Comment Re:Aawwwww (Score 1) 32
Remember that time you got drops of it in your hair?
Remember that time you got drops of it in your hair?
That kind of makes sense. If somebody pulled me out of what I do now and put a point-and-click interface between me and my work, I'd get upset too. They should hire people from the gaming community.
That would require real patients or a dummy/model to practice on. The latter are surprisingly expensive.
What if one 3D prints the models? If we want to animate the dummy, heck, let's go ahead and 4D print it.
What on earth is national porn? (outside of
Unless you're printing into the past and future, how is this 4D?
Bill Gates never actually made the 640K comment; it is falsely attributed to him. The other two quotes are accurate and very relevant to this conversation.
Unless I'm dyslexic, the third quote is accurate too -- I see it attributed to "Some guy"
Therefore we should not even consider buying an American aircraft at all. How do we know it can't simply be disabled with the flip of a switch, leaving us defenseless?
Or send your shol'vas on a tangent?
Indeed. It's an OCD must-have.
The Nexus family is a completely different story. They're a joy to hold -- they (especially the 10) fit smugly into your hand. Feels light too.
I bought a Galaxy Tab 7, used it for a few months and ended up selling it. It's in the wrong place between tablets and smart phones. I always end up leaving it at home. Or I take my laptop or netbook.
writing this with the stylist. Way better than typing.
Ouch. But I do agree with you.
I've played with the device quite a bit (I'm planning to buy one) and I think the Galaxy Note II would be about the limit for devices that need to fit into trouser pockets and can be held to the ear without looking like a clown.
Unless future fashion changes to accommodate "handsets" and handsets become more about the functions other than voice calls.
There are some parts of the old ship that most definitely should NOT be replicated on the new one.
Like the lifeboats.
And the engines.
And the bridge (and its navigation equipment and iceburg detection systems)
And the kitchens
And the iceberg itself. I don't think I'll be comfortable in a recreation of a scenario that ends in people freezing to death.
Does that mean they strip my life's story of just my name, phone number, address and other similar identifying information or do they go so far as to obfuscate other pieces of information like hometown, company, college etc? Without that, the data is still probably enough to narrow me down to a single individual.
I don't put up a lot of things on Facebook, but if Google pulls keywords from my GMail to decide my preferences and sells *that* as data, I'd be very, very scared.
Sparrow Connor taught him about Tweetie and Sequester.
Tweetie and Sequester: How one bird reached across the aisle and averted the budget crisis.
As long as we're going to reinvent the wheel again, we might as well try making it round this time. - Mike Dennison