Saturday, June 4, 2011

queen elizabeth 1st husband

queen elizabeth 1st husband. Queen Elizabeth and Prince
  • Queen Elizabeth and Prince



  • bretm
    Apr 25, 03:54 PM
    Ladies Ladies... they are storing information that should be private(yes, indeed), but let's not blow this out of proportion.

    THEY ARE NOT FOLLOWING YOU!!!

    The OS or iOS collects & stores this information like many platforms for specific reasons... Android, does indeed do the very same type of stored information of the 3 cell-tower's estimation of location.

    The really REALLY bad news is that this information is stored in your iPhone & as well as the actual device(Mac or PC) you sync your iPhone too. The information get's logged correctly... but we are talking about Privacy.

    THE iPHONE IS JUST NOT AS SECURE AS IT SHOULD BE!!!

    The file should be stored(for technical specific reasons), but not with this lack of diligence on user privacy...

    APPLE, you need a way to log this info in a much more secure atmosphere if the iOS does truly need this information for specific reasons.

    I don't get this either. If someone can get the file off your computer, then they can get any file off your computer. Email, web browsing history, address book, whatever. My phone is password protected and so is my computer.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. queen elizabeth 1st husband.
  • queen elizabeth 1st husband.



  • Island Dog
    Mar 26, 08:14 AM
    I wish the pre-orders would go up already.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. queen elizabeth 1st husband.
  • queen elizabeth 1st husband.



  • realitymonkey
    Apr 6, 06:52 AM
    Hmm we have a Blu Ray burner in our duplication bay in 3 years and approx 1500 hrs of Broadcast HD TV it has only been used so editors can take home personal projects to screen them.

    Really do not see the need for Blu Ray at all there are so many other better suited formats.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. queen elizabeth 1st husband.
  • queen elizabeth 1st husband.



  • demeni
    Mar 31, 04:04 PM
    Having had an Android phone I can say that the experience was mixed at best. It has potential to compete with IOS but the openess is hurting the overall customer experience not so much because of Google but more because of the attitude and the thoughtlessness of the manufacturers, and in the UK, the network providers.

    You couldn't update the software because the manufacturer had to first add its layers to Android and then the network had to cripple it with their rubbish so you couldn't forget who you had a contract with. So updates were virtually non existent unless you rooted and the manufacturer was doing its best to make sure you couldn't do that.

    What a farce! And now they want to impose this on people buying tablets!

    Android is doomed because of the same problems that haunt Windoze - no control over the hardware / software marriage so nothing will ever be robust enough. It'll never 'Just work'. I do still like some Google stuff (search engine / email) and Apple needs the threat of competition. They need to concentrate on their hardware / software efforts and forget about an open Mobile OS.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. queen elizabeth 1st husband.
  • queen elizabeth 1st husband.



  • ten-oak-druid
    Apr 19, 05:04 PM
    One of the three basics that must be proven in order to win a trade dress case, is the likelihood of confusion.

    In other words, would someone think they're buying one thing but really getting another, such as might happen with shoes or pills or whatever.

    Does anyone think that a normal person would actually confuse a Samsung Galaxy (especially with that huge "Samsung" on it) with an Apple iPhone when they're buying it?

    I mean, is Apple going to claim that they're losing sales because the Galaxy is so close to the iPhone that people can't tell the difference? If so, that sure doesn't say much for the iPhone. Or it says a lot for the Galaxy.

    That is not the case. The user can know they are buying a product that is a rip off of another and it is still wrong.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. Britain#39;s Queen Elizabeth and
  • Britain#39;s Queen Elizabeth and



  • LondonCentral
    Apr 11, 12:02 PM
    Wirelessly posted (Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; U; CPU iPhone OS 4_2_1 like Mac OS X; en-us) AppleWebKit/533.17.9 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/5.0.2 Mobile/8C148 Safari/6533.18.5)

    I dont want to wait :(

    Tell me about it. I've just sold my iPhone 4. More fool me for expecting a Summer release.

    Think I'll get a decent camera and update my Macbook for a MBA while I wait.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. queen elizabeth 1st husband.
  • queen elizabeth 1st husband.



  • Chupa Chupa
    Apr 5, 05:49 PM
    I wonder if this new version will be back end changes, front end or both. I wouldn't even mention front end, but I never thought they would have done such a radical make over of iMovie either until they did. I'm not a huge fan if the new iMovie but the FCP front end it quite crusty -- what a decade or so old.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. Queen Elizabeth Ii | BwgS
  • Queen Elizabeth Ii | BwgS



  • shamino
    Jul 20, 11:11 AM
    However, many apps today won't see that much improvement either way (like a simple calculator, or solitare and word processing).
    If that's all your requirements are, then you would be able to get by very nicely on an old G3 system (assuming you can cram enough RAM into it.)

    We have long since exceeded the amount of CPU power needed for things like basic Office apps, and are several orders of magnitude more powerful than what's needed for a calculator or solitare program!

    But this really should not come as a surprise to anybody. For basic word processing (without any embedded objects), my old Apple //c with AppleWorks is more than powerful enough. And that's with a 1MHz 6502 processor, 128K of RAM and two floppy drives!

    People are so used to bloatware and insane amounts of eye-candy, that they start thinking they actually need supercomputer power in order to write a memo or send a fax.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. queen elizabeth 1st husband.
  • queen elizabeth 1st husband.



  • animatedude
    Apr 7, 09:21 AM
    If June 2011 is set, then i would expect:

    11.6"
    Sandy Bridge
    4GB RAM default
    256GB SSD max
    Thunderbolt

    13"
    Sandy Bridge
    4GB RAM default
    512GB SSD max
    Thunderbolt
    Back-lit keyboard
    Ext Superdrive free (hi end model)

    Rejoice!


    ok don't be as ass! back-lit keyboard on the 13' but not the 11' would be heartbreaking for those of us who wants the 11 and will make the decision making between the two even harder..





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. queen elizabeth 1st husband.
  • queen elizabeth 1st husband.



  • realitymonkey
    Apr 6, 07:14 AM
    It all depends on what you do for a living I suppose. I can see wedding video makers would want to deliver blu-ray.

    I don�t do weddings, but I would at least like to have the option to easily make a Blu-Ray longer than 20min . Now every time we give people a HD format of what we have done, we usually end up with an Apple TV HD file and that�s a very compressed HD file IMHO.

    Yup I guess as we deliver full "uncompressed" HD via HDCAM SR mainly our needs a rather different. To me Blu-ray is the worst of all formats fairly big cumbersome files that are still to compressed to be useful to any one professionally, and not small enough to simply chuck around on thumb drives.....





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. queen elizabeth 1st husband.
  • queen elizabeth 1st husband.



  • Dan==
    Jul 27, 04:06 PM
    But its like ATI simply naming one of their chips ATI Radeon with no additional naming (being something like X1800 etc.). Why not something like Mac Plus, Mac Extra, Mac Express... I could go on.
    Those are all fine.

    Well, the Mac Plus is pretty slow these days. What was that - 8Mhz?

    Too bad the Mac Mini wasn't named the Mac Nano. Then we could have named this one the Mac Mini.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. the Queen Elizabeth II and
  • the Queen Elizabeth II and



  • davidcmc
    Mar 22, 07:08 PM
    This is one reason why Microsoft Office requires more and more RAM and CPU every time a new version is released.

    Microsoft Office 2007 (Windows) and 2011 (Mac) are not slow.
    They may be slow in your super �ber Mac from which uses the super �ber Core 2 Duo, but it's certainly not in my sister's Core i3 notebook.

    Your machine is outdated. I hope you're not using it as a reference to judge Microsoft Office performance.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. Honoured: Queen Elizabeth and
  • Honoured: Queen Elizabeth and



  • 2IS
    Apr 10, 10:39 AM
    Sorry not all of us are blessed with 'night vision' I dunno about your advanced genetics, but using my MBA on minimum setting will give me a headache in about 3 minutes.

    Majority of laptops don't have a BL keyboard yet the majority of people still manage just fine despite not having it or night vision.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. husband of Queen Elizabeth
  • husband of Queen Elizabeth



  • barkomatic
    Mar 31, 04:00 PM
    not when Google blocks handset makers from releasing innovations that would be good for consumers but bad for google. they may have tried to do such strong-arming -- a geo-services company claims it was shut-out by the makers due to google not wanting makers to license optional alternatives to google services.

    From the sounds of it, Google is trying to prevent the release of phones that run poorly and are *bad* for consumers. Google is a private company and they can do what they want--just like Apple. Handset makers can go back to their lousy proprietary mobile operating systems--but I really doubt they will. This is a win for consumers in the long run.

    It's a temporary lose for those who like to tinker though.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. queen elizabeth 1st husband.
  • queen elizabeth 1st husband.



  • NAG
    Apr 25, 02:33 PM
    Can we officially call this an over reaction? I'm all for Apple explaining what is going on here but a lawsuit is overkill. Where is the proof that this is actually harming people?





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. Go back to item 1 of this
  • Go back to item 1 of this



  • BlizzardBomb
    Jul 27, 10:22 AM
    Well there's always going to be some die-hard PPC and Core Duo users who will vote negative on this story :p

    Well Apple, get those Core 2 Duos in the iMacs and MacBook Pros, and a Woodcrest... No... 2 Woodcrests in the Mac Pros.





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. now sematat ave Pictures
  • now sematat ave Pictures



  • iGary
    Aug 25, 03:05 PM
    Apple needs to address this situation appropriately. As their products gain higher profile, as their customer base increases and they gain market share, it's only logical to think that there will be a greater need for support.

    You're missing a comma. :p :D





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. C101720-1 Louise Adams
  • C101720-1 Louise Adams



  • iJawn108
    Aug 6, 03:21 PM
    http://www.apple.com/quicktime/qtv/mwsf06/





    queen elizabeth 1st husband. queen elizabeth 1st husband.
  • queen elizabeth 1st husband.



  • notabadname
    Mar 31, 06:35 PM
    What a concept, Apple should consider this concept, for a more consistent and stable OS . . .

    oh, they do





    ~Shard~
    Jul 14, 03:57 PM
    Since apple is part of the Blu Ray consortium wouldn't you think they will use blu ray only?

    No, actually. Apple technically supports HD-DVD as well, since are a member of the DVD Forum, which backs HD-DVD. :cool:





    DakotaGuy
    Aug 11, 02:39 PM
    It is more like 81% of the world market.

    MS Windows has about 95% of the world market...doesn't mean the technology is better.:)





    BlizzardBomb
    Sep 19, 01:23 AM
    1.83 GHz and 2 GHz Core 2 Duos for the MacBook, 2.16 GHz and 2.33 GHz Core 2 Duos for the MacBook Pro. Simple. And an MR X1800 (XT?)/ Go 7800 (GTX?) for the MacBook Pro!





    bamerican
    Apr 25, 03:19 PM
    "Federal Marshals need a warrant. . . . . "

    Duh, the police always have to jump over a higher bar . . . I, personally, can come into your home, take your bag of cocaine, and go give it to the police and it will be admissible, even though the cops need a warrant. (I can be sued for breaking and entering, etc., but the drugs are still admissible.

    You are absolutely right. This lawyer is a complete idiot. The reason that federal marshals or any other goverment actor needs a warrant is because they are government actors. The Fourth Amendment protects people from the government, not private parties. Purely private searches are not protected by the Fourth Amendment.

    Apple is not a government actor and, unless they are acting in coordination or on behalf of the government, under the Fourth Amendment they don't require a warrant for a damn thing.

    Did this guy miss the day they taught law in law school?





    WeegieMac
    Apr 25, 03:17 PM
    This story is hilarious, in fact the whole debacle is.

    The only reason people can check what their iPhone has logged is because some idiots released open source software to check your iTunes backup.

    The insinuation that a Private Investigator could track your movements, as was suggested, is idiotic since a) they'd need access to your computer, b) need have access to your iTunes backup, and c) have the program released installed on your computer to check.

    The second notion, that you could be caught cheating by your partner, here's a hint: Don't be a cheating c*nt then. And again, you'd need to have a tech savvy partner.

    Massively blown out of proportion, but it's only because it's Apple. Google can drive down your street and film you for their street view maps. Sure, they edit out faces and license plates when the images are put online, but the original unedited images are kept at Google. Nosey b*stards.



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