
VOTE: Yamaha Audiogram 6 (for affordable consumer level)
VOTE: Yamaha Audiogram 6 (for affordable consumer level)
The idea is you combine the ingredients in the bottle then shake vigorously instead of using a beater or whisk. From experience I can say this actually works very well... with the right ingredients and enough endurance... (it's a LOT of shaking... like... minutes)
Thanks, Alan. Will check these out. I think it's one thing for a day to day scanner. But if you're serious about going paperless, you probably have a little filing cabinet somewhere with a thousand or so pages you need to digitize. Took me days to get through mine- with a paper tray. That weekend alone made it worth…
1. OCR accuracy is reduced
Jeff and Matt already pointed out why this won't save battery life... but OMG GREAT IDEA FOR NIGHT USE!!!! I just enabled this on my phone! Thanks! :-)
This is a joke. I think voters misunderstood 'going paperless'. I mean, Doxie is fine for scanning on occasion, and is probably the best option for the vast majority of consumers, but going paperless, where you may be scanning hundreds of papers every year... you NEED a scanner with a paper tray. A smartphone camera?…
The paper tray *500 series of the Fujitsu ScanSnap line. Been so for about a decade, amazingly enough. ScanSnap S1500, S1500M, iX500, and iX500 Deluxe.
Strongly disagree. As someone who had his stuff together, I still found meditation to be shockingly transformative over the years. My brain works in a very different way now. I see things I didn't before. I respond in ways I didn't before. There's a lot more to it than finding calm or being able to focus better. It's…
Don't punch your mom in the dick.
Yeah, the other huge benefit of working remote and having flex time is not having to "miss work" for life that gets in the way. Car problems, sick kids, sick you, deliveries, cable hookup, house repairs, on and on. You usually don't need to put in a time-off request or plan stuff way in advance. You just take care of…
Almost exactly 1 year
After 1.5 years of commuting 1.5 hours each way, I was offered the option to work from home with some frequency. I do 3 days a week on average, and I'm much more productive overall. I tend to work more hours too since I'm not sitting in a car for 2.5 hours every day.
But then who will make millions of dollars off of SDKs and licensing fees and transaction fees???
my understanding is it isn't the download speed, it's the latency. your button input goes half way around the world; the game process that input; video is then sent half way around the world back to you. fine for office applications and turn based strategy- completely unusable for FPS and other fast games
"However, that doesn't mean Japanese people won't make death puns if the console flounders. "
True, it won't be totally accurate, but more accurate than a poll; few people take polls relative to the # and % of people visiting the site. Same goes for those using analytics-blocking software; it's a very small percentage.
This made my day
Walter, you have Google Analytics installed... So is this poll to tell you the difference between the browser people who vote use, and the general visitor? It might be interesting in a way. How bout sharing the actual data from Analytics with us. No need to even wait for the poll to close.
THIS. It's why the iPhone, which didn't even have 'copy & paste' at launch (as well as a ton of other common features), did better than any smart phone before it. It's all about usability. Developers on Linux (and to a lesser extent, Windows) have a lot of catching up to do; too many 'old school' approaches...…