He never said "in one try."
He never said "in one try."
Notice "PleaseStopBreeding" referred to "this article" and not "this blog post." :P
Marywipes actually sounds like something Britons would say.
I have an iPhone 4. I really don't give two shits. I bought the phone knowing what it was. Can it run Siri and these new features? Yes. Does Apple have some type of obligation to add them in their old phones? No. As a consumer, all you have to do is buy another brand if you feel you are being wronged. If you keep…
Form factor and design don't have as much to do with it as does the cost of components. It's simply much cheaper to store data on magnetic media than solid state ICs.
Just look at it this way. As long as everyone else is using less fuel, the price of gasoline should go down.
Oh, just buy one you cheapskate. ;)
A gadget site purely judging an item by its cover. Oh yeah, great.
Yes, direct verbal communication. "Oh, this new BMW is so expensive to maintain!"
I've never seen such an apt comparison.
I think they spent a lot of time contemplating the size of the iPad mini. They wanted something that was physically bigger, but they HAD to go with 1024x768. There is no way they could have gone with any other resolution if they wanted to keep screen fragmentation from getting out of hand.
Being a grammar nazi is usually not cool. However, being a grammar nazi to a grammar nazi is completely justified.
Dude, it's an A4... Nice car, but c'mon, do you really think it's a stretch that I've actually driven one?
Check the A4.
Depending on the weight of the car and the incline you're sitting on, a torque converter can easily slip. It is a feature and a welcome one on heavy SUVs when towing an equally heavy load.
If you look at the right side of the other car, it's not there. Hopefully it's just a bad wrap job.
Genius.
Corning is not an obscure unknown company. It is one of the most respected manufacturers of industrial glass in the United States (likely the world). It is a multi-billion dollar company. It has been around since before the Civil War.
I bet voice recognition systems could have a fairly good success rate. In turn, I bet humans would have a surprisingly bad one.