By PeterPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:04 GMT
Wow 2 people complained........no one in their right mind believes what advertises tell them, they are paid to sprout complete bo11ox5. Who believes that if you don't have BT broadband your relationship will breakdown because your using non BT broadband? I might as well go trip in the foyer and make a claim whilst phoning Ocean finance to sort out my finances.
Surely more people complained about that loan company advert with the retard wanting to watch the footie or the geordie "Josh, Daddys found your scooter"
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:06 GMT
"cannot access websites which use Java or Flash"
Seriously? I mean... seriously? Once again a phone tries to get above it's station. So it was too hard to get it working J2ME? I may be missing something here isn't that fairly standard on mobiles these days (and for years)? Well done Apple, proving yet again why MS are so dominant. btw, I'm not an MS fan or anything, just saying.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:11 GMT
What a surprise. Apple saying their systems do some thing they do not. How many times has this happened now? and how many times have they got away with it?
By CrackedButterPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:18 GMT
This was obvious right from the start. As much as some of us hate flash or how much of a drain it is on battery life it is a big part of the internet and Apple can't ignore it. This can only help Apple in so much as people's expectations should be biased on truthful advertising now.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:29 GMT
...were flash and java web standards compliant? A whole 2 complainants as well!!! The Jesusphone would benefit from java and flash - but that ain't Steve's problem per se...
By DanielPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:31 GMT
Ok, enough with calling it the Jesusphone. I'm not a God botherer but this kind of juvenile namecalling is really starting to get on my tits.
It reminds me of a 2nd grader who heard the big kids using naughty language and thought it would be cool to join in. Get over it and find something original to say.
By N1AKPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:34 GMT
Of the top 18 articles on the site at the moment (by order on screen) 6 are Apple related. I know your a little less blinded by Apple's supposed wonder than most tech sites so at least they aren't all blind fanboyism, but I really don't have that much interest in Apple products.
I hope I'm not the only reader of this 'tech news' site who doesn't want to know every little happening within the 'Job's reality distortion field'.
By Peter ThompsonPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:51 GMT
..that inability to run Flash or Java isn't really a technical limitation per se. Someone high up in the Apple tree decided that those technologies were not going to be available.
By dreadful scathePosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:08 GMT
so not even all parts of the web then. The "internet" is a big place with lots of protocols (http, ftp, telnet, gopher, smtp etc.. etc...) and types of server software (tor, counterstrike ;), torrent - blah blah...etc... ) ...so it's a much bigger lie than the ASA acknowledge.
By Webster PhreakyPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:17 GMT
In the full adjudication, it says:
"Clearcast said, in order to assess the claims, they saw a demonstration of the iPhone and in particular the internet functionality. They said a number of websites were chosen at random and they appeared to work as described in the ad. They said, on the basis of the demonstration and the advertiser's assurances, they were content to approve the claims relating to access to the internet."
So, even after a demonstration of the iPhone's internet functionality, where they concluded it accessed the internet as described in the ad - the ASA still upheld the complaint...?! What are they on?
Since when did proprietary technologies used on a minority of sites, become synonymous with the open standards based 'internet' as a whole?
I don't hear people complaining they can't access "all parts of the internet" on PCs without Flash or Java...
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:21 GMT
This is all by the by, "all parts of the internet" should also include ftp, nntp, ssh clients etc. Or did they really mean all parts of the web (which they still got wrong).
By A J StilesPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:41 GMT
Java has now been released under the GPL, and there are efforts towards a GPL Flash player alternative (Gnash) which is known to work with YouTube. And there are instructions to create homebrew iPhone applications.
So surely someone could cross-compile GPL Java and Gnash, and install the resulting binaries on an iPhone?
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:52 GMT
Sites which use java or flash are, by and large, using it to cause ANNOYANCE.
Most of the world's worst web sites would be greatly improved if ALL browsers failed to support java, flash and any script which involves timeout coding.
By Ian FergusonPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:08 GMT
I was told my iPhone would support Bluetooth standards - it duzzent.
But in the case of this advert, I support Apple. Safari supports web compatibility standards admirably. By including Java and Flash as 'standards' on the internet, we are opening publishers up to the possibility of providing sites that ONLY work with these technologies. Do you really want to come to The Register and find you can only view the front page in a whizzy Flash format, and only comment once you've logged in with a Java applet? Uuurgh.
By bothwellPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:09 GMT
"Ok, enough with calling it the Jesusphone. I'm not a God botherer but this kind of juvenile namecalling is really starting to get on my tits.
It reminds me of a 2nd grader who heard the big kids using naughty language and thought it would be cool to join in. Get over it and find something original to say."
I do like the way you use the childish phrase, "god botherer" in your very first paragraph. Original, pithy, mature... Clearly we can all learn from your standards!
By James BassettPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:27 GMT
Whilst I agree about the whole Flash thing (never seen the point, annoys the crap out of me and crashes the version of IE I'm forced to use at work) I think you'll find every Internet Banking site in existence uses Javascript.
So do all those wonderful people above, who claim Javascript should be bannished to hell because it is not a "standard", do all their banking in the high street or are we just dealing with the usual bunch of blinkered ass-holes who like jumping on band wagons and high-horses because it's "cool"?
Incidentally, I hate Javascript. But that's because I have to write Internet Banking systems using it and Firefox and Internet Explorer have a rather fundamental disagreement concerning what bits of Javascript should be implemented and it makes my life hell.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:32 GMT
If I complain about the blatant miss-advertising of internet services to the ASA, they don't want to know. They've refused to uphold any complaints regarding "Unlimited Broadband" when clearly it's not "unlimited", and (apparently) not misleading either!?
I really can't see why this complaint would be upheld when other more serious and wide reaching ones aren't.
I can only presume poor old Apple forgot to pay the appropriate iBung & the ISP's didn't.
By Neil HoskinsPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:38 GMT
It can't multi-task, it can't copy & paste, it can't take video, it can't mms, it can't be used as a modem with your laptop, it can't do bluetooth properly, it has limited browsing ability... Why can't the sodding thing just politely assume its correct niche in the market; that is, a very nice mid-range proprietary feature phone that runs limited proprietary applications (but not j2me, like the rest of the world). Why this evangelical insistence that it's something more than that?
By Cameron ColleyPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:43 GMT
Indeed, it really winds me up when people talk about "The internet" and mean "The Web", or whatever. I can forgive the APs, but anyone associated with technology should know that "The Internet" is far more than a few websites.
By Webster PhreakyPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:04 GMT
Erm... you need to learn the huge difference between JAVA and JAVASCRIPT.
It's JAVA the iPhone doesn't support - read the article. It has great JAVASCRIPT support, which means every banking site I've ever tried works perfectly...
By dreadful scathePosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:09 GMT
For the web n00bs, who are happy to post in comments on el Reg :), have a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_protocols and look at the Application layer protocols ;) There's more than just HTTP (and what gets me is the majority of you use POP3 every single day...sigh)
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:10 GMT
I wasn't going to buy one, but now i've read it doesn't support such a crap security breaching standard i think i'll go out and purchase one today! Thankyou Apple!
By Sean BaggaleyPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:13 GMT
The ASA's flagrant misunderstanding of W3C standards notwithstanding, the lack of Adobe Flash -- Apple don't get to produce their own version without being sued -- and Java are hardly showstoppers.
The lack of Java is, frankly, no great loss. It serves little purpose other than to annoy and it has so many "standards" of its own that complaining that a phone doesn't run one of them is hypocritical to say the least: which version of Java would you like it to have? J2ME? J2EE? (The iPhone runs on OS X, not Symbian or WM6.) How about one of the umpteen variants that still exist on embedded platforms? Or perhaps one or two of the older JVMs that are still installed by default on desktops?
Would the real "Java" PLEASE stand up!
@James Bassett: Javascript (officially known "ECMAScript") *is* supported on iPhone. Javascript has nothing to do with Java other than looking a bit like it at times if you squint your eyes a little and view it from a distance.
As for accessing the whole Internet: yes it can.
Just because you don't get FTP, WebDAV and other Internet apps supplied by default, it doesn't mean they can't be written. There's a full, proper OS in there with a *complete* TCP/IP stack. None of it is limited and there are plenty of third-party apps that let you do whatever you want. The only reason you can't run VOIP apps on it (in certain territories) is because Apple won't put them on its App Store, not because the iPhone can't handle it.
By DavePosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:15 GMT
Javascript != Java Applet
The end. Twat. Were you the judge in this case? 'Cause clearly he is a twat as well. Techinically, you _can_ reach all parts of the Internet (or at least all parts of the web, but anyone who knows the difference wouldn't pay any attention to this claim) it merely chooses not to display them quite the way that the auther intended. A bit like people visiting with Internet Exploder...
By Sean BaggaleyPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:27 GMT
"You can't multi-task, you can't copy & paste! You can't take video! You can't MMS! You can't be used as a modem with your laptop! You can't do Bluetooth properly! You have negligibly limited web-browsing features!"
[Unwraps Kit-Kat and eats it...]
"You'll go a long way!"
(For the young 'uns, here's the original 1980s ad: http://video.aol.com/video-detail/kitkat-1980-s-retro-advert/1332649792)
By Flocke KroesPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:34 GMT
I am one of the people who thing the world would be a better place without javascript. I know, the article was about Java and Flash not Javascript. Very occasionally there is a good reason for some noncompulsory javascript. I have ye to see a reason for Flash and Java.
I do not use internet banking at all, so I do walk into my nearest branches when necessary. I have heard good things about the HSBC web site, but not enough to get me to try it.
It would be nice to send gpg signed emails instead of cheques. It would be nice to receive gpg encrypted statements signed by my bank - if they gave a real commitment not to use my email address for junk mail.
A browser is too big and complicated to trust with my investments. I might be tempted if the site worked with lynx.
Unfortunately using gpg securely requires a tiny bit of effort on the part of the customer, so 99% of them will never be able to handle it. How much am I paying so the banks can fart about with flashy web pages that encourage users to use security flawed software?
By JamesPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:42 GMT
So, because it lacks two particular plugins, Apple get slapped down - yet Virgin are allowed to keep lying about their cable modems being "fibre optic broadband", on the pathetic excuse that their network backbone is fibre optic (just like every ADSL provider) and "only" the "final mile" connection is copper (again, just like every ADSL provider). Equally, "unlimited" is apparently allowed to include all sorts of limits, and confusing bits with bytes is OK, because that's "only" exaggerating the capacity by a factor of eight.
I wonder how they'd react to a complaint about themselves, on the basis they clearly have no standards?
By sleepyPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 14:33 GMT
The ASA is wrong to assume that Flash is part of the web. The web is not even partly defined by Microsoft, Adobe or Sun. The ASA is wrong to presume prejudices falsely instilled by dominant companies to the disadvantage of consumers.
By andreas kochPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 14:53 GMT
had to try it straight away. rather posh, that site, plays without fail, though, and reasonable loading times(1-4s). It's a posh watch company, though, so what do we expect?
To the original issue: the usual buyer (or rather on credit hirer) of an iphone seems to me either the paris hilton type female or the 'look at the diameter of the exhaust on my Subaru' prematurely postadolescent male. There is a high demand in these circles for youtube, youp*rn, p*rntube, eywhatever as well as all kinds of p2p that they don't wanna mummy to find on the home pc.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 14:59 GMT
Now we can go on an Ad dissecting rampage and invalidate 99.999999999% of all ads out there and if only 2 of us complain for each one, we are SURE to get rid of commercials ya!
By Robert HillPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 15:21 GMT
Why the insistence it's something you think it's not???
Because it has the single best phone user interface in the world, with the EXCEPTION of a lack of cut and paste. After Palm OS, Windows Mobile and Linux smartphones, I have a decent experience base to make that claim. Nothing compares to the visual interface of the iPhone - and when you use it for a while, you just think, "HUH - how come nobody else thought of that paradigm?" Moving a large slider rather than trying to touch small parts of the screen to answer a call or unlock it, paging through icons by letting the whole screen slide left and right (and even show physics by bouncing!), moving icons by pressing and watching them jiggle to show they are now moveable? You don't need a bloody stylus, you can do most things with one finger, and best of all NO freakin' cascading menus on a touch screen.
OK, I miss cut and paste, but agree that it is a difficult thing to do well without a stylus or keys from a UI perspective. It hasn't made me want to throw it out the window however, like MS Mobile's menus small buttons did on my three HTC phones...
By Michael CPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 15:33 GMT
Java is not the internet, nor is flash. It is an application API, not a website. The site loads, we can access it, but the application embedded in it, which is actualy compiled code, will not run wiothout that addition. You can access every website on the iPhone. Whether the site operator chooses to publish in the industry supported HTML versions, or have flash only support has nothing to do with the phone's ability to get there.
btw, IE can not access the whole internet either by the ASAs determination, nor can any browser on earth for that matter, even with additions of flash and a hundred other plug-ins. In fact, IE can't be used at me.com, but firefox, opera, and safari all can, not just apple's proprietary browser. Nothing BUT IE can go to microsoft.com anymore and access actual content without installing silverlight, which is available to noone else.
You can get the whole internet, but you can not get all the CONTENT that's on it that uses PROPRIETARY protocols.
also, flash IS coming to the iPhone soon enough, and I expe ct java might actually get there first. If the iPhone is more powerful that a PSP, and computers less powerful than that can run flash, the iPhone can too. It's just a matter of integrating it so it's not ALLWAYS running in the background.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 15:38 GMT
that every time there is an ASA ruling on anything there are two main responses on El Reg...
1) But they still wont go after the ISPs (I understand this)
2) But this is totally wrong. I work in IT therefore I know all about these things and I am right. I don't care about what the general public think, they are wrong.
I think you will find the ASA are not there to judge if an advert is WC3 compliant (You know what I mean by that), but if it is likely to mislead the public. As far as most people are concerned there are allot of websites they want to use which contain Flash and Java, and probably think FTP is a type of STD.
We all know you probably didn't get laid until you were in your mid 40s, but this kind of willy waving "look how clever I am" is not helping you. It’s probably what caused that situation in the first place.
The worst is that you are NOT ALLOWED to install it #
By JD EvoraPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 16:38 GMT
Java and Flash are free yo download (Java is even GPL now)
BUT the Apple's license terms for the SDK doesn't allow anyone to create a IPhone port for those technologies.
I'm OK for not having java/flash out of the box, but banding people to install it????
By SpearboxPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 17:38 GMT
Unfortunately, with an increase of market share and further public awareness, regardless of how minor, the direct result is people rip into for everything that they possibly can.
The world is in recession but apple are booming. Expect jealousy, and expect people to slate them for more. This is just the beginning.
By Mike GroombridgePosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 18:02 GMT
can i say that you all your comments should be ignored for a serious use or the word paradigm.
and using a big slider to unlock phone is "so much" easier then flipping my phone open or sliding it up like i do now sorry i'll stick to mW910i i can live with out the gizmos and i'm old enough to keep my porn on my laptop and no one cares.
(hell no one cared if i had porn when i was sixteen.)
they should of been done for the "really fast " bit as i'll never ever got the top 3g speeds with any phone or a 3G card and especially if it trns out it's really not quite 3g
By Dave LawtonPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 18:43 GMT
I think you will find that not all banking websites NEED Javascript, though the ones that don't need it, still have it to do twiddly bits. The Cooperative Bank is one of these, and they aren't the only ones. Their site doesn't need JAVA either, so provided your browser supports 128 bit https and cookies it should work.
By JohnPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 19:41 GMT
The only reason for flash is Homestar Runner (and Strongbad), but I can watch those on my MacBook. Other than that, the biggest annoyance I have with my iPhone is that the SMS app seems to take ages to load and I'd like to have quicker access to the WiFi on-off setting and the brightness setting.
By andreas kochPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 19:56 GMT
just been to me.com with my ie6sp2. Ok, didn't go first time. After changing the user agent to firefox 9.3 it works and i could sign up (which I didn't).
I don't think they're using anything special (although I haven't looked through the website), they are just reading your agent string and redirect.
Can some russian car maker design a light commercial vehicle, please?
By Robert HillPosted Wednesday 27th August 2008 21:02 GMT
Sorry Mikey, but do you actually KNOW what a paradigm is???
$0.10.
And yes, using a big visual slider is a major UI issue on a phone that actually has a touchscreen, not some downmarket little clamshell that answers when opened. And you need that giant touchscreen to have a true web-capable phone, not some small little 1.5" screen that you can barely see text in. Like it sounds yours is...
Bet it doesn't do FTP either or, to haul up a real oldie moldie, Gopher. Nor NNTP.
Must have been a long afternoon in the ad office... #
By Dr Patrick J R HarkinPosted Thursday 28th August 2008 08:08 GMT
"OK Steve, we're going to do movie tie-in ads, worked for Orange, it'll work for us! Now imagine, a desert landscape, two suns low on the horizon, little figures in dark robes stand in front of an enormous iPhone mounted on treads, lots of robots lined up out fornt. Alec Guiness voice-overs "These little fellows" (waddya mean he's dead? Offer him double) sorry about that "These little fellows are Javas, they provide the best droids on the intern- oh. It doesn't? You're sure? OK OK OK, I got another one. Space battle! Lasers! Big jock guy, girl dressed in harem gear. Heavy drums on soundtrack DUM DUM DUM DUM DUM DUM DUM DUM FLASH! Ah-ahhhh! Saviour of the inter- it doesn't do that either? What the hell does it do? It makes phone calls and the screen flips when you turn it sideways? Jeez, no wonder you need a decent ad campaign..."
By ShellPosted Thursday 28th August 2008 11:39 GMT
BBC and YouTube provide Quicktime alternatives of all the content that the iPhone is able to decode. The iPhone does not support Flash. It's never likely too either. Anyone following the Adobe development blogs will know that Adobe currently have no plans, or real incentive, for making a Flash player for iPhone. Apple aren't pushing for it either probably because it would just drain the battery so fast (Flash is pretty intensive). As the Flash player isn't open source, nobody else can make a Flash player for the iPhone legally (without paying a hefty license fee to Adobe I guess). I'd love to see Flash on the iPhone, but I doubt it'll happen.
Comments on: Apple slapped for dodgy ads
Give me strength #
By Peter Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:04 GMT
lolwhut? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:06 GMT
hehe #
By Neil Hoskins Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:07 GMT
All they'll do... #
By dervheid Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:09 GMT
Apple lying *shock* #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:11 GMT
A bit harsh #
By Jared Earle Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:14 GMT
Obvious #
By CrackedButter Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:18 GMT
Cue Webster! #
By Nick Palmer Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:21 GMT
Since when... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:29 GMT
Enough already #
By Daniel Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:31 GMT
Apple Story Overload #
By N1AK Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:34 GMT
Sat nav #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:37 GMT
Yes but... #
By Peter Thompson Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:51 GMT
WTF? #
By Head Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 09:52 GMT
"all parts of the internet are on the iPhone" #
By Hein Kruger Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:06 GMT
all parts? #
By dreadful scathe Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:08 GMT
Apple bending the truth (to snapping point) #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:12 GMT
Yet they allow ISPs to keep asvertising 'Unlimited' broadband... #
By It'sa Mea... Mario Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:16 GMT
Crazy #
By Webster Phreaky Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:17 GMT
internet != web #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:21 GMT
How about stuff protocols other than HTTP? #
By Andrew Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:21 GMT
Re:My previous post.. #
By It'sa Mea... Mario Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:22 GMT
Bit like the millions of colours screens #
By Mark Broadhurst Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:24 GMT
But ..... #
By A J Stiles Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:41 GMT
You're better off without it #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 10:52 GMT
Bluetooth? #
By Ian Ferguson Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:08 GMT
@Daniel #
By bothwell Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:09 GMT
Javascript #
By James Bassett Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:27 GMT
Yet.... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:32 GMT
Flash = Annoying Sites #
By Peter Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:35 GMT
But seriously, #
By Neil Hoskins Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:38 GMT
RE: all parts? el al. #
By Cameron Colley Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:43 GMT
Those 2 complainants #
By ShaggyDoggy Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 11:57 GMT
@James Bassett #
By Webster Phreaky Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:04 GMT
web n00bs #
By dreadful scathe Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:09 GMT
It doesn't support ActiveX? Thankgod! #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:10 GMT
Re: Javascript #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:10 GMT
@Apple bending the truth (anonymous coward) #
By Paul Strinati Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:12 GMT
There's a lot of FUD going on here. #
By Sean Baggaley Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:13 GMT
@Webster Phreaky #
By MichaelG Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:13 GMT
@James Bassett #
By Don S. Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:14 GMT
@James Bassett #
By Dave Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:15 GMT
Have a break... #
By Sean Baggaley Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:27 GMT
@James Bassett #
By Flocke Kroes Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:34 GMT
@Bothwell #
By Daniel Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:40 GMT
"access" #
By Andrew Kirkpatrick Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:40 GMT
Yet Virgin get away with it #
By James Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:42 GMT
@Neil Hoskins #
By Bill Gould Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 12:54 GMT
A tweak to the ad would do #
By Colin Millar Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 13:03 GMT
Reality Check? #
By Messiah Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 13:22 GMT
@Daniel #
By James Pickett Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 13:51 GMT
Flash #
By Liam Johnson Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 13:54 GMT
Silly ASA #
By sleepy Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 14:33 GMT
Re: Have a break... #
By Snake Plissken Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 14:40 GMT
@messiah #
By andreas koch Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 14:53 GMT
Rampage! #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 14:59 GMT
@Neil Hoskins #
By Robert Hill Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 15:21 GMT
@ Webster #
By Mark Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 15:28 GMT
definitions and misinderstanding #
By Michael C Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 15:33 GMT
Why is it... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 15:38 GMT
The worst is that you are NOT ALLOWED to install it #
By JD Evora Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 16:38 GMT
@N1AK #
By Spearbox Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 17:38 GMT
@Robert Hill #
By Mike Groombridge Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 18:02 GMT
So if there's no flash #
By Ivan Headache Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 18:42 GMT
@James Bassett #
By Dave Lawton Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 18:43 GMT
Ev'rybody! Ev'rybody! #
By John Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 19:41 GMT
@Michael C #
By andreas koch Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 19:56 GMT
@Mike Groombridge #
By Robert Hill Posted Wednesday 27th August 2008 21:02 GMT
Internet? Or World Wide Web? #
By RW Posted Thursday 28th August 2008 00:07 GMT
Must have been a long afternoon in the ad office... #
By Dr Patrick J R Harkin Posted Thursday 28th August 2008 08:08 GMT
Good to see Apple don't give a fcuk #
By Adrian Posted Thursday 28th August 2008 09:09 GMT
@Peter #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 28th August 2008 11:07 GMT
@ Ivan Headache #
By Shell Posted Thursday 28th August 2008 11:39 GMT
@Michael C #
By Matthew Ellen Posted Friday 29th August 2008 14:59 GMT