@G3rusz: Some people might actually like it. Unfortunately.
@G3rusz: Some people might actually like it. Unfortunately.
@strabes: This shall be tagged #corrections.
@Andre Kibbe: I was thinking the same thing: even if Wave doesn't live to be a fully grown product, it will have helped Google with their other products.
Google, just give me a cloud-based version of OneNote — I know you can do it — and I'll surrender to your plans of world domination. No questions asked.
@Sand Man: I feel your pain, Thena and Sand Man... it's amazing how many people resist using Google Docs in college.
@Ryan Nevius: I was gonna say "no, of course not, Wave hasn't even been launched yet, it's on a preview stage, it's got a long way until it's even born, so it can't be already dead" and so on.
@Bully: Just start a comment, click on the YouTube icon and paste the video link. Easy-peasy!
@bayern: "Blam, I have two spoons, DONE!"
Lifehacker features a lot of how-to videos, and usually they are very helpful. Slicing and dicing onions, tossing pizza dough in the air and tying a tie are things for which there is no good substitute to visual explanation.
@lozer4all: Okay, April Fool was last week, so stop teasing.
@SamburgerHandwich: Context!
@comodidit: I've never had this problem. I use Chrome 5 beta on Windows 7, and Chrome 4 beta on XP.
@CodaMan: Works fine over here. On Chrome beta on Windows 7, and on Chrome stable on Windows XP.
@unojack: My thoughts exactly. I can't even cook but I know what a bad omelette is, and that sure was one.
This is the table of printing costs by font used, pointed out on another comment. The assumptions are on the original article, which was written in April 2009, so maybe the costs have risen. What matters, though, is the relative cost, and I see no reason why they could have changed, so the table remains relevant.
@infmom: Or are they? [blog.printer.com]
Good news for Cliq / DEXT and Backflip users: this now works on Android 1.5!
@bradmann: Thank you!
I used FastestChrome/FastestFox and it was a memory hog. Let's see how this one fares.
I tried the alternatives to Antenna, listed below by my fellow LHers (Screamer Radio, Radio Sure and Streema) but none of them had what I need the most: the ability to discover new online radio stations.