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Did all of you people who are anti-wearable tech get your asses beat behind the gym as kids for wearing a calculator watch? I mean, I probably will not own an iWatch, but I just won't buy one. You people are ANGRY about this... it's just, it's very very sad. Go talk to somebody.

I'm not sure that makes you the better crowd.

Sorry, according to http://www.statisticbrain.com/welfare-statis… the total number of people on welfare in the US as of 01/01/2014 was 12.8 million (4.1% of pop.). Rutherford B. Hayes was President from 1877 to 1881 so we'll use the 1880 census to show us that the U.S. population was 50.2 million.

There are 3.7 million people on welfare right now. Rutherford B. Hayes presided over a nation of almost 40 million. FWIW, even in Washington's day there were more US citizens (3.9 million) than are currently on welfare.

Kitchenmodo is definitely a site I'd visit on my daily rounds.

Gizmodo is a gadget site; this is a kitchen gadget. I don't see the problem. I personally like it when they have them.

Yep, sand is littering.

C'mon there has to be a Proper Pokemon Wii-U game stashed somewhere for a rainy day.

As a parent of two Autistics that were prone to wandering, absolutely!!!

Exactly. I work on my computers myself because I know enough about it to know its pretty difficult to mess something up beyond repair, and if I do, most things are a fairly inexpensive repair. On a car, I'd be afraid to mess something up that would either be expensive, or put me danger.

Hey, why don't we stop giving articles misleading titles? I can't count the number of times I have clicked on a Giz product article only to find the product is currently a prototype or kickstarter project.

A group of friends and I were talking exactly about this and it's impact on the consumer and the world. From a consumer-centric perspective, this was the best representation of why a lot of consumers are up in arms. Yours truly included.

I think games like these would be much more enjoyable for me if cooperation was more of an incentive than hostility. I mean, studying anonymous social behavior between armed strangers trying to survive aside, I always found cooperative games more worthwhile and fun than games that turn everyone into jerks.

This is what I'd use it for too. Build a machine that's just strong enough to get booted up and stream a game, and basically extend my gaming PC into another room wirelessly.

I think if you want to play games on a TV in the living room and you have a gaming rig set up elsewhere, a low powered Steam Machine for streaming gameplay might be an idea, but I'd probably not get one of the pre-built systems, as I could build my own for cheaper.

things learned from this video:

I've never owned a credit card. I never liked the idea of owing a bank money for an annual fee, interest or other costs. Yes, I am aware that without it, it is a lot harder to build credit and fraud protection is more difficult with a debit card. However, if and when the time comes that I want to get a credit card,

I would like to point out that many (all?) debit cards are supported by a credit card company, and can almost always be used as credit instead of debit at the machine/register. When used as credit rather than debit, most debit card users experience many of the security benefits that credit card users enjoy (such as

RELEASE IT ALREADY. I want one so bad. I wish they'd stop adding new features and just release this thing. It's already awesome. Wait a year, then release a new version with more features. They will never hit shelves if they keep adding new features.

So what's the price? You reference it in the headline and article but never actually give it to us.