...and if it can't fit on the SoC, then (loud_booming_voice) "move it to the cloud" (/loud_booming_voice)
...and if it can't fit on the SoC, then (loud_booming_voice) "move it to the cloud" (/loud_booming_voice)
Reaaaaaly wish i could have heard his screams/shrieks/cries following that hit.
Wonder if the cheap route is a red and green laser, and a blow dryer... :)
A vegetarians dream come true.
just about every Android review on this site is pretty much: "I'm an Apple fan, but I got this Android device I have to review, and I hate it because (insert some Apple party line hated)".
New dieting technique for the summer.
Why do we have or need a base over there. These were senseless deaths.
Any amount of money is life altering. It just may not amount to much altering.
Seriously. How are they supposed to be killing off these other products if their desktop market share is only about 15% of the market at best estimations? The only way they can kill ANYTHING off, is if they open it up for other OSs or take over the market share arena by leaps and bounds. Not happening ANY time soon.
Sprint does not have a soft cap. The hub-bub about them having a cap on the top 1% was mis-understood. The limit was on roaming internet only. [www.androidcentral.com]
Those countries are smaller, and are more populated per square mile, thus it doesn't cost as much to cover the vast spaces, like out in the West/Mid-West where there's about 1 person/mile on the interstate.
They clarified. They throttle only the roaming internet for the top 1%. BIG difference. [www.androidcentral.com]
People can leave them after their contract. And bad word can get around about bad companies. AT&T would really be hurting if it weren't for the fact that they got the iPhone exclusivity. Their contracts over the past years have gone up and up. And Verizon has stuck with them because frankly they can.
The phone company's stance is that they will continue to offer unlimited internet (albeit throttled). And "throttled internet" is still considered "unlimited internet", if only in the most technically speaking terms. Though to us normal people its practically useless.
The question I have is how did they know how much pressure the lake was under. It could have been under so much pressure it pushed out lake water all the way to the top. And considering we don't know what kind of microbes are in that water, it could have been dangerous to OUR environment.
I didn't watch the movie for it's storyline
Usually when i want to see something "visualized" i want to have something to compare it to. A ruler with measurements marked off isn't a very good visualization.
After looking at it, it looks like they've fixed the big issue with plugins not being able to handle preload events (ie Adblock). The Firebug you're using is Firebug Lite I believe. Firebug Lite is missing the following features from Firebug:
Open 10 tabs in Firefox and Chrome. Leave them open for a day. After 24 hours tell me which one is using more memory. Close 9 of them, and open 9 new pages, and tell me which one is using more memory.
Another test I'd like seen done: "9 Tabs open for an entire day" (leave GMail/GReader or any AJAX infused website). I use Firefox and love it (mainly due to the plethora of plugins), but after 24hrs of use, it's typically around 1.5GB even if i close most/all the tabs.