telepheedian-old
telepheedian
telepheedian-old

Downloaded the software, is a beautiful thing.

@Malthian: Do it. Just don't get caught.

@RobotVampire: Android is linux based, shouldn't be too hard to pull off.

@NaraVara: Tell that to the clients.

@battra92: That's basically what we wear over at my IT department, except they supply us with a shirt we have to wear.

@wasting_company_time: It is a relative term, but considering it has a 233mhz processor, it does a great job. It's capable of browsing fairly modern sites with Safari (though you're not going to be doing any serious tabbing in it), can stream audio with VLC (what I use it for), and could easily work as someone's

@donlphi: How is it dying? I've noticed a lot of those machines last quite a while as far as usability and relevancy goes. (I have a 12 year old iMac running Panther, quite well actually)

@ilovexspin: Are you the girl sitting next to GetEmSteveDave in pics 7 and 20, and standing in front of the tweetboard in 4? If so, we are going to need copies of that pic, for important reasons of course.

So basically they're going to charge for a blog?

If anything, he followed in the steps of Gabe Newell.

I knew Oracle would make dick moves with Java after purchasing Sun. Just wait, MySQL is next... :P

@drwatz0n: Did it work for a flash drive, or did it just work for that mouse? They really weren't meant to work with anything other than a mouse (green) or a keyboard (purple).

If he had a serial USB converter handy, this could work. PS/2 to USB = no.

@usa1: Oh, with the advertising revenue, it will...

@AwesomeStudios: Android has a native development kit for those who choose to use it. Most apps simply don't need it, though.

@ericesque: Android does explain what each thing means under the request, like "Services that cost you money". If you're going to allow a media player "Services that cost you money", you're an idiot. (However, that doesn't mean that the ability to access "services that cost you money" is useless, anything that does