Recent Comments:
London 2008: Mastretta MXT will be Mexico's first homegrown car {Autoblog}
Jul 26th 2008 4:06PM Too high on meth to turn off that caps lock key, I see.
London 2008: Mastretta MXT will be Mexico's first homegrown car {Autoblog}
Jul 26th 2008 3:54PM Truck nutz, anyone?
How would you change the Samsung Instinct? {Engadget}
Jul 19th 2008 7:11PM Yeah, this phone is going back pretty soon. I would add another 15-20 shortcomings about this phone, but that list is plenty long already.
Should've bought a Garmin? Testing the iPhone 3G's GPS capabilities {Autoblog}
Jul 15th 2008 12:26AM I recently took Sprint's Instinct phone on a little journey in and around Sacramento, and down around in L.A. The navigation option performed just as good as my stand-alone. The only minor inconvenience, was that I had to wear the headset because the speaker volume wasn't loud enough at max level.
Is your Samsung Instinct acting up? {Engadget}
Jul 12th 2008 3:16PM "... by the way, the word instinct comes form the Latin word meaning "to prick"..."
Thanks for the laugh.
VIDEO: New BMW 750Li and 730d out for beauty shots {Autoblog}
Jul 7th 2008 9:55PM Ditto on the E38.
More details on the "all-new" BMW 7 Series {Autoblog}
Jul 3rd 2008 10:30PM E38 7-series still the classiest, best looking of all 7-series.
HTC's Touch Diamond gets spotted in Sprint attire {Engadget}
Jul 2nd 2008 1:03AM The blurrier the picture, the more credibility it has. :-)
Sprint's $130 Samsung Instinct twists free {Engadget}
Jun 21st 2008 2:22PM @Paul, db26:
That's a GSM phone. It will not work on Sprint's CDMA network.
Verizon pushing FiOS internet to 50Mbps throughout US {Engadget}
Jun 18th 2008 9:26PM Most of the population in the U.S. lives in cities, about 80%, if I recall correctly. About 1/3 of the country is very thinly populated. Of those 80%, most of those cities are concentrated in the North Eastern seaboard and some spread along the coast. The other part part of the majority of the population lives in the South and Northern part of California, with medium-size towns and small rural towns in-between. Again, no excuse, as to why I can't get higher-quality, and affordable broadband service levels in L.A..







