The lack of a removable or changeable battery is a tad annoying on a device that's meant to be used for hours at a time, but this thing looks pretty damn good.
@Arggh! there goes a...snake a snake!: @THIS STATMENT IS VERIFIABLY INCORRECT. SCOTT REDMOND HAS SIMPLY COINED A NEW INDUSTRY BUZZWORD BY COMBINING STATISTICS WITH STATEMENT.
While I understand his feelings of frustration and mourn his loss, his statement is essentially meaningless.
No omnivorous, territorial species that rises to our level of culture will ever be completely peaceful. It's not in our nature, and it's a fallacy to suggest that a utopian paradise ever awaits mankind, if we just work hard enough.
The world is a beautiful, dangerous, wonderful, violent, amazing, and unfair place.
Ok, once again I need to ping Whitenoise about an issue that I'm reaching a dead end on.
My wife has a Dell Inspiron 1545 laptop that can't connect to the internet. Her WLAN adaptor seems to be working fine, and picks up all the signals in the neighborhood, but won't connect to them. It's connected to my home router (Linsys wireless-g) once or twice, but the internet speeds she's getting are so slow that it's unusable. My laptop's connection appears to be fine. Both laptops display great signal strength from my home router.
This just started today, out of the blue.
The only issues I can think of that are unusual are that last night, we had a gigantic T-storm, and that my ISP is currently working on upgrading service in my neighborhood. I've spoken to my ISP and neither seems to be an issue with signal to my modem. The problem seems to directly lie between my wife's wireless card and the router.
I've done everything I know to do to deal with the problem, but I'm no network expert. Any ideas would rock. #whitenoise