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  • gojou
  • Member Since Sep 15th, 2006
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Recent Comments:

To this day The Trinity Session stands as my *all-time favorite* album - a work of sheer genius and unmatched artistry. Hard to believe it's been twenty years.
Oh yeah, baby - the big enchilada! Gimme gimme gimme!!!
Comment?

Comment!

COMMENT!

(May I have my bear now, please?)
To all those QQ'ing about losing mail older than 15 days old:

Take a deep breath and relax.

Blizzard clearly stated that only mail sent during the last 15 days is impacted by this mishap.

Mail older than that will still be in your box when you're finally able to log back on.

All mail sent in the last 15 days *that was still in your mailbox when the mishap occurred* will be reimbursed.

Everything will be OK.
Ravenblood hit it right on the head. From a business POV, this level of downtime in a production environment is simply unacceptable. When you factor in the number of users impacted - AND the fact that each user is a paying customer - heads should be rolling at Blizzard. No business I've ever worked at as IT staff would consider this amount of downtime to be acceptable.

I am of the opinion that, contrary to prior practice and philosophy, Blizzard rushed WofLK to market so as not to miss out on the holiday buying season. I believe this to be a direct consequence of the merger with Activision - I don't believe Blizzard controls its own destiny to as great a degree as they like to think they do.
One for me, sir, please!
+1 to Robert's comments. It's laughable how many self-styled "experts" think they have this thing figured out.

The fact is, not only is Blu-Ray adoption conforming exactly to the pattern established by DVD, it's doing so at a faster rate than DVD did. A remarkable achievement, considering that DVD is, to date, the most quickly-adopted consumer electronics format ever. I was an early adopter of DVD - I only *wish* I'd had the wide variety of titles available in the second year of the DVD format that I currently enjoy with Blu-Ray.

Blu-Ray is doing and will continue to do just fine.
Nice pop culture reference. :-)
Off by default has always been my experience. On my new MacBook, however, I turned it on for the first time, as I'll be using it on WLANs for which I don't know how secure they are.
Regarding iTunes 2.0, at the time of its release in October 2001, the most current version of OS X was 10.1, having been just released as a free upgrade to the very slow and somewhat buggy 10.0, released in March 2001.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I have a MacBook Pro and an Xbox 360 and I would like to get a 20- to 24-inch display that will support both devices. The speakers should be inbuilt, or there should be an aux out on the display to hook up external speakers. Help! Please!"

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