trenchent
Trenchant
trenchent

@paulold: What... You thought the approval process was about quality control? No no... It's about user experience control. If there was any quality behind what the approvers do, apps that collect any user data without explicit consent should have been barred long long ago.

"It time for HP to consider a different figure: zero. That's the amount of publicly perceived charisma its ex-CEO possessed, and that's something the company cannot afford to repeat."

How anyone thinks this is a good idea, I really don't know.

"Microsoft said that they wanted to appeal to the casual gamer more with the lower price."

@JuniperoXVII: The problem is that I bought into the Apple ecosystem.

What you've described and what is pictured are the complete opposite.

Does nobody remember that Apple PURPOSELY modified their antenna algorithm for the 3G?

@MxPxRobbie: Weren't the EV's never sold, only leased, and then destroyed on recall? I know it happened with the GM EV's, but I thought I remember the Toyota's generally being reclaimed by Toyota as well from the documentary "Who Killed the Electric Car?"

Seriously? That's it? That's their "solution"? Band-aids are not solutions.

Or... You know... Delete.

No luck whatsoever.

@Alluvian: No, the media dropped it because it's not a hot topic anymore. They're still getting backlash.

Old news... I remember reading this well over a month ago in complete disgust. They don't want them wearing masks because it looks bad from a PR perspective and stresses the hazardous and dangerous nature of the disaster.

"It's a known, recurring problem. So why, after all these years, does something as serious as a flammable gadget continue to be an issue?"

"Don't mind the slow-motion footage. Take heed of the results, using Unreal Tournament III, which in this case show that the time between button press and on-screen action was around 150ms. That may sound like a lot, but it's typical of the kind of delays you'll face playing any kind of networked game, whether online

@Steve_Thompson: Or perhaps we shouldn't be told to hold our iPhones unnaturally or that we're required to hide them in hideous rubber bands, when Apple shouldn't have been peddling the poor design in the first place.

It's about time, 'cause the US is certainly dragging its feet with this one.

@bigtimes: I agree... I don't know why anyone would be keeping this thing with these troubles... But for some people, it's not as easy to part with their iPhone 4's.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but back when the 3G was launched and people were complaining of bad reception, wasn't Apple's response then that their signal calculations were wrong, and that they weren't displaying ENOUGH bars?

And just like that, Cameron loses all credibility...