Bad news for Cliq / DEXT and Backflip users: this doesn't work on Android 1.5.
Bad news for Cliq / DEXT and Backflip users: this doesn't work on Android 1.5.
@The_Doc: This.
It works on Android 1.5! Huzzah!
@freakshowtime: Or here.
@Studlychris: It's here: [jkontherun.com]
@nocturnal99: Same here! Even though not every app works on my poor, poor Cliq with Android 1.5.
@abhishekbhatnagar: His name did not appear on the LH staff until recently: now you see Lowell Heddings on the LH team (on the left), but for months it was The How-To Geek.
I grabbed the W7 beta as soon as it was available. Same with RC. I've been amazed since day one.
What XP theme is being used on the screenshot? That's not the Royale theme, it looks a little bit different and a little bit better.
@cryguy: Oh sure, since Flash might not work as well as native apps in the iPhone/iPad, let's just forbid it!
@RockLobsterNet: Oh, do embed the image!
@paravorheim: Both. I don't think there are usage statistics broken down by browser and OS (not for free anyway). But since Safari is obviously more popular on Macs and it was pwned on OS X, my point remains.
@SandHammer: I'm sorry, what now?
@JimmySawczuk: The Ars article is indeed great. From the article:
@billrand: "For the second year in a row, Chrome has left the Pwn2Own competition unscathed even as all of its competitors have been compromised. And that's not just because it has small market share (5.6% according to Net Applications) Apple's Safari's market share is actually smaller, around 4.5%, and yet has fallen…
@GetOutOfBox: "Naysayers will also point out that Google patched 11 flaws in its browser just before the competition began. But Apple patched 19 bugs in Safari the same week, and that didn't prevent Apple hacker Charlie Miller from doing evil things to it for the third year in a row."
@soldstatic: Na Prost, du German-speaking man, du!
@Bobly: So... emergency stairs then?
@Nitesh Singh: Google's cache page of Pzizz: [74.125.47.132]
@USMCSD: You don't give your Google username and password to AppBrain, you give it Google, which then authorizes the login. AppBrain won't have access to your Google password.