They might also want to test a link to an FAQ or Details page. I was trying to see if this was only for iPhone or Android but there's really only one option : give us your email.
This also doesn't take into account the people that paid X for the album and then went on to see them in concert, making them Y more (and I'm pretty sure Y>>X)
The articles don't seem to give a specific answer (aside from a time and day of the week,) but sounds like the consensus is 3 p.m. EST on Tuesday, your best bet being 8 weeks before traveling.
From personal experience, once you hit the 3 week mark, you're pretty much SOL until the last few days, since most seats have been sold at that point. If there are still plenty of seats (orbitz sometimes shows you the seating chart,) you'll have better results than on fuller flights.
I edited just the capitalization of the title. I did a cut and paste from the original article and did not want to do any editing on my own. I guess the white house needs an Editor-in -Chief.
I'd like to make an amendment:
Take risks. You will pocket profits right away and bailout will cover any downside as long as you can make enough people think you are too important to fail.
Another way to get bailed out is to make sure that folks who have the power to do a bail out think that keeping you alive will benefit them. You can do that with political support.
I was going to say something similar: Take huge frikkin risks that can sink the world if they fail. You'll make billions and bailouts will cover any downside.
Don't know the full context here, but I would show it off with newer devices and let people know a fix is almost out the door for an issue with older devices.
Also, put up a sign-up form on your site to collect user's emails to let them know when the fix is ready; that way you minimize the number of people you may lose due to the bug. They know you are being proactive and you have a way to get in touch with them.
*NOTE: Wrote this up before seeing tomjen3's message which states pretty much the same idea.
Alright guys, bear with me... I got 2 hours of sleep today because I spent most of my night trying to get this thing worked on, then worked on it more through my classes lol.
Here is the design itself: http://imgur.com/yiqRM.jpg
Here is me being proud: http://imgur.com/RdJc4.jpg
I'm trying to figure the best way to deliver this. I'll likely host the high-res files somewhere and put a link up on my site with a step-by-step on how to make it. In total, it should only cost around $15 or so to make your own (I got my shirt for $3, a pack of iron-on's for $7, and some card-stock paper for like $5). You can obviously make more for friends and such.
I'll make a post in the Colbert Rally page with more info when I get that up in the next hour or so (sorry if I'm rushing, today's my bday and I'm supposed to be getting ready for dinner lol).
It's usually not up to Motorola or LG. It's the carriers that add (or ask to add) these additional/non-stock features. I'm curious what the state of Android is outside of the US - do carriers in other countries add the likes of V-Cast or a NASCAR app?
In Australia, the biggest carrier Telstra generally adds a tonne of crapware, and several people I know with htc desires have links to various telstra features that are broken on the default firmware. I seem to recall the reason telstra didnt get into the iphone game until significantly after the other carriers was because of the iphone impeding sales of telstra 'services'.
We also have the more budget oriented virgin mobile who have generally little to no customization depending on the phone.
Now that you mention Hipmunk, I just became convinced that Google will acquire them. A market they are interested in with a small team of talented hackers with a product with proven traction, who probably wouldn't mind working for Google on their own project (since the lead dev already worked in a similar arrangement before) if the price is right.
Sometimes (usually) it's all about marketing and getting your name out. Posting a link to your site here, there, everywhere (especially on a post about a product launch.) Talk to people about it, get feedback and build a community that gets emotionally attached to the product. You're done with the "hard" part, now it's all about increasing your luck by mingling and networking. Good luck!