.:[Double Click To][Close]:.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

blue waffles disease in men

blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_1%
  • %IMG_DESC_1%



  • robertgenito
    Nov 3, 02:23 PM
    The next phases of Sopho's agenda:

    1) create more "viruses" and get as much media hype as possible. This will ensure a larger demand of their free product.

    2) once a significant number of users are registered and using their free product, force them to update their application--for new virus protection. this new update will lock them into a 30-day trial mode :) users will have to pay $60 per year in order to stay protected.

    I'm not worried at all honestly. I'm just even happier to be running a unix-based operating system :)





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_2%
  • %IMG_DESC_2%



  • err404
    Apr 5, 01:23 PM
    Honestly, I hope Toyota tells Apple to stuff it.
    Too late. They already agreed to pull it.
    I was more disappointed in Cydia's public response to the request. If the want to appear more legitimate, they should assume that conversations with 'clients' are confidential.

    BTW - Apple can reasonably be expected to want iOS to be portrayed in a specific light. I think it's fine for Apple to have asked for the take down, so long as they did not threaten to take action against Toyota.





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_3%
  • %IMG_DESC_3%



  • Raineer
    Apr 18, 04:46 PM
    They have patents but they HAVE to pursue infringers or they can lose the rights to the patents. That's why you see so many patent lawsuits. Unfortunately, that's just how the system works (in very basic terms).

    8 pages and no quotes of this. That's all there is to this, folks...





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_4%
  • %IMG_DESC_4%



  • MikeTheC
    Nov 25, 09:49 PM
    To illustrate your point, PalmOne (if that's what the PalmOS Group is called this month...) is doing the aforemnetioned ground-up rewrite of PalmOS now (it should be available to devs soon if they're on schedule) and it's based on Linux. Stable, massively featureful, full PalmOS 5 backward-compatibility, and futureproof.

    Yet the hardware arm of Palm has said it might not buy the new sytem from the software arm. I have to imagine this has to do with posturing/playing the good little beoch to Microsoft. We know what happens to companies which partner with Microsoft... that they have proves prima facia that they're unequipped to run a company.

    I hate to keep dragging my personal employment history into the discussion here, but this is *hardly* the first time this kind of factor has been in play.

    I worked for what was, until (talk about timing!) April 1st of this year, a fully-Sony-staffed technical support facility. We provided tech support for Sony computers, monitors, CLIÉ PDAs, WebTV, Satellite tv, TVs, DVD players, VCRs, phones, all the Business and Professional stuff, etc. Yet (with the exception of B&P), our facility competed for tech-supporting our products with other tech support agencies out there, including our own out-sourced tech support partners.

    Sony frequently would not include their own subsystems (CD-ROMs, DVD-ROMs, writers, etc.) in their own products because they wouldn't (some say "couldn't" but I don't buy that) let themselves have their own inventory cheap enough in a lot of cases. Heck, for that matter, it wasn't until sometime in early 2004 (basically 1 year and change before we all got kicked out) that they switched from 500MHz P3-based Hewlett-Packard desktop computers as our actual "agent workstations" to 3.2GHz P4-based VAIOs. For that matter (and yes this is a rant, but it's also pertinent to this aspect of the discussion) it wasn't until like the last year-and-a-half, maybe not-quite-two-years of our operations that they managed to get more than a handful of current-model Sony computer products into the building AND into the hands of those of us doing the tech support. (The reason for this largely relates to the fact that we as the "tech support" division were the red-headed step-child, and basically a money pit, and we had to actually *buy* our own products at regular retail prices from our manufacturing divisions, instead of them sending them to us.) Now, make of that what you will.

    I go into this to basically say that it doesn't surprise me to see any company playing the "house divided" strategy. The only problem is that it is a losing strategy. Whether religious or not, people should at least look *this* up in the Bible as a basic, common sense 101 lesson on how not to run your personal life or your business. Ah, but I digress...





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_5%
  • %IMG_DESC_5%



  • strider42
    Apr 18, 03:51 PM
    They have patents but they HAVE to pursue infringers or they can lose the rights to the patents. That's why you see so many patent lawsuits. Unfortunately, that's just how the system works (in very basic terms).

    You're thinking of trademark law. Patents are awarded for a specific period of time. You can't lose them just because you don't defend them. You can sue at any time.

    Its only trademarks that you have to protect in order to keep them.

    You see so many patent lawsuits because there's money in it and to stifle competition. There is no other reason.





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_6%
  • %IMG_DESC_6%



  • iGary
    Jul 23, 09:31 AM
    Why do I have some weird feeling that they will update the entire product line at WWDC?





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_7%
  • %IMG_DESC_7%



  • Plutonius
    May 3, 10:42 PM
    Please Vote

    1) Does everyone agree that "Don't Panic" is the leader at the start of this game (his job is to send in our orders) ?

    2) Do we leave the room in two groups as per "Don't Panic's" suggestion ?


    I'll vote 1) Yes 2) Yes





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_8%
  • %IMG_DESC_8%



  • DotComName
    Apr 20, 10:11 AM
    hopefully this time Apple will put the antenna back inside the phone?





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_9%
  • %IMG_DESC_9%



  • CheesePuff
    Apr 20, 08:49 AM
    I just upgraded to a (2011) 13" MBP and I'm still trying to get a 32 GB iPad 2 (Wi-Fi only) as my first iOS device. I'm giving my old (2010) 13" MBP to a friend.

    But later this year, when my mortgage is paid off, I might spring for my first iPhone (although i'm still concerned the small screen may be unmanageable for me... due to vision issues which may, or may not, be resolved later this year).

    Also, when my mortgage is paid off, I'll consider getting a MobileMe account and next year perhaps a 128 GB iPad 3 (Wi-Fi + LTE/G3 GSM). If I get that iPad 3, I'll give my old iPad 2 to a friend.

    But all this is a matter of treating myself to toys that I do not really need. First I need to focus on financial fundamentals like paying off my mortgage.

    Sounds like you need to pay off your mortgage.





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_10%
  • %IMG_DESC_10%



  • kalsta
    May 6, 11:54 AM
    The only preference I still have for imperial is food based. Can i have 500 grams of sliced ham? It just sounds wrong.

    So, ask for 'half a kilo'. Problem solved. :)





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_11%
  • %IMG_DESC_11%



  • RedTomato
    Aug 7, 03:28 PM
    Apple's newest and greatest always has high prices, then they will come down.

    With the Gx range, this didn't happen as IBM rarely changed their prices.

    Welcome to the new Intel world where prices change on a monthly basis.

    Remember when the Mac Mini were introduced?

    First they were quite expensive, then prices came down within a few weeks.

    I can't remember when the next Intel price drop is expected - someone tell us please? (probably in about 2 or 3 months time - Octoberish.)





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_12%
  • %IMG_DESC_12%



  • lPHONE
    May 6, 12:19 AM
    There's no way that Apple is gonna switch to ARM for their Mac lines when it already took them a decade to make the transition from IBM to Intel processors.

    I thought the transition was noteworthy. Not quite flawless, but who else has switched architecture so perfectly?





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_13%
  • %IMG_DESC_13%



  • maclaptop
    Apr 20, 06:37 AM
    This will definitely be the first iteration of the iPhone that I will pass on. It's certainly not much of an upgrade from the iPhone 4.

    This model promises to be one that many will pass on.

    I certainly will.

    Even though it's already well known that it will have a better antenna to fix the antennagate issue that most everyone denied.

    The lack of a fresh new look will keep me away, especially retaining the tiny screen. Seems like Apples coasting this time around.

    A faster processor? Big deal, who needs it, a waste of money just to pump up Apples coffers.

    A true disappointment, this one is. I was so eager to dump my antennagate special.





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_14%
  • %IMG_DESC_14%



  • KnightWRX
    Apr 11, 06:15 AM
    Nobody with maths skills beyond that of a ten year old should be using "/".

    As a programmer, I find this comment highly insulting. Tell that to my compiler.





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_15%
  • %IMG_DESC_15%



  • cfanyc
    Sep 11, 12:40 PM
    is paris expo still on tomorrow? seems like its been totally pushed under the rug with the media event...

    wonder if that was the plan? if theres any hope for mbp's I would imagine it would be @ paris





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_16%
  • %IMG_DESC_16%



  • res1233
    May 6, 07:36 AM
    Microsoft isnt switching over to just ARM. They're just making Windows compatible on ARM. For their Windows 8 Tablets most likely.




    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_17%
  • %IMG_DESC_17%



  • Gatorman
    Jul 21, 03:31 PM
    I'm just burnin' doin' the Merom Dance!

    Sing it with me, now! :D

    Regardless of what happens on the 7th, I'm ordering a MBP. Though, things look like they're shaping up for that! Apple would be nuts not to put that chip in the MBP now that it's shipping.

    I'm keeping my fingers crossed! Can't wait....





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_18%
  • %IMG_DESC_18%



  • thisisahughes
    Apr 25, 11:27 AM
    Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; U; CPU iPhone OS 4_3_2 like Mac OS X; en-us) AppleWebKit/533.17.9 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/5.0.2 Mobile/8H7 Safari/6533.18.5)

    �If you have something that you don�t want anyone to know maybe you shouldn�t be doing it in the first place.� - Eric Schmidt





    blue waffles disease in men. %IMG_DESC_19%
  • %IMG_DESC_19%



  • qwerto
    Aug 12, 03:07 AM
    i don't think so. i'm sure apple put some sticky stuff on the processor and the motherboard so that it'll stay there basically forever.

    dang, i knew it was a long shot. Oh well, time to buy some more ram for my mbp... that will suffice for now





    ActionableMango
    Apr 28, 02:51 PM
    EDIT: found a pic that illustrates this: http://images.anandtech.com/reviews/mac/MacPro2010/_DSC2953.jpg

    Man, the MP is a beauty isn't it?

    I can only hope they do half as well with the next case design.





    CalBoy
    May 6, 04:30 PM
    So you're saying that science has nothing to do with everyday life? Cake for the elite and bread for everyone else??

    I didn't say that at all.

    Certain things are good for one thing but not as good for another. Basing your metrics off of water and light make a lot of sense when you have to measure a great deal of new items and compare them objectively.

    On the other hand when you need metrics to be a guide through daily life and nothing else, the system that's born from daily necessity makes a lot more sense.

    The reasoning gets worse when you'd ask 311 million to make a change because a smaller community of professionals would like their standards to be the standards for all of society. It's not like the two can't coexist; there might be a good argument there if the two were incompatible, but the fact is that they're not.

    I see no good sense in that. If the metric system was intrinsically difficult to use in everyday life, then maybe you would have a point. But it's not � it's actually much, much easier to use once you learn it.

    A distinction needs to be made here: just because something is easier to multiply by 10 (or 1/10th) doesn't mean that it's easier to use. How many times in your daily life do you need to multiply by 10, or even multiply what you measure? In most of my daily activities the metric system would do nothing new except provide a new set of numbers to get to know.

    Even if you did occasionally multiply daily measurements, it would probably be with a smaller integer like 2, 3, or 4. In that case, the imperial system works very well because it provides very low factors and products that most people can do rapidly with nothing more than their 2nd grade 12x12 tables. In fact that's exactly how it came to be the way it is.



    The metric system, as many people here keep pointing out, enables some pretty easy mental arithmetic. You'd use it if you had it.

    How often does that easy arithmetic come up outside of science? Can you think of a real life example?

    In any case, I do already have it. It's on every measuring device I have, from my ruler to my bathroom scale. I use it when it's necessary or more effective, but that's rare. Maybe you should accept that people can have a different preference.


    You say it's about the 'ease of transition' but in the next breath you argue that it's all about 'economic return'. Personally I think you're clutching at straws to defend the fact that your country is behind the rest of the world in its ability to institute any kind of consistency with its system of measurements. But, we can agree to disagree.

    They are not mutually exclusive values. Both are important factors in determining whether or not to switch. It's just like when a business decides to change it's logo; not only does the cost of marketing the new logo have to be factored in, but the potential lost sales also have to be weighed. In much the same way we have to decide if certain things being switched to metric will ever pay off and how disruptive they'll be. Some things that make sense like food and toiletries have already been metricated. Other things probably cost a lot more and won't be able to overcome their switching cost and they could also cost a lot.





    TedSlawski
    Aug 7, 06:02 PM
    Just ordered my Mac Pro!! :D

    Quad 3Ghz, 4GB ram, 250GB HD + 500 GB HD, X1900 XT 512MB, Bluetooth+Airport, wireless keyboard and mouse, 1 Superdrive (holding out for BluRay) 30" ACD... $8264.23 :eek:
    Estimated Ship Time... 3- 5 Weeks :eek: :eek:

    This is gonna be good.
    I got the base model, really don't find that graphic cards make much difference to me, RAM is usually less than half of what Apple wants in the aftermarket, putting my lightscribe in the other optical bay, Hard drives are usually close to free with my Staples office rewards, so I'll pick up the pieces to deck it out while I wait 3 weeks to get mine. Plus the place I bought it from gave me a $1200 trade in on my moderately upgraded original 2gig G5. I envy the 3gig processor though but that was financially just out of reach.





    jaw04005
    Mar 30, 10:05 PM
    First impressions: iCal's new UI is ugly. Speed is dramatically improved (on both my Air and Mac mini 2010). New QuickLook chapter UI for videos is really cool, not sure I like the white interface though. Launchpad doesn't crash after renaming folders.

    Does the new build officially support TRIM on 3rd party SSDs?

    No.





    RalfTheDog
    Apr 7, 10:38 AM
    Apple is one greedy corporation that just loves to attack.. typical of the coming corporate takeover of humanity.

    How is this an attack? Apple can't make enough devices to match demand, while RIM will have a hard time selling the few units they do make. If RIM had people lining up every morning to get an rPad, they would have an issue.

    You are not supply limited if you can't sell what you make.