operator207
operator207
operator207

Might want to rethink that. It varies from state to state.

during WWIII? Who won?

So this comes with a huge "Don't let your kids anywhere near this if you want them to have appendages" sign, right?

Your MacBooks never sucked air from the bottom of the laptop. They sucked from the sides or the back depending of their age. Most PC Laptops suck air from the bottom and blow it out the side.

Except for all those pesky left handed users that will now have to reach over the keyboard to move the cursor. Even the laptops that move the trackpad a bit to the right can be harder to user if your left handed.

Vote: Fisher Space Pen

In a place I worked, homeless would constantly come into the parking garage to get a couple hours sleep until security found them. A friend had his window smashed at this work place. they stole a bic lighter (broken) and a pack of smokes with 5 cigarettes left in it. He had left them on the seat when he came into

If the user is like me, they would take their expensive stuff with them when leaving the car, or secure them in a place where someone looking into the car would not see the expensive stuff.

In the cars I have needed to power electrical devices suctioned to my dash, there were always power plugin's in the fuse box under the dash on the driver's side. You have to hack up one of those lighter power adapters, but it is much cleaner that way.

Did you know that Waze was once Open Source, but has since moved to a different license with V3? Don't get me wrong, I like Waze quite a bit, I use it for ~3 hours every day during my work commute. However, it moving away from Open Source lessens my support of it. I see the reasoning behind moving, which keeps me

I haven't seen this with my Kenwood or the "aftermarket XM Radio/AUX adapter thingee that plugs into the GPS in the trunk" of my Acura TL's stock Nav radio.

Thank you for describing this.

THey can be quiet, just don't buy a cheap one. We use them all the time in our house. Even though every room has a ceiling fan, the tower fan's work better on keeping the family cool.

Looks a lot like the licq cli plugin I used back in the late 90's early 2000's. And it is a fork of CenterICQ I used back before licq. licq was nice, as you could run the gui version when you were in front of your desktop, and cli version when you were away via ssh. Didn't have to install an app (other than putty if

It is good to see they fixed their slow drawing issue. It was what drew me away from iterm2 originally.

And it lost the ability to double tap space to get a period, capitalize 'i' when used as a word, offer suggestions on misspelled words and so on. It's really a downgrade if you are used to how the keyboard in iOS works in all other apps. I hope they fix it, I use it more than I probably should.

I think offby1 is calling a "Windows Keyboard" a "Standard Keyboard". For example, my Dell keyboard, which I have from time to time used as a keyboard on my MBP, does not have an eject key.

My home network apparently has a "cool" name. 2 people within range of me being able to see them with my laptop in my living room have similar names. The rest are AT&T defaults with 2wire in the name.

Not really, the Airs come with a USB drive. By default you cannot format it or write to it. But with a little Google-Fu you can find a site that has an application that will make it writable. We use them at work for misc stuff. We also get a ton of Airs to build and do not give them the install media. So we for a

2 apps I would have loved to see on this list.