Comment Re:So they can just keep stolen property then? (Score 4, Insightful) 340
It would be so wonderful if there was a way to find out what really happened...
Alas, we have to live in ignorance.
It would be so wonderful if there was a way to find out what really happened...
Alas, we have to live in ignorance.
Hi there,
Could someone please explain me what's the big deal about BlackBerry? Every time I tried to use one of those I hated the experience, from top to bottom, and never managed to understand why anyone would actually choose a device by RIM than from Nokia or even SE (or now Apple).
Is it the Enterprise support with things like the BlackBerry server? But now you can get that with other phones, right? I mean, even with Google Apps you get most of that now through their Exchange support...
Is it that they were the first (that I know of) on getting mail to be "pushed" to the device, and hence got enough mindshare to keep on selling despite being horrible?
Or is it just a thing about different tastes/cultures between American and Europeans?
I don't know, at the company I work for we were just about to upgrade all our phones, and they sent me a couple of BBs trying to get us to get in the BlackBerry wagon. Again, I was disappointed, and hurriedly chose something else from Nokia, as usual
Regards,
I.-
Yes, they allow the Settings application to run in the background. As shown by The Jobs himself in the event video...
Regards,
I.-
The question is, how much do you value human life? You could, for example, send all your kids off to war, and indeed you will have "survival of the fittest."
Yes, but then only the most fit for war would survive. Survivors would then come back to peacetime, something they wouldn't be fit for. Unless war went on and on, your selection process would severely suck.
I.-
Parent is right, grand-parent is seriously confused.
In Spain tethering also worked from day one, using it is extremely simple (either via bluetooth or cable) and the connection is fast. I have a couple of friends (who obviously don't download gigabytes of movies each month) who gave up on their land-line ADSL to rely only on their iPhone Internet's connection.
The tethering thing it's a provider thing.
I.-
...we can still complain about the name.
I.-
Those questions are quite silly, really.
A question I'd like to have answered at some point is: can the iPad tether to iPhone via bluetooth (for us outside US where tethering is not blocked by AT&T)
I.-
Can you save and transfer documents to the iPad?
Most likely.
More than "most likely". It's been said that the iPad has a "partition" that will be visible as removable storage from the computer, and accessible to all iPad applications.
Does the iPad support Microsoft Exchange email?
Not likely.
Why no? iPhone/iPod Touch support it, and this is still iPhone OS.
Does the iPad support VPN and configuration management?
Not likely.
Same as the last one.
Can the iPad be used for videoconferencing?
There is no camera.
Has the people making these questions read/heard anything at all about the iPad? I mean, there are unanswered questions, but most of the questions of the list only made sense a couple weeks ago... before the keynote.
I.-
Newer ATMs (I have only found a couple here in Madrid, both belonging to La Caixa) count money in real-time, so the deposit gets credited in immediately in your account. Another bonus is that there is no need for an envelope (yay trees!).
If the machine can't read your money for whatever reason, it just spits it out.
I don't get the bit about the "six axes". I thought we had only three in meatspace.
Are they talking about something else and I am not getting it? Or they are just being silly?
Regards,
I.-
Man, I browse
Because of you, there is tab back there with who knows what kind of result. And I'm afraid to go to that tab, and at the same time I really, really want to.
I fear I'll be disappointed though...
Clouds are actually water vapors. So it literally is vaporware.
Whoosh?
Or you were afraid someone else wouldn't get the joke?
I.-
1600 suspected terrorists a day? If even 1% of that was real then we'd be dealing with 58,000 people a year intending to commit terrorist acts a year? Are we suppose to believe that the FBI has managed to stop them all in every case??? It's not that hard to blow a bus up or derail a train, so why aren't they doing it? Oh I know, because it's all bullshit.
Sorry to nitpick since it doesn't have anything to do with your point, but if 1% of the suspected people were real terrorists the actual number would be over 5800, not 58000 (1600 * 365 * 0.01 = 5840).
I.-
Comparing information and knowledge is like asking whether the fatness of a pig is more or less green than the designated hitter rule." -- David Guaspari