
So although it is perhaps “true” that the Yankees aren’t going to start dropping $300 million offers immediately, I think they are the Option B source that wants this information out there right now.

It's just that she's an iPerson, so every time she bricks something, it's an iThing because that's all she uses.Led by Aaron Judge, the Yankees came from behind to defeat the Royals, 6-4, at Kauffman Stadium on Sunday, securing the sweep and their ninth consecutive victory. (This is not an anti-Apple comment other vendors also have a spotty history with brand new OS versions. If 2.01 comes out in the next little while and fixes a bunch of problems that showed up in 2.0, then I'll upgrade directly to 2.01 and skip the problems.Īs an aside in relation to your iOS 5 comment: I have a friend who reliably bricks at least one of her assorted iThings on the day a new OS is released. I'll keep my eye out here and elsewhere to see if others' experiences are like Puppy's or if there are reports of problems. Personally, there's nothing in there that I need, though there are a few things that might be nice to have. Far too much software gets released that really ought to have been tested more than it was, and I have better things to do with my time and energy than dealing with bugs in version *.0 that the vendor will probably fix in version *.01 in the next little while.

I've been an IT guy for the last 20+ years and my general recommendation is to avoid point-zero releases if at all possible, at least until enough others have taken that leap and found them to be stable.


Then don't be among the first to install it, unless there's something in it that you truly need. The "Features" I was asking about are issues that people have experienced after the upgrade that would require backing it out, i.e., like the Iphone v5 software upgrade that caused all sorts of problems.
