steven
steven [gawker help]
steven

Via alien technology from the future

Unfortunately I don't have ETAs on when problems will be resolved and in what order. If the tech team is aware of them, then they'll resolve them

It's temporary, your comment history isn't gone!

Great points. Let's tackle them one by one.

Hmmm, sounds to me like you created a new account by accident instead of converting your old account. If you can shoot an email over to help [at] gawker.com we can help you straighten things out, as we'll need to get a few more tidbits of info from you.

I'll go ahead and forward the suggestion to our Tech Team :)

If you go to your profile you can click on the Comments button. There you will find the comment you are looking for.

Personally, I miss disemvowling people.

The reasons are technical, but the pain is only temporary. In a few days the sidebar will be repopulated with enough new articles to make this inconvenience long gone.

Ohhh, that's my favorite cutscene from Tomb Raider 2!

No, an algorithm is responsible for weeding out the trolls.

Any article that was published before the rollout of the new system is closed for comments. For technical reasons the old and the new comment system need to be kept separate. In regards to the comment view, unfortunately what you see here is what you get. There's no Konami code to give you a different comment view.

Remember where the old "Start A New Discussion" button was? In that same spot now exists the "Reply to this post" button. You seem to have already found that though, since I'm replying to your new discussion :)

Good eye in catching the hover feature ;)

It's important! Important enough that our Tech Team is already on it and working on a fix. Hang in there.

Nope, Kinja automatically sorts out the trolls so they get bumped all the way to the back.

Down with the Totillgeoisie!

Gawker uses Kinja. It's super effective!

I completely agree that in Europe things are not as rosy when it comes to roaming. However, roaming prices and agreements are currently being regulated down to very cheap price points (a 0.70 euro cap per megabyte becomes effective in July with the cap falling to 0.20 cents by 2014). It is only a matter of time before

To make things even more interesting (and convoluted), Apple Maps has two rival services collaborating with each other: NavTeq (owned by Nokia) and Tele Atlas (owned by TomTom), with Nokia licensing C9 from Apple. Christ my head is going to explode. So it's essentially a three-way handshake which leads me to believe