Comment Re:Different Audiences? (Score 1) 399
> What is so hard about WASD?
For those of us that learned on AZShiftX, about a half-inch of muscle memory.
> What is so hard about WASD?
For those of us that learned on AZShiftX, about a half-inch of muscle memory.
The support was limited to "here's the init string our documents say you'll need, but you'll need to figure out which file to edit to set it" since bluetooth tethering is 'pair device, send plan-specific (but not user-specific) init string, dial #99*' for anything GPRS.
It's kinda sad when it's simpler to tether a cell phone to a laptop for internet access in the middle of the Pacific ocean on an island than it is to set up most printers...
But yeah, didn't blink when I said I just needed the init strings and I was working under Linux so I couldn't follow their prompts for how to get to the spot to enter stuff. They were willing to skim through their scripts to the juicy bits instead of just hanging up on me.
Oookay, if T-Mobile bans tethering their phones, why have they helped me and my mom seperately to configure their phones to tether over bluetooth to our laptops? Hell, I'm running Linux, that didn't even phase them, they still helped me find the command-strings I needed!
"For more than six months, beginning in January of this year, Wikipedia's million-dollar check book was balanced by a convicted felon. When Carolyn Bothwell Doran was hired as the Chief Operating Officer (COO) of the Florida-based Wikimedia Foundation, she had a criminal record in three other states — Virginia, Maryland, and Texas — and she was still on parole for a DUI (driving under the influence of alcohol) hit and run that resulted in a fatality. Her record also included convictions for passing bad checks, theft, petty larceny, additional DUIs, and unlawfully wounding her boyfriend with a gun shot to the chest."
The key elements in human thinking are not numbers but labels of fuzzy sets. -- L. Zadeh