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In a store, the phones are lacking content. That's exactly the thing that brings these devices to life.

I have very mixed feelings about the music hub. On one hand, it's pretty, all the extra info (artist biography, album reviews, etc) are great, and it loads tracks instantly after tapping one. However, creating playlists on the device is a pain. You can add tracks to the 'now playing' list, but you can't remove

I'd see that as a plus, because of how fast webpages load nowadays. When opening the browser with your previous session (say, 50 tabs), you don't need them to load all at once. And when you need one of your old tabs again, activate it and it'll be there in less than a second.

Tab groups and stability are the main reasons for me to stick with Firefox. Also, the way multiple tabs are handled.

Please don't. Hopefully the original theme remains available. The rounded edges are an extreme waste of space. Call me obsessed, but straight blocks fit better next to eachother. Why step away to an inefficient squiggly edge? It's a step backwards.

I just hide my birthday from my page. This way, only people who actually remembered congratulate me. I don't blame people for forgetting, but those who remember make it a bit more special.

To be honest, most people have this data readily available already. Just grouped less conveniently.

Pfft. 35-foot long, you say? That's nothing.

The image contains only halve the comic.

The source gives the 20 worst talks, your link (at the end of the first paragraph) says 50. #Corrections

WindowsPhoneDaily encountered a 1080p device in their logs with a WP8 user agent string.

Luckily, it does most of the time.

Or your browser still had the old data cached ;)

I don't see it saying it'll be a thumb drive. And I don't expect it to be.

By the time this hits mainstream, we'll be laughing at our puny 1TB drives.

"[...] are located around the back and sites."

Halfway down the first paragraph: "privatized" #Corrections

Actually, I'm not. I'm studying at a Dutch university, working on my BSc in Engineering.

If you look a little more closely, you see that the hashtag is linked. It's part of Gizmodo's comment system, and unrelated to Twitter. Posts tagged with the 'corrections' hashtag form a feed of errors (not only linguistic, but also if things are cited incorrectly or other mistakes. However, the vast majority has to

I can come up with a bunch of excuses, but I guess I'll just have to admit that it's quite a failure to make such an elementary mistake while correcting someone else. Normally I'm a little more keen on checking my own writing, but apparently not this time.