Comment Re:Real work (Score 1) 577
Real work involves using a copy/paste function and multiple windows. I like my Nexus 7 as much as the next person, but it's not a pc. Not even when I carry it with it's blue tooth keyboard.
Real work involves using a copy/paste function and multiple windows. I like my Nexus 7 as much as the next person, but it's not a pc. Not even when I carry it with it's blue tooth keyboard.
Technology is providing the ability to exploit unequal labor markets and avoid the regulations that force capitalism to provide broad based benefits. A middle class doesn't happen by accident. It requires government policy to enforce and making work location independent through tech has done much to destroy the middle class.
I remember the digitizers. My school had some Koala Pads. I had a
All relationships take work. When the cost of replacement is low, you are not committed to putting in the effort to make a relationship work and instead find someone else that you refuse to commit to because thee might be someone better out there and you don't want to feel like you "settled".
Ummm... the B-1B is Mach 1.25.
You are assuming you will never have a significant medical need. This is a very poor assumption and it is obvious that you are not capable of doing the necessary risk/cost calculations. Bear in mind that one hospitalization will run you $10k, if you need to have a major procedure done that will likely cost you $25k or more. These are just for one time events. If you get a chronic condition, these numbers can go way up.
The reason insurance is required under the new plan is that people are stupid and short sighted.
Not really. I didn't (and basically still don't) care about streaming video and other high bandwidth activities, I just wanted the damn browser to display things properly. These were all issues that existed for BB in the 3G era and hitching it to the roll out of 4G is a bit of revisionist history.
It was a 9700. I really liked many of the devices features, particularly the keyboard and battery life. WRT the browser, there were lots of sites that wouldn't display properly and the small screen made surfing for anything but the most basic of information an exercise in frustration. Speed was never an issue for me. I was considering getting a Torch, but a number of my coworkers had them and the reviews were uniformly bad.
When my BB broke last year I ended up replacing it with an iPhone 4. There are many things about the iPhone that annoy the piss out of me. The UI is far less intuitive than the apple fan-base would have you believe and there is no unified contact management and messaging as there is on a BB.
The browser on the iPhone works perfectly and I can even read the NY Times on it without too much trouble when the situation calls for it.
I was mostly happy with my BlackBerry Bold, but the real issue for me wasn't apps, it was the shitty web browser and small screen. The killer app for smart phones is the Web. If they managed to get that to work seamlessly, they would have kept their customer base and app developers. What did them in was that the Torch was a buggy piece of crap. The UI for email and contacts and all the other communication functions is already superior to the the iPhone.
Nonsense! There are quite a few games where I would love to have a separate screen. With FPS's you could put the map, more detailed injury status, inventory and all sorts of things that might make for new and interesting game play. RPG's would derive a huge benefit as well in that you wouldn't need to waste game real estate on status, configuration or other information.
Your issue is that you are imagining today's game elements moved onto a second screen. I agree that this would merely be a marginal improvement, though one which I would welcome. Instead consider how the second screen and all that lovely space can be used to improve the game in various ways.
How do you fit QA into those classes? For us, this includes performance testing, not just functional and regression.
There is certainly a benefit to spending a lot of money on engineering, never the less horsepower is a function of fuel burned. If you prefer the comparison, my Subaru WRX gets 18/25 at 228 HP with AWD.
That's not very good for 2 wheel drive and ~ 240 HP. My 911 Turbo gets 16/23 with AWD and 470 HP.
I think some game had inverted Y axis as the default, or it seemed more intuitive when I first started playing games that allowed you to look up and down.
For me this was Mechwarrior, mainly because it is more like a sim than a shooter. To this day I play every game with a first person view with the mouse inverted. All the 20 somethings I hang out with think its weird.
Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?