katsumeblisk
KatsumeBlisk
katsumeblisk

Verizon has always done that as far as I know. It might have only been online though.

I can confirm an imported GNex will work in the US, but I'm not sure if it'd be AT&T or T-Mobile. A dev I follow on Twitter has a GSM Galaxy Nexus.

I don't have a GUI at all with my server. I SSH into it when I need to access it directly. LXDE is wonderful, but it's unneeded with a server. Also, KDE is only slow if you've got old hardware (ie Pentium III or low RAM) or you're running Kubuntu. The only time I've had KDE be slower than GNOME is with Kubuntu.

Unless it's GNOME specific like the network applications, etc. you don't get anything that's not already in LXDE. Both use GTK. It's really only a problem (if you call it that) with GNOME and KDE because KDE uses Qt.

You can install CyanogenMod 7 on it to get Android. CM9 is in the works for it too.

You have a GUI with your server? Real sysadmins use the command line.

Well, I've heard that CM7 runs better on it than its stock webOS. Most people bought it for Android. Most people who buy MacBooks don't buy them to run Windows on. They buy them for Mac OS X (except maybe the Airs because they're so lightweight and ultrabooks haven't existed unti now).

You can get a full version of Android soon. Until then, you can install the Market and use custom launchers.

This is a compilation of past articles from 2011. Yes, they may be outdated. The Firefox article was about Firefox 4 because Firefox 4 had just come out. The only reason the IE9 one isn't as outdated is because Microsoft doesn't update it as often.

This is a compilation of past articles from 2011. Yes, they may be outdated. That article was about Firefox 4 because Firefox 4 had just come out. The only reason the IE9 one isn't as outdated is because Microsoft doesn't update it as often.

This is a compilation of past articles from 2011. Yes, they may be outdated. That article was about Firefox 4 because Firefox 4 had just come out. The only reason the IE9 one isn't as outdated is because Microsoft doesn't update it as often.

I'm surprised you're doing this right before the release of a majorly hyped quad core tablet, the Transformer Prime.

You got my note!

Approving.

Javascript is sort of used for things outside of the web browser now. For example, webOS' apps are written in Javascript. GNOME Shell extensions are also written with Javascript. Windows 8 might have it also, but I'm not sure. Javascript isn't as versatile as C or Python, but it's becoming more common.

I'm surprised MS Office wasn't chosen. Despite its price tag, it's the more popular option. I'm a big FOSS person, but Office fits in with businesses better due to the *cough* monopoly *cough* that MS has in the enterprise world.

I didn't realize this. I knew the Nexus phones were more open to modification, but usually, at least that's what they claim, OEMs don't provide root so you don't screw up the phones.

Some of these apps are part of 10 billion downloads promotion. For example, Beautiful Widgets is $0.10 as of posting this. The only time I'd buy an app during this period is if it's on sale or it was earlier (so it can't be discounted again). The apps aren't too expensive, but it adds up. I'd rather spend the $10.00

I'm using a cheap keyboard off of Newegg that's brandless (logo-wise so I don't know who made it), but it's wonderful. It doesn't have any fancy multimedia keys, but it's great for coding. My mouse is the mighty Logitech MX518. It's the best mouse I've ever used, but the Revolution may be better.