it's not worse than Chernobyl by any means, it only above the threshold established in the Chernobyl incident for habitability in these areas. There's a big difference.
@Giz, you got the wrong math somewhere, the NIST clock is >100 million years to lose a second, but the NPL clock is notably more. The article refers to "tens of millions", not 10 million. By their measure of up to a billionth of a second every two months, that would be 167million years for the NPL clock (though I…
You're absolutely correct, with *most* zip ties this is pointless, because it won't hold well enough to have been worth using.
Effective noise of a 1Ds or Hasselblad (and many "lesser" cameras) scaled down to 10mp (what he's getting) directly or through pixel binning is nill. As I said, past a certain point it doesn't matter any more.
Actually, now that I think about it, not including OSX on this list is really kind of an insult. That's probably the single thing that brought mac computers back into the picture after Steve's return, and was a direct result of his ventures.
Apple wasn't all suckage while stevo was gone. The powerbooks including the classic "blackbird" that got screen time in x-files and movies were iconic, and pretty much defined the path for laptops from that point onward. It was the lack of forward thinking in terms of processing power and OS that was killing them off,…
I think that's just figure of speech, not exposure.
Before someone else asks, the resolution, from his comments, is 3285 x 2611
Your statement assumes no realized personal value in just living in a home and the benefits of ownership. For my home my monthly payment including taxes and insurance (and not counting the tax discount, because I don't trust that it will stay) is almost identical to renting the same type of property. So, if that is…
All you need to find is a similar job with pay that makes sense for the Cost of Living where you move. People place too much value on absolute wages. If all that extra cash is going to overpriced rent and food, it's the same difference. :)
200,000 @ 5% for 30 years =~386,500+fees.