> rebels are fighting back on their iPhones
Translated: the government have created an app so that they can better track and manipulate the citizens
Or maybe this is saying that they are throwing iPhones instead of stones?
What a stupid thing to brag about. If they caught him, they could try to make use of his skills an knowledge.
> Does this mean that they will be reviving the TouchPad?
And not licensing the WebOS to vacuum-cleaner manufactures?
You should really check (and comment on) this: How government programs drive up college tuitions
Really good stuff starts around 3.00 when he starts discussing Yale tuitions starting from the 19-th century, and compares them to gold, blue-collar wages etc.
If it's not a thin-layer above the core OS (Linux) how is that possible that it's been hacked to run on Android?
I watched a longish video discussing how webOS was developed and, well, I found it disappointing. Compare the man-months that went to webOS development to the 1.2$ bln HP paid. It just doesn't make any sense to me.
In the first place -- what was this WebOS thing that HP paid 1.2 bln $ for?
Do I miss something when I say that it is just a thin JavaScript layer on top of Linux, possibly not more complicated than an average JavaScript framework?
> Clinton, Obama, and the Housing Crisis; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivmL-lXNy64#t=2m10s
I didn't know you could link to a certain time point in a YT movie (#t=2m10s).
Now, mod this up as informative.
It is easier to change the specification to fit the program than vice versa.