Borrowed from Mr. Brumfield
Some work. Mostly play.
Borrowed from Mr. Brumfield
Halo’s debut during Job’s keynote at MacWorld 1999. Bungie was bought by Microsoft before the game was released and had it ported to Xbox.
What concerns me, and others in the security community, however, is that if simply visiting a website with your iPhone can cause it to be jailbroken - just imagine what else could hackers do by exploiting this vulnerability?
— JailBreakMe: Security warning for iPhone and iPad owners | Graham Cluley’s blog
“Most of the security flaws were found not in Apple’s operating system but in its software, namely Safari, Quicktime and iTunes.”
Don’t want Apple (or Amazon, or Sony, or whoever) controlling your delivery channel? Then put some of that money into creating new and innovative features for your website, where it should have been all along.
I almost want to feel sorry for B&N but when they make such a bad product I can’t wait to watch the train wreck.
Mr. Davidson writes: “Look at what happens (possibly) with the iPad though. You can just sense by looking at it that it’s a bit “early”. There isn’t enough to do with it yet. The New York Times app looks nice and all, but it’s a far cry from a world of widely available, richly laid out e-publications (I personally question, however, if we even need this sort of world). You also can’t use the iPad for home automation stuff yet (although my buddy Danny will be working on it). You can’t beam Hulu from it to your TV. You can’t video conference with it. You can’t control it with voice commands. You can’t run it for a week on a single charge. These are all things I think we’ll see in the next several years, and thus it may become a more valuable device as time goes on.”