thomasella
Thomas Ella
thomasella

It's an article that should just be titled, "Be Aware Of Your Food Budget" and end there.

There is zero reason to ever use a debit card. Zero. Always use a credit card.

Eh, Shifu has turned out to be even more lackluster than Google Now. It's literally just "define a list of conditional tasks." That's it. It'll remind you of those tasks when you hit the condition, like connecting to a certain WiFi network or while on the phone with someone, but it's not giving you those tasks or

Frankly, this sounds like Google Now, except that my phone (Moto X) is so tightly integrated with Google Now that it might not be worth it. I'll try it out because Google Now isn't nearly the powerhouse, oh-god-is-this-how-Skynet-happens super assistant they make it out to be, but unfortunately it won't be able to

Haha I didn't even think about that while I was watching. Bravo.

Oh, yeah, I usually just sign up for any beta apps that are available. Chrome, Snapchat, Fleksy, SwiftKey, etc. I like being on the accelerated evolution of an app and watching it develop. I have no idea what other features are in the beta and not in the release version. Might be worth trying out the beta and seeing

That's an old version of Fleksy. Now that keyboard button literally just says "123" and will bring you to the standard dedicated alternate keyboard with numbers and stuff.

Take into account, then, that on my "older Mac" (a white 2008 Macbook that would definitely benefit from having a cleared memory) this "app" isn't even available because you have to have OS X 10.7 or higher. I don't even know that 10.7 and higher is even compatible on my Macbook. Right now I'm running Snow Leopard

Up until I got my Moto X last month, I was still using my original black Zune 30 from what, like 2005? Jeez. I loved that thing. I even bought an iPod Classic in 2008 because I was buying a Macbook for college, but after maybe a year, I couldn't stand it anymore and installed Windows as a virtual machine, which was

It's cool but the paper is way overpriced. It's like $3.49 for 25 sheets. I can buy a Mead notebook with 120 sheets for less than that.

I think it's more about cautioning average people not to get too reliant on a 7-minute workout or a 20-minute workout, thinking that it'll net you the same (or even similar) benefits as longer, more intense workouts, rather than assuming that these short workouts are at all targeted toward serious athletes.

I disabled Flow because I tended to swipe accidentally and it would read it as a Flow swipe, and also, you can't swipe left to delete when Flow is active, which is why I didn't even know that SwiftKey had that option and wasn't just a Fleksy innovation.

No, it just means that my chances of running into someone stupid increase greatly. I work with some of the dumbest people I've ever met (I wish you could've heard the new rules my boss laid down this morning, holy shit, or in general what one of our work study students says).

Like cyprus, I'd agree with that too. I guess I just assumed that this entire article was about those "big ticket" apologies. Nobody expects a 5-step apology when somebody bumps into them.

I work at a community college so that's all I work with. I skipped straight to the last bit. Started a blog where I just turn all their dumb antics into nonfiction stories. It's a pretty awesome coping mechanism.

If you mean, "How can you compare Fleksy's tapping to SwiftKey's Flow?" then that's because Fleksy is designed to tap and SwiftKey has the option for both and I don't like tapping with SwiftKey, so I'm just comparing my main input method with both.

Yeah but he's not saying "make unrealistic promises." He's just saying to outline a way to correct it. So in your example, you can't promise "IT'LL NEVER HAPPEN AGAIN EVER" but you could promise "I'll try harder to remember in the future."

For me, yeah, it's way better. SwiftKey is constantly giving me the wrong words. Mind you, I'm using Flow, not tapping to type, when I use SwiftKey, so there's an element there of "not only do you have to predict what word I wanted, but you have to guess which word I carelessly slid to." I end up needing to go back

Ah, okay. Yeah I just wasn't sure if people were going to have the same reaction to it as me, where I used it for 5 minutes and almost wrote it off.

I think it just depends on the kind of person you are. If you really do use QuickOffice at work a lot and Google Play Music in the car and Hangouts at home, then I bet this kind of thing is pretty useful. But if you're like me and use pretty much the same apps everywhere, yeah, it's probably not all that useful. I did