Comment Re:Smells like BS. (Score 1) 117
Testing seems to show that iPhones on 8.3 don't connect to wifi immediately after a reboot. They wait until you login.
Testing seems to show that iPhones on 8.3 don't connect to wifi immediately after a reboot. They wait until you login.
Because the summary is wrong. The article says exactly the opposite of the summary. (bold mine)
But it gets worse for the victims: If the hacker's Rickmote stays within the range of the device, even if you turn the Chromecast off and on again, it will constantly reconnect to the Rickmote â" "thus the Rickroll keeps going indefinitely," Petro told BI.
This might be the first time I've ever heard someone speculate about Apple putting in too many features.
Exactly.
Pod systems like this should always carry three passengers. If you are traveling with a group, 2 passenger pods can force part of your group to ride alone. Carrying 3 lets people ride with the group for groups any size.
A friend of mine is behind a really well reviewed iPad app called Numbers League. This covers math down to simple addition and subtraction and up to multiplication, division and simple fractions.
Review: http://www.wired.com/geekdad/2011/07/the-numbers-league-app-improves-on-a-masterpiece/
App store link: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/numbers-league/id444781544?mt=8&ls=1
The app is based on a card game with info and online store here: http://www.bentcastle.com/nl.htm
For a number of years now Hero Games has put out a PDF of every book. They even offer PDF/physical sets
OK, but that means that our playlists are shared (which we can deal with by using folders for our individual playlists), but so is the metadata. Mostly, that's a good thing, but what if my wife and I and my sons want to all rate the same song differently? Out of luck: the rating is shared. I could go on about what should be shared and what shouldn't, but the point is that Apple does not make it easy to share some things and not others even within a family. I imagine that trying to work AppleIDs and iDevices into an enterprise must be quite the nightmare from that point of view.
Your sharing with your family problem is probably solved by using Apple's Home Sharing. http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3819
How likely is it that some 3rd party analytics firm has sales data from the Apple stores. And it explicitly only includes retail.
With Apple having such a large retail presence for iPhones and a large online operation as well it seems like the iPhones would be heavily undercounted in this survey.
So yeah. That's not how tax brackets work. The scenario you describe never happens.
Except that the wholesaler and store and telco can return unsold inventory at some point in the future and expect it's money back. If a lot of devices are on their shelves and not selling they may do just that.
Also, If shipped is much higher than sold stock sits in a warehouse and they order less or none next time. Future shipments drop like a rock.
If everything shipped is sold than future shipments stay high as everyone keeps ordering more to keep selling.
Watch the numbers over time. If shipments drop off a cliff you know what's still sitting on shelves.
What they don't mention is that every "wonderful new software update" by Apple came (until after the new iOS 5 release) in the form of a 500+ megabyte software download that was only accessible through iTunes. Never mind that the Android updates are all on the order of 2-100MB and most are available over the air, that would distract from the reader's impression that Apple devices were superior in every way possible
Seriously?
The iPhone user has to wait 'til they get home, plug in and then wait an extra 15 minutes for the download. But updates for all phones are available at the same time. With an iPhone when I read about a new update available I know it'll be there once I get home.
The Android user gets a shorter download but it's rolled out to each phone at a different time and inside each phone the updates get rolled out over time. With an Android phone, even if it's available for my phone model it not be available for my phone for a week.
Different issues, both are frustrations of one sort or another but it's not the major win for Android that you imply. Plus this really only occur a couple times a year anyway.
why not have a simple page that grabs the current time, loads a page in the iframe, when the iframe triggers it's ready() event, grab the current time and compare against the start for a load time analysis?
Because that may not be correct either. In their iPad 2 preview Anandtech went back to manual timing of web page loading because
"It turns out that Honeycomb's browser was stopping our page load timer sooner than iOS', which resulted in some funny numbers when we got to the 4.3/Honeycomb comparison. To ensure accuracy we went back to timing by hand (each test was repeated at least 5 times and we present an average of the results)."
While they don't talk about their method (either) they decided they couldn't trust whatever automated system they had. Obviously there are all kinds of assumptions and differences in the test bed but the basic point is you can't necessarily trust the browser to tell you when it's ready either as an embedded view or stand alone browser.
And what did Android look like in January 2007 when the iPhone was announced? I dunno, but I found photos from January 2008.
Only God can make random selections.