happened to you. Good to see you're still around.
Amanda
-Original Message-
From: mai...@andrelouis.com [mailto:mai...@andrelouis.com] On Behalf Of Dj
Paddy
Sent: Monday, March 01, 2010 17:35
To: talk2
Subject: RE: The Talk2 List Fw: [access] WFA User Protest
Guys just displaying
, 2010 17:35
To: talk2
Subject: RE: The Talk2 List Fw: [access] WFA User Protest
Guys just displaying understandable anger over loss of access.
Barry
-Original Message-
From: mai...@andrelouis.com [mailto:mai...@andrelouis.com] On Behalf Of
Brandon Hicks
Sent: Monday, March 01, 2010 8:45 PM
was wondering
what
had happened to you. Good to see you're still around.
Amanda
-Original Message-
From: mai...@andrelouis.com [mailto:mai...@andrelouis.com] On
Behalf Of Dj
Paddy
Sent: Monday, March 01, 2010 17:35
To: talk2
Subject: RE: The Talk2 List Fw: [access] WFA User Protest
Guys
happened to you. Good to see you're still around.
Amanda
-Original Message-
From: mai...@andrelouis.com [mailto:mai...@andrelouis.com] On
Behalf Of Dj
Paddy
Sent: Monday, March 01, 2010 17:35
To: talk2
Subject: RE: The Talk2 List Fw: [access] WFA User Protest
Guys just displaying
Subject: Re: The Talk2 List Fw: [access] WFA User Protest
Also, the WFA concept of free life time upgrades also put a nail in its
coffin. Wheres the insentive for Vodaphone to develop a program which
wont bring them any sort of positive cash flow? This is a gps program
and it needs updated data
this is something I've been pondering for the last 2 weeks after a
conversation with onj
the Asterisk pbx uses a bounty system to get stuff done. So, basically
you take donations for 3-9 months, then offer the money to developers to
complete
the project. and the project that I invision is an
and all these other nice new technologies they don't
officially support.
-Original Message-
From: mai...@andrelouis.com [mailto:mai...@andrelouis.com] On Behalf Of
Doug Langley
Sent: Tuesday, March 02, 2010 10:12
To: talk2
Subject: Re: The Talk2 List Fw: [access] WFA User Protest
Also, the WFA
hmmm do it anyway.
Ok I can't prommise any donations but I am part admin of a podcast site, I can
submit material for inclusion, I can probably promote the project heck could
even get my own section basedon that project if I wished at least I think I can.
At 06:32 a.m. 3/03/2010, you wrote:
So... he wants more signatures, but the only way he feels he can get
them is to insult everybody? I won't sign now simply because of the
author's attitude, despite his good intentions.
Steve
On 3/1/2010 2:12 PM, Onj wrote:
I haven't seen a message on this list for months. Why not let the
Agreed Steve. Maybe if he was nicer, and asked kindly, i would have
considered it. Luckily you posted, because right to the delete button
I was going.
On 3/1/10, Stephen Clower st...@steve-audio.net wrote:
So... he wants more signatures, but the only way he feels he can get
them is to insult
you're not head of a large blindy organisation, though. And though I agree
with your standpoint, to a point, if I ask you, will you sign instead? I'm
asking as someone who, unless Loadstone really decides to do something
useful, will have no GPS undder his platform. You have Mobile Geo and
hmph.
well I myself think simbian rocks.
win mobile, well from what I hear it crashes like no one's business.
On that note wander why no one has designed something around a linux distro,
ubuntu, maybe nvda and something else.
could probably work to.
and you could run linux apps on your mobile.
Given what's out there right now, it can't be done. Platforms are very,
very different, and a lot of what products like Orca or NVDA need to
operate aren't present on handsets. Android is based on Linux, by the
way. A screen reader is in the works, and while it's not very useful
now, it may be
hmph.
thought symbian was opensource.
oh well what exactly will we all use after all that goes away.
not that I care much there will probably be for the forseeable future old
phones mine still works.
I suppose we will have to use all the broken windows and simlinux systems then.
android looks
It's open source, but to release it that way, Nokia had to remove a lot
of closed-source components that are critical to the platform itself. If
you compiled and installed what's on the internet right now, you'd end
up with a brick.
Steve
On 3/1/2010 5:11 PM, shaun everiss wrote:
hmph.
and, symbian is changing the UI to a better GUI which is visually
appealing and doesnt look like a dos app from 1996. Tthe problem with
this new GUI is its very lacking in the accessibility department. and
will probably take screen reader venders several years to redesign
things to work with
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