This is great: I’m getting twe…

This is great: I’m getting tweets from folks in the UK who think I’m the Comedian @peter_kay or @peterkay_co_uk

Funny…never thought I was a …

Funny…never thought I was a comedian RT @hazza18: Lmao @peterkay sooo funny x

I go to great lengths for my f…

I go to great lengths for my fans! RT @deedee1974: not sure why @peterkay needs to dress up as a woman to be funny? #comicrelief

If you’re using jailbroken tethering on the iPhone..AT&T is coming to take you away

I’m a heavy tether user on my Sprint EVO 4G. I use pdaNET which allows free tethering (though an ingenious use of the development mode usb connection). But if you’re an AT&T iPhone user and you’ve got some naughty apps letting you tether without paying the additional service fees…watch out!

AT&T is ruining a lot of people’s days with a customer mailshot explaining that its “records show that you use [tethering] but are not subscribed to our tethering plan.” iOS, of course, will disable the built-in tethering facility if you do not have an appropriate carrier plan.

Gotta have phone usb plugged i…

Gotta have phone usb plugged in! RT @rsuenaga @LesterSalazar 4G on Sprint is impressive only if you have lots of battery. @onokinegrindz

The UN just approved a no fly …

The UN just approved a no fly zone for Libya.

OMG Verizon LTE network speeds are crazy!

If these tests prove to be representative of actual speeds in most markets, this is a game changer.

Though my Sprint EVO 4G is a great phone, the wimax radio seldom goes above 3mb down and never goes beyond 1mb up.

The tests in this article are peaking at 13mb down and a whopping 4mb up. That beats my cable modem!

Unless the other carriers figure out something, quick, Verizon will soon rule with the Geeks.

http://blog.laptopmag.com/htc-thunderbolt-first-speed-tests-freakin-fast-mixed-hotspot-mode-results

I’m installing IE9 now..

I’ll give you a report soon. Take your own Download Risk over here.

Google Docs Does Discussions

To start, we’ve improved the discussion flow by adding ownership and edit rights to individual comments. Each comment now has a timestamp and profile picture.

Google Docs doesn’t force you to delete comments. Instead, you can resolve comments to remove them from the visible document and view them later by clicking the discussions button at the top of any document. You can even re-open comments from here.

Google continues improving their products. We’ve been waiting for in-document discussions for a long time. Can’t wait to start using this!