person29
Person29
person29

They could guide you through it, but if the person doing it messes up and the doctor makes an incorrect diagnosis, the doctor is the one liable, not you. I can't think of many physicians who are willing to risk a lawsuit and get quagmired. (I work in medicine)

The iPhone was announced in January 2007 and went on sale in June. The Apple watch was announced in September and looks like it will go on sale by February.

That's never really been the case with Apple. Look at the iPhone 4, the so-called "antennagate" scandal. Apple published the data on dropped call statistics to show they were only 1% higher on the 4 than the iPhone 3GS, and offered every customer a choice of free case from the Apple Store, as well as a new 30-day

Yup, I was caseless until this too.

Unless you're a doctor.

Autopsy results take a long time, of all the things to criticize as a scandal/cover-up, this isn't one. First, there are few medical examiners, so there's a perpetual backlog, especially in cases where there's a lot of public scrutiny, tracing bullet trajectories like here. Second, they do a full drug screen of the

X-Men had plenty of female superheroes.

Maybe Apple is just turning their iPod nano into a watch, without the fancy other features?

Interestingly enough, the US intelligence agenices switched to digital cameras somewhat quickly, while Soviet intelligence kept using film through the 80's.

They've always been this way. Remember when people were starving to death in Somalia and People ran their Sexiest Men Alive issue?

Wouldn't a no-bezel phone instantly shatter the screen when dropped?

But the cool millenials want something to connect with their smartphone, anything.

But if the car needs to come to a sudden stop, who is now liable? Google probably. There's a reason to have mandatory speed limits, it doesn't matter "if everyone else is doing it."

Good question. Generally the police are under the control of the local and state governments. The President can mandate it for FBI agents and other federal authorities, although they don't see nearly as much action (although it would have answered questions regarding the mysterious killing of Ibragim Todashev).

Dress more conservatively!

Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back is one of the few films that conveys reading a website decently well, and is the only one I can think of that actually showed a full page and scrolling, with Ben Affleck reading the page to the rest of the characters. It looks relatively lousy compared to the text message scenes in

I suspect it's because they don't want to give free advertising to brands. I strongly doubt that Microsoft or Apple is going to sue over screenshots in a movie.

The movie The Saint, had a Nokia 9000 Communicator cell phone. It was very cutting-edge when it was introduced in 1996, as it was a bit smaller than the above phone and had more apps.

Aren't there laws against that? Detaining someone can be unlawful, just like an unlawful arrest.

Oh not again. I hated the grayed-out comments, and the incessant bitching about them.