hallumos-old
HalLumos
hallumos-old

@infmom: I think the point is still valid, a door isn't built to hold ANY weight except itself, so whatever you store on a door should be very, very, very light. Keeping it closed will probably lessen the damage to the hinges, but it's still gonna happen with all that weight on it. It being 80 years isn't a point in

@infmom: yes, people get rid of clothes for a reason, but it's not always because of a stain, smell, or it's damaged.

@HalLumos: Or to put it a different way

@ffejie: that doesn't sound like a "sleep bank" to me.

@bangoker+lifehack: Keep in mind that rule is in the short-term recovery section.

@somarix: because most english speakers don't know transcriptions.

taking a break is also a good idea.

@constructofamind: I'm okay waiting until I can get a new phone with 2.1 or 2.2 on it. My contract with T-Mobile is up in September, and my partner and I want to add me to his sprint account so we can save money.

@Whitson Gordon: It's a good tool, but for me, if I've got anything that would require a full file explorer, I'd rather just plug the phone into a PC and make all the changes with a mouse.

@Software_Goddess: that's why you get a "ladder" with 4 legs. Extension ladders are dangerous anyway.

@Whitson Gordon: you'd be wrong, I store everything on my SD card, there's simply no room for anything but apps on my G1. Most programs have some sort of file explorer menu so that you can find files. Seems ridiculous to me that this reader doesn't include a basic feature like that, or at least read the whole phone

@Matt Lindley: "Maybe, and that is a big maybe, this could solve a lot of problems - particularly with the recent announcement about Google TV. If I can get most or all of my television content online, then I would happily cancel all my cable services. I have no way of knowing for certain, but I suspect that a lot of

@infmom: They are most likely following a script that they are NOT allowed to deviate from. You're right, you're probably much more informed than they are, but they're probably using some sort of "Knowledge base" program that tells them "Ask the customer this". It's like Windows help menus, only they're reading them

I have to disagree on the dryer sheets.

@Demonicume: I didn't see anything dark about all that. Granted, with all the acronyms and jargon I'm not quite sure I understood everything but the general gist I get is, "google is recording information whenever you access google services" —which would be true of every service online.

@GrandPoobah: that seems odd. I never assume that because someone's chat status (in any chat service) is listed as available that they are sitting there waiting to respond. They might be in the bathroom, on the phone, in the kitchen, out for a smoke, or just left the house and didn't sign out. Outside of jobs where