The bigger issue is there is no passcode option for the Photos app. Beyond the main passcode, if you give your phone to someone to use (to play a game, for example), it doesn't mean you want them to have access to your photos or email, etc.
What really gets me is when people make a hashtag out of a whole run-on sentence. Hashtags were buit for categories, if no one will ever use it more than once, what's the point? My response to those hashtag sentence folks: #hardtoreadandnotgettingthepoin...
@mamedin2: It's a good thing Palm UI design team left for Apple and Google this past summer. Here's hoping Android gets a more polished UI and that Apple finally gets a notification paradigm that isn't terrible!
Well good thing we didn't all die of boredom on that day, and thus we were able to advance to the 21st century.
"But it's not the most boring day in the 20th century."
Flawed sentence construction leads the line to read as if 11-27-2010 is also in the 20th century (rather than the 21st). It would have been better to say something like this: "But at least it's not as boring as the most boring day in the 20th century, as determined recently by scientists studying the matter.
They need to kick the interns off the Twitters, seriously. TSA needs to be more professional with their public face, and probably their private face, too.
Can we also petition the iPhone "soft" volume control (left of the iPod/orientation lock controls) to be converted to a brightness control? There already a hardware button for volume for crikes' sake! Brightness (and WiFi on/off) is what I frequently want to change.
WiMAX and LTE most certainly are 4G. While they shares some technologies with 3G, there are key fundamental differences. The architecture of these new wireless standards are focused on widening the pipe for data. 3G evolved from a different perspective.
WiMAX and LTE combine advanced SOFDMA and MIMO antenna technology to give much greater throughput, spectral efficiency, and latency when compared to 3G (HSDPA). WiMAX 2 and LTE-Advanced will build and add to these standards, but that doesn't mean the current iterations aren't 4G.
If you're getting caught up on speed alone, you're missing the point.
Well here it is in real life (it was in the related video).
It seems like the screen is always attached to the netbook base, and yes, the "pivot" flip mechanism looks pretty flimsy. I would prefer a convertible piece like the concept Lenovo U1 Hybrid which simply docks into the keyboard. Also Windows 7 on a tablet, is that a good idea?
SpringPad has become more useful lately as they've enhanced the information "feed" view. It's better for quick bookmarks, lists, and to-buy reminders though.