> I was offered sex today, with a 21 year old girl, in exchange I was supposed to advertise some kind of bathroom cleaner to my friends. Of course I declined because I am a person of high moral standards with strong will power. Just as strong as Ajax, the super strong bathroom cleaner, now available scented lemon or vanilla.
> In this release, Android introduces a new Toolbar widget. This is a generalization of the Action Bar pattern that gives you much more control and flexibility. Toolbar is a view in your hierarchy just like any other, making it easier to interleave with the rest of your views, animate it, and react to scroll events. You can also set it as your Activity’s action bar, meaning that your standard options menu actions will be display within it.
Though I have yet to see someone put it on the left/right/bottom, it is possible and I've read somewhere (too lazy to find source) that it was a benefit over the AB.
@edwoollard If I recall correctly there is no solution using ListActivity, you'd need to switch to AppCompatActivity and implement a ListView if you want to use the Toolbar.
I've honestly never used a ListActivity, I've always just ended up including the list and writing my own adapter and everything. I'm notorious for doing things the hard way lol
then we started chatting via hangouts and video calls every now and then and now he doesn't leave me alone he's kinda like a pet dog you can't shake off.
Hmm. Idk I wrote a simple swipe to dismiss app for a blog post, if you want to see it, but it's probably incredibly simplified compared to your case here.
> Following the closing of the $25 million financing round, Sequoia encouraged Brin and Page to hire a CEO. Brin and Page ultimately acquiesced and hired Eric Schmidt as Google’s first CEO in March 2001.
Do companies in software actually hate against each other? Like, I know here in Detroit if you work for an automotive company (one of the big 3) you are loyal as hell to that company and they love to trash talk the other two.
Where else are KAYAK offices in the US? Just Boston?
@codeMagic did go for NameCheap in the end; they provide some really fast assistance and the server response is really sweet; only drawback is that they won't give you access to things like httpd.conf and other folders which you might want to make your URL case non-snensitive etc; nevertheless it seems like a good company.