hawkeward
hawkeward
hawkeward

It's news. The quote was posted on MacDailyNews. Gizmodo communicates what's new and notable in technology. QED.

I usually recommend that people carry around a friend's iPod Touch (if they have a friend with such a device) for at least a day before buying an iPhone. The many mobile OSs have different philosophies that will cater to certain types of users/learners. There's a right "fit" for everybody, so long as you do your

Agreed; the notifications system makes me want to off small children. Regarding the UI, I think the best part about iOS is that the UI isn't the first thing you notice. Organization is subtle, and the applications home screen makes the smart phone *task*-based instead of widget-based. (i.e. glancing/skimming your

Fair; it is important to note that all older technologies suffer fragmentation—Macs and PCs, iOS and Android (say hello to the millions of people on Android 1.* software still) alike. It's just the nature of a society that develops its technology faster than developers can design for it.

Widgets would be nice... but I don't miss them. It really depends on your form of usage. Some people need at-a-glance information—the weather, the titles of recent emails, recent text messages, and recent tweets all in the same place. Others (like myself) prefer to open applications—which I addressed based on the red

Today (and in the old days), if you wanted to bring over a movie, you brought a physical storage media item—a VHS, a DVD, or a Blu-ray disc. With AirPlay and Apple TV, you can just bring your iOS device and stream the movie (or music, or TV show, or photos) to the big screen TV with the built-in functionality in your

The Mail app has actually made great strides over the past year, especially with the ability to use multiple Exchange accounts, threaded messages, archive-capabilities for Gmail, and improved attachment handling. The only criticism is that in composing messages, iOS have the ability to use rich text editors. That

iTunes is design gone wrong—many have conceded this exact same point. The Geniuses are not Geniuses. iPhone is a waste of money (p.s. learn to capitalize iPhone and iTunes correctly, kthxbai). The user interface isn't intuitive. All of these points have been made—and made well—in the past four years.

Challenge accepted.

I think it was already taken down? Or the link doesn't work?

3-3.5 hours*

I wanted to share this article on Facebook to raise awareness on this injustice... but your Facebook sharing capabilities make "subpar" seem complimentary.

The fact that Obama and that photo are now linked in the same post... probably means DHS is watching you now :P

No Safari?

You should look up all the interesting mock-ups for alternatives that display the bar, but subtly... including that one that makes it slightly transparent and disappear after ten seconds.

It's more than Europeans not only documented their own history, but tended to destroy most records of NON-European cultures. Think: Tenochtitlan, Central-to-southern Africa, and almost all of North America.

I'm with the people here who are saying the title is racist.

"This is kind of the core problem with iOS in general—as much as AirPlay alleviates the feeling that the iPad is a silo of computing tranquility, it still doesn't feel holistically connected, which has the pernicious effect occasionally of bursting the pleasant computing bubble you're in..."

"This is kind of the core problem with iOS in general—as much as AirPlay alleviates the feeling that the iPad is a silo of computing tranquility, it still doesn't feel holistically connected, which has the pernicious effect occasionally of bursting the pleasant computing bubble you're in..."

"This is kind of the core problem with iOS in general—as much as AirPlay alleviates the feeling that the iPad is a silo of computing tranquility, it still doesn't feel holistically connected, which has the pernicious effect occasionally of bursting the pleasant computing bubble you're in..."