it's a feeble God who needs armed men to defend himself.
This is brilliant, mind if I pass it around?
Um, this is AT&T using deep packet inspection to deny certain content. There is no great conspiracy here between Apple and AT&T
Not for this feature they don't, there is an option to enable FaceTime over cellular, the provider config is able to set this flag.
My mother, now aged 85, learned to type using a printed picture of a keyboard, and exercises very similar to "Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing". Its true there is no record of what keys you actually press, etc, but she could type a lot faster than I ever could, and is using an IPad as I type this.
My point is: stop being obsessed with technology: anyone in the third world can have a photocopy of a picture of a keyboad, and probably has the motivation to try and learn with it. Once a week, use a real machine to test their progress if you have to. (Yes I have visited third world countries).
That won't work. I speak from personal experience (borned & raised in a third world country). I learned typing with a mechanical typewriter. You have to have a physical feedback from the type writer to develop the necessary muscle memory.
You also need paper to see that you are typing, and to see if you are doing it right or wrong. And when you commit errors, you need to see how often you made them and where on the keyboard layout. Finally you develop the speed to type with a high degree of correctness.
You. Will. Never. Ever. Get. That. With. A. Picture. Of. A. Keyboard.
You need an actual keyboard, mechanical or otherwise.
I don't agree, I learned to type over 35 years ago on a keyboard diagram, then a manual typewriter and then moved to an IBM Selectric in high school. Modern computer keyboards require almost no real finger strength and virtual keyboards require NO finger strength. Typing is learned by rote exercise, my mother didn't want me breaking her typewriter so she had me practice on the diagram until I knew where most of the letters where.
Right, they have to make it reasonably accessible, but they can still dock you for time if you are over your allowed break minutes.
Nope, all employees must be paid for breaks that are under 20 minutes. Well, at least in the US.
FORTRAN is not a flower but a weed -- it is hardy, occasionally blooms, and grows in every computer. -- A.J. Perlis