What is this? [link]
When I squish the screen, it moves and then bounces back.
I'm assuming dead pixels and am taking the laptop in to get it fixed under warranty, I'm just curious as to why it seems tangible.
Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!
What is this? [link]
When I squish the screen, it moves and then bounces back.
I'm assuming dead pixels and am taking the laptop in to get it fixed under warranty, I'm just curious as to why it seems tangible.
A local nursery linked to this cool app for identifying trees: [link] It's part of an effort to develop visual recognition software to identify plant species. The first release is for NY and DC, but that would cover a large percentage of the trees east of the Mississippi.
The Galaxy tab doesn't charge from a PC USB connection while it's on. Which is irritating. But I will work with it. However, if I plug the USB->Galaxy cable into the power adapter that charges my phone or Nook, it also doesn't charge--the Galaxy acts as if I've plugged it into the PC. What signal can the charger be sending that the Galaxy charger doesn't? I haven't yet tested to see if the Galaxy cable and a regular mini USB charger will charge my phone.
Try a different mini USB cable, ita. Sounds like that one doesn't have a live connection to pin-1.
The Galaxy Tab needs more milliamps than what the official USB standard calls for.
The Galaxy Tab needs more milliamps than what the official USB standard calls for.
And somehow it's okay when it's turned off? That's the part I don't get, really. I'm guessing I shouldn't try using the Galaxy charger with the mini USB cables to charge my Nook, etc.
DCP--I miswrote. It's not a mini USB cable that goes to the Galaxy, it's a Galaxy cable and a charger with a USB port.
And somehow it's okay when it's turned off?
When it's turned off, the CPU, display, network, etc. aren't using any power, which leaves enough to charge the batteries.
God damn you, Samsung, God damn you!!
::shakes fist::
iPad doesn't charge when plugged into computer at all. Rather frustrating.
They will charge (albeit slowly) when plugged into a Mac, because the Mac's USB ports will send more charge when required.