Yeah well - millions of uneducated people being wrong shouldn't make a thing right.
No, but it might make a thing French (Spanish, Italian, Romanian, et al.).
Yeah well - millions of uneducated people being wrong shouldn't make a thing right.
Yeah well - millions of uneducated people being wrong shouldn't make a thing right.
My biggest fear was that the ID sensor would not work with full enclosure cases. Glad to see it is possible.
I wish I worked in a field where I didn't need to protect my electronics from being banded up and covered in all kinds of body secretions and excretions. I learned the lesson the hard way- the smell of vomit can never be fully removed from an iPhone
not really...where's armor series?
Except that it does. Language is not static, and if the common usage of the word changes, it changes. There is no "right" or "wrong" way to use language, there simply is the way it is used and how it has evolved.
(I work with linguists on a daily basis... believe me, I have heard this lecture far too often...)
i would literally rather walk around with a broken back than to put my slim iPhone in such an ugly "box"
What the hell were you doing???
I work weekends as an EMT in the club and party district of town. Sometimes the patients resent you, so they purposely aim at you. You never get use to the smell.
I wonder how Lifeproof will handle making the finterprint scanner work while remaining waterproof.
I wonder how Lifeproof will handle making the finterprint scanner work while remaining waterproof.
Yeah well - millions of uneducated people being wrong shouldn't make a thing right.
What I fail to understand is if the competition can make a waterproof, shockproof, freeze proof, drop proof phone, why can't Apple?
I saw that in the news section of the search results, when I was looking to see if life proof had announced anything about the 5S.
no shiat sherlock
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"Literally" the most misused word in the language has officially changed definition. Now as well as meaning "in a literal manner or sense; exactly: 'the driver took it literally when asked to go straight over the traffic circle'", various dictionaries have added its other more recent usage. "literally" can be used "to acknowledge that something is not literally true but is used for emphasis or to express strong feeling".