posco-grubb-old
Posco Grubb
posco-grubb-old

I must say, I do LOVE the Google favicon!

@CGGGwydion: That's right; thank you. Also correct with the per-file limits.

@michael.hargett: And if that pencil Tom sold you was a product of forced child labor, and Tom hid that fact from you, and Tom used the profits of that transaction to grow his child-labor factory?

@simonbarsinister: You're talking about California's gubernatorial race, aren't you?

This year I started using Microsoft Windows Live SkyDrive (don't you just love Microsoft's branding system?). You can give out URLs to certain folders for people to download without logging in.

@mjriccardo: I'm fine "up here", thanks. Anyone interested in the roots of hacker culture should definitely check out Steve Levy's book Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution.

@Xeraphim: Heheh, then 90% will vote "Other"

To the pure, all things are pure.

On my account with a number of folders and hundreds of messages, it definitely feels faster on displaying emails.

@Superhuman: Yeah, but to say that lock-in is to civil government as hacking is to civil disobedience? I don't think so.

@mjriccardo: The grade is a joke, ok? I took the article for what it is: IMHO quite a bit of juvenile nonsense. I expect better from LH. Maybe civil disobedience can be linked to hacking, downloading music, and building stuff, but this article did a terrible job of it.

@mjriccardo: Meh. This article looks like a high school English essay assignment. "Write an essay linking civil disobedience with a contemporary issue."

@Marand: Choosing to void the warranty is not disobedience.

I disagree that hackers' roots are associated with civil disobedience.

@crichton007: And not only that, but the love of money is A root of all evil. Not the only root.

Windows 7 users: it uses its task bar button as a progress meter, just like Windows Explorer does when it's copying a big file. Cool!

@31337h4ck3r: No, it does not prevent the screen saver from activating, nor does it prevent the display from turning off.

@athews: Desktop PC's don't have a battery meter.