evanminn01-old
evanminn01
evanminn01-old

@Ding-Dang: Inhaling freon is really bad. Good thing there is no freon in whipped cream canisters.

@AreWeThereYeti: I did read it. Aside from the people pointing out it is not, the people that say it is are only saying, in effect, 'Well, if you hold it far enough away you can't see pixels.'.

@AreWeThereYeti: Well, yeah. I didn't realize there were people that didn't know it is just a marketing term used to sell you things and not gospel truth.

@geolemon: How common it is depends on your friends.

@MSgtSimon: I once had a manager that wanted excruciatingly detailed info on what was worked on. I knew he wasn't reading them when I would periodically put in:

@vel0city: Um, what are you talking about? Have any source to back that up?

Why only T-mobile? Was it a T-Mobile only app (seems unlikely) or is there some weakness in their network that other carriers don't have?

One of the biggest culture shocks I had when going to the iPhone was how few paid apps offered a trial version.

I also don't friend anyone at work unless they become a real outside-of-work friend (the exception being my bosses boss but I have known him for twenty years).

@dailycupofjoe: Ability to search on more criteria, ability to sort search results on various criteria, a LOT more subcategories, not have to load a big, clunk app just to browse software, ....

@Billybird: Add to that they lost the sexy curves and when to a flat black slab full of right angles and this was an easy one to skip for me.

@Vitto #9: Actually, because Chrome to phone doesn't work that great is part of the reason I still use my GPS.

@Vitto #9: "But if you have a tool that can perform multiple jobs and do them all well, why bother spending more money for single-purpose hardware"

I believe in using the right tool for the job and a phone is not the right tool for car navigation.

The headline makes it sound like iPhone users are cheaters but people with other GPS equipped phones are not.