jamestheniggahatindolphin
JamesTheNiggaHatinDolphin
jamestheniggahatindolphin

I loved my Logitech Revue. I was able to play damn near any file format on it. Just recently retired it when I got my Apple TV 4th gen since it can run VLC and play just about any format I can throw at it.

The Revue was a descent product, it’s a shame that Google gave up on it so soon and that updates were discontinued

Likewise. I think the people who are “hating” on it have never actually used it.

It is much easier for me to hold my apple watch up the the card reader and click the side button twice than it is to reach into my back pocket, pull my wallet out, find the card I want to use, swipe it, put it back into my wallets tight ass pockets (My wallet won’t loosen up so getting cards in and out of it is a real

It still runs Windows...No thank you.

Bought a 4th Gen Apple TV last month and am loving it. Much better than the 3rd generation, and the VLC app gives you the ability to stream any video format. Only complaint is that there is no “hold” or “off” button on the remote. I am constantly bumping the remote and disrupting playback.

Kendrick got 5...just sayin’.

I have never even heard of a Safeway.

These speeds are awful. I often pull 60+mbps on AT&T.

So I guess we shouldn’t be allowed to carry any electronics on an airplane then. According to your logic, Anything that uses lithium ion batteries has a high risk of “exploding” apparently. Just like anything else, you get what you pay for.

They are harder to ride (usually take a couple hours to learn which deters a lot of people so you have less kids riding them around recklessly), they are narrow so it’s safer to ride them on sidewalks without mowing people down, it’s damn near impossible to ride them backwards (I noticed a lot of hoverboard riders

Honest answer: no. These things weigh 20-25 pounds though, so it’s easier to ride it than it is to carry it. Ultimately the goal is to use it at my destination to get around and explore downtown areas (San Fran, NYC, LA, etc.). Can’t really do that now without someone yelling “Hey! You Can’t ride that here!”

No, but it’s easier to ride it then it is to carry. Weighs about 25lbs. I like riding it in downtown areas when I travel (San Fran, NYC, LA, etc.) but that is a thing of the past now since I can’t ride it anymore without being told “Hey! You can’t ride that here!”.

Not sure who made them first. For a while, Mark Cuban was saying that he owned the patent. The first one I saw was from “Airwheel”. Not sure who made it first though.

I have been riding solowheels for over a year now and love it. It’s a shame that these stupid “hoverboards” are ruining it for everybody. I used to be able to carry my solowheel onto an airplane with no worries, as well as ride it through the airport. Those days are gone. It was fun while it lasted.

FUCK YEAH AMERICA

I couldn’t get into it after forcing myself through it for about 2 hours. Fortunately I just rented it from Redox and wasn’t out $60 for a game I will never play again.

Most of these are cheap chinese knock-offs with cheap unbranded battery cells. I don’t understand how these things exploding come as a shock to anyone. You get what you pay for. There is a reason why these things vary from $250 to $2k in price.

I have always disliked burner and never understood why Gawker doesn’t use Disquis (like most other blogs). Burner wouldn’t be so bad if I could change my password to something I can remember rather than their auto-generated keys.

I did a trial, but the service didn’t really compare to Spotify. The only way for them to get market share will be to offer exclusive content, much like what Apple Music is doing. Since my Apple Music trial has ended, I find myself missing some of the content that I can’t get on Spotify, but not enough to warrant

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