vlatro-old
vlatro
vlatro-old

Once again, the NY Times pulls another gem from their big bag of completely f*cking obvious topics.

@phquaryn: I know, it almost sounds too strange to be true, but as one who's seen it in practice, I assure you they do exist.

@Phrosty: I agree to an extent, the police dept could have handled that better. But look at their position. Why would they continue to employ an officer who couldn't make an arrest without every detail being under public scrutiny. In the area he patrolled, there's a huge problem with getting the citizens to

The saving grace of online media is that hardly anyone embeds proper metadata in files. Your picture likely doesn't have your name attached to it, so copied and reposted from one of your social networking sites, it becomes an anonymous picture to all but those who already know you.

@bdinger: I disagree. If everyone else gets fees per GB, sprint will too. They have a duty to their share holders to profit as much as they can from the market, which right now is dictating higher data prices. The level of infrastructure may allow them to undercut the competition, but that doesn't mean they'll

@Reese Mitchell: If movies are scaled down to proper iPhone resolutions, with decent sound and video quality it's about 350MB per hour of video.

Well, there's two sides to this. Let me begin by stating, if it's in public, you can photograph it. That's the law, and it's your right, one I'd gladly defend.

@englishman: I should clarify, used they are very cheap, around the $300 mark, which is approximately what you can build one for. As I said, I found mine for $50 used.

Who would go to all that trouble to burn a few sawdust piles or some scrap paper. If you have a lot of this waste, it's fairly easy to make a pellet mill (or buy one for about $300). Then you can turn all this into pellets for a pellet stove. You can use dried leaves, green or brown grass clippings, paper, sawdust,

@Maave: The only ones laughing now are dumb-ass kids who've done nothing to advance computing themselves. From 10MB hard drives sold at $3,400 to 2TB hard drives for $99. That's 200,000 times the capacity for 3% of the cost. Fairly significant progress in 25 years. I'd say we set the bar pretty high. If

@Wewtaco: I agree with your sentiment, Google it's self is not a threat to you or I personally. That doesn't mean that an endless trend of expansion is equitable for them or their consumers.

@yanks003: As a rule, developing based on an emulator alone is irresponsible for a commercial app. It assumes the emulator is flawless, and the hardware and OS platform the emulator is run under can effectively emulate the hardware functions of the phone in software.

@Andrew Hill: I think the point here is the volume of the dehydrator. the $30 Table top models take forever to finish and hardly hold anything.

@el_basto: Decrypt and before compressing, play back in a media player that can drop frames to an image. VLC works well for this.

Old news, they've had x64 compiled builds for well over 2 years now.