j-whiteman
J Whiteman
j-whiteman

Imagine it integrated with Tasker.

Old school aim (3.x?) is still the tops on my list. It let you share files and folders...so leave it running, and youve got yourself a virtual data server. That was the start of my website design days.

eh, shit happens. At least I don't have to fear it.

@Turkieshooter: Right. Because once again, when there is a design flaw with an apple product, and your phone breaks or won't function because of it....it's YOUR fault.

@Philip.J.Fry: No. I've dropped my Motorola Droid a dozen times, at different heights, on different material. I dropped it from my shoulder height (im 6-2) on to concrete, and it just happened to rotate while falling to land flat on the screen. It got a nasty dent on the edge metal, just as it was designed to, but the

you certainly missed out. Theres nothing like calling in an airstrike as a sniper painting a target on a building with enemy snipers in the attic.

It's a little bit different than you think. I'm a leader of a clan 9mm (www.Clan9mm.com) and for us, we know the engine of the game in multiplayer hasn't changed....its not the upgrades like graphics or celebrity voices, its the improvements over time. For instance, World at War introduced on the fly squad management

I've done this myself in NYC, only I used a combination of a Think Outside Boomtube speaker system (google it) and a sansa clip. The whole thing was secured using hose clamps and rubber grip mats for the cabinets cut to size to prevent scratches.

Like Street Fighter!

Except at that point, the shear weight would turn your belt from holding your pants up, to pulling them down.

its tricky

It's buggy graphically, but 100% playable. Ive been playing it while the the PSN is down and it's perfect for holding me over.

negative, i survived with singleplayer games for decades, i can survive a month and a half. Gamefly and new vegas helps too.

funny thing is, its small, side programs like those that commonly are used to find ways past all the security.

my sources are kotaku. everything i mentioned was from articles here.

Well they supposedly left their calling card behind. A text file named anonymous.txt which only had "We are no one and everyone" or some other bullshit in it. Plus, according to Sony, they started to host a website on Sony's own servers which listed all sensitive data they collected (names, passwords, partial

RROD is worse, simply because even in this dark time for Sony, I can still play offline, and right now I'm busy with New Vegas.

+1

That's assuming they don't release sensitive information for real...not like the 'warning' sony already scrubbed. If they do release private data, may they be forced to live in Cuba's version of an Amish village. I can see no stronger punishment for a hacker.