garci66
garci66
garci66

there's a cool add on like that for outlook as well.. pretty handy!

Maybe the orbit his ship took?

all that data is static... can easily be stolen just as easily. Two-factor authentication using one-time-codes (such as what paypal or google are doing) are infinitely safer as the login data cant be re-used.

In fact.. most hard drives have a built-in temperature sensor which is readable through the SMART diagnostics. They didnt need a new cable to get the drive's temperature. Also, the standard SATA power connector is 15 pins and the data one is 7 pins. I know the original article had this errors.. but sti...

and any device that connects through the 30pin connector needs the approved apple chip which apple will only sell to you as an approved developer. This is not "hacker-friendly" at all. Even big companies have a hard time getting the 30-pin identification chips...

different gallons.... ;)

seems not... See the post above with the 5th gear video ([www.youtube.com] where they hit a much bigger loop and run it at 36 Mph...

its been there for ages. The "long" is nowhere near as long as shown on the video, but its really handy. The long press on the BB button brings up the task-switcher in any BB device from the last two or three years. My bold 9000 has it and its quite handy... (the rest of the phone sucks though)

Also, the plant was damaged mainly by the quake itself and not so much the Tsunami

Running inside a VM does not necesarily mean its going to be slow. This is not an emulated platform, but rather running on the native hardware with a thin layer of emulation. Given that android code is based on java (which is a vm itself with no native code) the penalty might not be too bad. The main thing is to

@deciBels: I agree with most of your statements, but as several other commenters mentioned, getting the famous TDMA clicking on the com is not rare AT ALL. And a plane with 200 transmitters searching for a signal at 300mW each makes for some significant sources of potential interference. When a pico-cell is installed

@deciBels: Actually, not really. The components might be shielded, but plenty of avionics rely on receiving RF signals from ground antennas such as VOR and ILS, and those could be affected by other transmitting equipment.

An 11" MacBook Air weight around 1Kg. This would require approximately a 1m^3 balloon (1000 litres) - see here: [answers.yahoo.com]

The cost of those international dial-up sessions would be astronomical as well. I appreciate the effort of the french ISPs (and others) but the price paid will make in unaffordable for most.

@Ninety-9: This is argentina, not the US.. so there is public health care and no bills for it.... so that's one less worry at least. And I know it might not be the most encouraging thing, but I do know of a failed suicide attempt (also jumping out) that lived through his depression. Unfortunately, though, he was left

@EljhHck: Its almost a telltale design of the thinkpads... I'd almost say they do it on purpose these days ;-)

@SlipperyCheese: You can find some good youtube videos showing it... I posted the links above.

Now playing

A couple of videos showing the loading and laying of cable (By Alcatel-Lucent)

@Jerm Deeks: Microsoft Mobile Memory 8000 Mouse. Currently on sale for 20 bucks. It uses a sort of mag-safe connector to charge and you can use it while charging. It takes a sub-dongle but can also pair using bluetooth (both modes are supported). And the dongle doubles as a 1G memory key... pretty nice!

@PossibleCabbage: that makes sense... sounds like the Skol from german / dutch... and thus, what you say when you toast.