That is what I figured. But then I got confused and I forgot, and then I couldn't understand why Microsoft would name two apps pretty much exactly the same thing. Only to confuse people I guess!
That is what I figured. But then I got confused and I forgot, and then I couldn't understand why Microsoft would name two apps pretty much exactly the same thing. Only to confuse people I guess!
lol, yes? High school? College?
Your link for Outlook for Android takes me to a play store link for Word for tablets. Anyway, I thought Outlook was out on Android for a while already. I've had it installed for months. Or is this different from the Outlook.com app?
In this case their quality checking is hurting quality.
Does this also apply to users who have the paid version of the app on the Amazon app store?
That's just it. With me, I don't anticipate doing any large jobs. I don't have a big wood working shop in my garage and I don't plan on building any large decks, just smaller jobs and fixing stuff around the house. I figured it would be okay for that. Thanks!
What do you think of this thing? It appears you can turn off the impact function and use it as just a regular drill. I had this in mind since I already have the oscillating tool they have which uses the same batteries and charger. Worth it?
Oh and then you have this weird lookin guy who claims to be a hammer drill / driver.
Thanks for clarifying. I can't see much use for a hammer drill. After looking into it more, it sounds like a hammer drill does more "pounding" by oscillating forward and backward on the bit, whereas an impact driver sends torque side-to-side, i.e. left and right in pulses. Does that sound correct?
I've used impact drivers before, but my question is, I've seen some tools advertised as "hammer drills" is this the same thing just different wording, or are we talking about two different power tools here?
At what cost are those prepaid extra miles? I'm sure getting a lease with something like 15k or 18k a year probably makes the payment go up quite a bit. I'm genuinely interested and that is why I'm asking. I'd love to lease a car but I've always been turned off by the fact that I drive so much and I know people who…
I'll probably get the HGST 4TB drives next. They seem to be going for about $80 less than the Seagate's on Amazon currently. So it seems like a decent deal. Each manufacturer goes through periods of good drives and bad drives. I remember the older HGST (Hitachi drives back then) we called them the Hitachi "Deathstar"…
I used to drive a lot for work doing IT consulting, but my employer would reimburse for mileage. I'm now working somewhere else and now I just commute about 100 miles each day.
What if I drive 20,000 miles a year? Can you even lease a car with that high of a mileage allotment? I usually see most leases list anywhere from 10,000-12,000 miles a year for annual mileage allotment. Which is why I have always bought a car instead. Unless the lease terms support how much I drive each year, it…
Odd, as I've had about 3 different Seagate drives in my desktop for the last 6 years or so and they are still going strong....knock on wood...I cringe to think how much work it would be for me if they went offline. I do have backups though, so that helps. But those backups are on Seagate drives as well...cringe.
I'm really lovin the Lenovo. My previous Lenovo laptops have always been rock solid. Also the design is probably the most unique out of those others.
So this tells me I should get either a Surface Pro 3, Macbook Air, or Lenovo Yoga. I've considered all of them seriously before, so that makes pretty good sense. Small, light, ssd, small screen. Perfect for mobility.
Thanks. I was directing that same question to the guy from Decibullz to see if they had an "official" answer to the question. They should consider expanding their chart.
Valid point, and another reason I wear my giant over the head headphones at the office. People know I'm not listening instead of ignoring them lol.
Hey, as long as they are "decent enough" and better than the cheap Samsung or iPhone headphones that come standard that's okay by me for $15. Now I'm just wondering if those Decibullz work with headphones other than the ones on their short list on their website. I'm guessing most of the round ribbed protrusion that…