@pixelsnader: That's the one.
@pixelsnader: That's the one.
@Standish: I like my notebooks like I like my matrices. Defective.
@Gimmeslack: You want a lemon?
@jepzilla:
@Drummertist v.3: IBM disapproves of your commenting shenanigans.
Reminds me of the original Thinkpad, designed to look like a simple black Japanese lunchbox.
@Benedinho: Bluntly, you aim up. Fire control is something militaries are very good at; they've been working on it for a few hundred years.
@sunspot72: Cut it out. You're making us look like douchebags.
@Falke: Well that was easy.
@RockLawbster: Paper = carbon sequestration
They should call it WTF.
I know who I am! I'm a dude, playing a dude, disguised as another dude.
@vinod1978: You are either purposely disingenuous, or you need to work on your reading comprehension. Since you don't strike me as an imbecile, I'm going with the former.
@CoDRoX: I know, I was being retarded last night.
@caldweab: I'm not exactly sure what your point is, or what you're trying to correct, but UMTS uses CDMA for its channel multiplexing.
@sassafras_: Yes, you are right. I don't know why it got into my head that GSM was FDMA, other than it being late. GSM's TDMA implementation is the principle cause of the infamous GSM buzz.
@vinod1978: No. Just, no.
@Cilos: You are correct. I presume they mean radiant heating equivalent to 200F conduction.
@vinod1978: Yes... and no. Any antenna will be affected by the presence of human tissue. To some extent this is a signal attenuation issue, but there's also lensing effects from having a large mass of dielectric in the immediate presence. All phones, including the iPhone 4, have these issues.
There is no CDMA protocol. You mean CDMA2000, which is different.