Comment Re: This might be a bridge too far (Score 1) 377
The guy requested this back in November for other reasons, Parler was not the target but was caught in the crossfire. RTFA.
The guy requested this back in November for other reasons, Parler was not the target but was caught in the crossfire. RTFA.
Waze's method is pretty simple, it just says "Typing is disabled while driving. Please try again when stopped." and has the option to choose Passenger and type away.
Ah, well, it seems they're doing that in the mobile market, anyway.
They're actually doing something about this because some smartphone games for children do location tracking, and nobody knows why.
According to the FTC, among its more troubling findings is that many children's apps "shared certain information with third parties -- such as device ID, geolocation, or phone number -- without disclosing that fact to parents. Further, a number of apps contained interactive features -- such as advertising, the ability to make in-app purchases, and links to social media -- without disclosing these features to parents prior to download."
Would be nice if this could be used to trick ants into thinking they need to rush to help an ant in distress, only to die in the trap.
If you read the posts about it, apparently he wants money to put his kids through college. Maybe he missed the part about how Steve Jobs didn't finish college?
I already see sponsored results show up on my iPhone's Maps app, so I'm pretty sure you're gonna get those regardless of if you pay or not.
reddit / hacker news exist.
In fact, it's cold as hell.
I think the issue with that is, it is only unfriends going forward, not historical like the timeline (did) show.
You're correct, I looked the first day it was there and saw "added 50 something friends", looked and several had "add to friends" boxes, so I knew they'd unfriended me or whatever. They are no longer there.
Apparently some in the blind community have issues with rapid release, but accessibility is for the weak, right?
Apparently some in the blind community have serious issues with Rapid Release. But accessibility is for the weak, right?
Eh? Google+ features checkin on the mobile G+ app (it's the checkmark in a circle in the top, see the screenshot for "stream") and their latitude platform.
Some people post stupid questions out loud on Twitter. They expect one of their friends to help them use google, so companies are more and more joining twitter to do that. Plus, some people honestly believe that the only way to get support is via Twitter because they read an article in their newspaper (the paper one, they don't understand the internet) about Frank Elison from Comcast. Example tweets from the link prakslash posted show people asking what time their local BofA branch is open, and someone from BofA responding telling them how to use the bank locator which happens to also tell people hours (something revolutionary that companies like Burger King and McDonalds have yet to grasp, hours on a website, amazing).
Thanks to Apache and the miracle of Virtual Servers, one can use one IPv4 address to host thousands of domains! This depends on HTTP1.1, though, and old browsers can't handle it, but nobody cares about them.
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_name#Use_in_web_site_hosting
In conclusion, your argument is invalid.
Every successful person has had failures but repeated failure is no guarantee of eventual success.