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  • Member Since Nov 9th, 2006
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Recent Comments:

What OS is it running? And what web browser does it have?

It's nice enough hardware, but what's the software like? Do we have any details.
How well does this intergrate with MS Surface Computing?

They're meant to be available soon right? (To businesses at least).
Ha! Ha!

You're good.

"Force Apple to innovate".

What's that 8mm thick iPod 3.5" widescreen display doing on the shelves then?
What about ripping up Windows CE, err mobile and starting again?
That person who said — can you open PDF documents? — needs to learn a little about Mac OS X.

All 2D graphics are drawn using a technology called quartz, which is based on the PDF format.

It's why you can print to PDF from every application in Mac OS X.
"Thayne Miller" I find your answer quite rude and over the top.

No matter "how small" the files are you will eventually reach the capacity.

Say you want to backup a 60MB folder, with the latest contents everyday. You don't want to put it on removable media, as that media is stored on the same location, so it just a vulnerable to fire/flood damage as the computer.

If Backup 2 was as elegant as the rest of Apple's software it would handle this in an elegant manner...

a) By letting the user specify how many days they wish to keep backed up.
b) When the capacity is reached, display a dialog asking which days the user would like to remove.
c) At the very least let the use clear space on the iDisk from within the backup UI, not through the finder.

If backup was so good, there would be no need for Time Machine. You wouldn't have Apple's own employees going on stage at a keynote and admitting they know they should backup, but don't.

Displaying an ambiguous error message is not a very elegant way to deal with the problem of running out of capacity. In general error handling is pretty poor. The only thing it tells you is "backup has failed". You then have the option to read the console, which is quite daunting for what is essentially a consumer app.
Backup to iDisk does not work well.

When it reaches the iDisk capacity, you have to mess around deleting files manually.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I own an iPhone 3G and I'm looking for a decent speaker / alarm clock for it. I am going to listen music in a mid-sized room, so I want nice quality speakers with solid bass. I also want to use it as an alarm clock, so it would be great if there is such a feature. The price can be low-mid to mid-high range. I was looking at the Klipsch iGroove SXT; it's powerful, slick and the reviews are good, but it doesn't have an alarm clock feature. It's no deal breaker if I can set it up from the iPhone, but I'm not sure. Thanks!"

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