"Whoa. What the hell?! See, boss this is what I'm talking about. IE is so insecure! Pop-ups just walk right past it. This is why I've been saying we need to switch to Firefox/Chrome."
"Whoa. What the hell?! See, boss this is what I'm talking about. IE is so insecure! Pop-ups just walk right past it. This is why I've been saying we need to switch to Firefox/Chrome."
You're new around here, aren't you?
"If you know someone well enough to be exchanging IMs in the first place, why would you question their judgment?"
Just updated and...the app doesn't really look that different on Honeycomb tablets. Still the same single-panel, giant UI. The Action bar was already added previously, so besides the icon, I'm not sure what changed.
I use Google Voice on a Sprint line where I can use GV on my main number. With the exception of MMS, it's brilliant. Since texts are synced with your Google account, you can send/receive texts from just about any device. I frequently use my tablet for texting while my phone charges.
I generally prefer to play the role of counter-balance to Gizmodo's Google-bashing, but this is one time I have to agree.
Technically, it's not to get rid of those skins, but rather to ensure those skins don't hold back updates.
Like Lewis said, if Apple did this right, then Google is doing this right. Apple does not enforce their design guidelines any more than Google does. App Store policy is enforced, but not design guidelines.
As a portable screen for watching movies, I recommend the Nook Tablet, the Nook Color, or the Kindle Fire, all of which have solid hardware, great battery life, and can be had for $250 or less.
Those girls absolutely butchered that song. Freddie Mercury is not to be fucked with.
I'm sorry but....who fucking cares?
If you're a woman, yes. It's called alimony. You'll have to put out for a rich guy for a while, though.
You're right. It's totally awful when someone tries to take a feature that one company has created and hijack it for their own selfish purposes.
Even if they did it exactly as you described it (which is mostly how it works, except you'd probably have to manually tell Google Music to download a local version), as you say, it's just like iTunes.
Don't start telling CostCo/Sam's Club/BJ's or any of the other wholesale retailers that. If they ever find out that you can't get customers to spend money by offering a discount on things bought in bulk versus the higher per-unit cost of buying things individually, they might all commit seppuku.
It physically hurt me, how right you are.
Advertisers have more money and are more willing to spend it on goofy looking shit that grabs people's attention. And as the existence of Google proves, ad money makes innovation happen. Innovations that otherwise might never come to pass.