View Single Post
  #59   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
ESAD ESAD is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Nov 2012
Posts: 1,370
Default Enjoy that sandwich...

On 1/12/13 9:23 AM, iBoaterer wrote:
In article , earl8372
@hotmail.com says...

wrote:
On Wednesday, January 9, 2013 9:51:00 PM UTC-4, Meyer wrote:
On 1/9/2013 8:16 PM,
wrote:

On Wednesday, January 9, 2013 9:03:57 PM UTC-4, Earl wrote:
wrote:
So what?
Around here it was a poor man's food...in the fishing communities the kids had to eat lobster day in and out... some would gladly trade their lobster sandwich for baloneyat school.
Even the jails served lobster on a regular basis because it was so cheap.
Actually it's pretty cheap now...roadside sellers (fisherman) charge $5.00 or less a pound.
But back to your question...the secret ingredient here is...actual lobster.
What's baloneyat? That's a type of school?
Baloney is the stuff that spews out of your mouth with everything post.


Now you are really getting weird.

Relax FloridaFart.
That Playbook over rules me and inserts it's own words on a regular basis.
If I don't catch it right away...well, you see what happens.

The problem is that you were dumb enough to buy a Playbook. Have fun
with that. It was obsolete before it was manufactured.


Those problems don't happen with a REAL Android tablet.


It's not the hardware, moron, it's the auto-correct feature, which you
can turn off. When I had an Android "smart phone," one of the keyboard
apps included auto-correct, and it was fun for a day or two to see what
strange, unwanted words it would insert into texts to "correct" what I
had typed. Then, I shut that feature off.

I don't have an Android device anymore, but my iPhone and iPad have
auto-correct, which I have turned off. One feature I like that has
improved tremendously in the last few years is the ability to dictate
what you want to write into emails or messages on the smart devices. If
your speaking voice is fairly unaccented, it works very well.

Dragon Dictate works nicely on desktop computers.