Check out the tags on his article. One of them is "bath salst". Ha.
Check out the tags on his article. One of them is "bath salst". Ha.
hahaha nice one!
I'm sorry, I should have clarified. What I meant to say was screen SIZE. The difference in screen size is really the determining factor. Do you need something large with lots of screen real estate, or something small that's extremely portable? It's nice to have choice.
It looks like some Apple retail stores are doing exchanges. http://gizmodo.com/5954295/
And if thats important to you, go with the iPad!
I think you answered your own question: its the screen. That really differentiates them into two market segments, and which one you should buy depends wholly on what you need.
There are refurbished units of the 3rd gen. iPad going for $379, which, frankly, is a way better deal than the iPad 2 at $399.
Depending on the price point of the Nexus 10, it could be one of the best tablets out there.
I assume you meant to say "wouldn't". This watch is not going to get you any more points. There's a clock in every room you take the SAT in, and the proctor is instructed to let you know how much time you have left at certain intervals. And plus, if you really need a watch during the test, get some cheap one, not one…
The reason we won't see it is because the world is going to end in December. Duh.
I think this would make things a lot more stressful because I would be looking at it constantly. I took an SAT Subject Test last weekend, and the proctor simply let us know when we had 30 min. left, 10 min. left, etc. Buying a watch exclusively for one test seems excessive, IMO.
Really? So you pay less than $45/month for unlimited everything? Or less than $30/month for unlimited everything, but 100 min? On AT&T? Please, enlighten me.
Yes, you have a point: it'd be more meaningful to compare it to a non-contract iPhone where you'd purchase the device for about $650. It's been done with an iPhone 4S, and the results are always pretty drastic, with the no-contract plans resulting in a much lower bill in 2 years.
How is it flawed? If you own your own phone, you can switch plans anytime you want. And the biggest advantage (especially here in the U.S.) is that you can get cheaper rates on non-contract plans because they don't have to subsidize your phone. Its very easy to get a no contract plan with similar components (if not…
I think they did. They said that there will just be black bars on the top and bottom of the screen so that the app is centered.
I definitely don't mind the ads. I think its a win-win situation: Amazon sells ads, we save money. The only thing that surprises me is that you can't opt-out of them by paying a fee (wasn't it like $25 for the old Kindle with ads?). I'm sure the people who are complaining would be willing to do that, and then we could…
Yeah, this is the best plan, hands down.
What will happen to Carbon for Android? It's yet to be released, so IDK how this will affect them.
Ah, you beat me too it. Tisk tisk for posting that kinda stuff on Twitter Giz...
Yeah, I see it, but 1 GB of data compared to unlimited data isn't comparable. Sure it might not matter to you because you use Wifi, but you're still getting less data.