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What the heck? Ubuntu cannot recognize the Motorola Xoom via USB.

You have to download a special Windows driver to make it work. My HTC Incredible works just fine without any special drivers. I even read an article that says that to make it work on Windows you have to enable USB debugging even after the driver is installed (here it is: ) What the heck? Why does my HTC phone not require any special drivers but the Xoom does? What makes it even more dumb is I don't think it has Mac OS X support either.

“Most of these songs were written between 1969 and 1987. Each song is a love story. They represent my life, the secrets, the broken hearts. These songs are the memories - the 24 karat gold rings in the blue box. These songs are for you.” - Stevie Nicks. Visit the Motorola Media Link (for Windows) customer support page to view user guides, FAQs, bluetooth pairing, software downloads. We’ve got the tools to help. How-to’s, forums, live support and so much more. All mobile phones are designed and manufactured by Motorola Mobility LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lenovo.

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It wouldn't be so bad if I could use a microSD card, but Motorola thought it would be a good idea to release the thing before the software could actually recognize one. If I was paying that much money, i'd expect something that worked, so yes. I'd be fuming if later buyers got a better device for cheaper.If you're an early adopter, you should expect problems, and for the product to improve and its price lowered down the road. That's just how it is. When I bought my PS3 at launch, the internet browser sucked, the store sucked, there was no in-game menu access, I couldn't download stuff in the background, I couldn't connect to my media server, I couldn't connect to netlix, etc. All that has been fixed/added/improved now, and people can get that improved experience at a lower price than what I paid. Nope, because I've had longer time with the product, and derived great enjoyment from using it for years now, even with the lacking featureset.

Last edited by NCLI; March 14th, 2011 at 11:19 AM. I just saw something that showed a Mac and Windows file transfer utility (here: ) and something about transferring files to and from the device using Linux OSes here: I haven't tried the Linux fix yet, but that is still ridiculous. I didn't have to do anything special at all to make my HTC droid act as removable media. I am just testing it now and it automatically installs the right driver in Windows Vista x64. However, it doesn't mount it as a normal drive, it mounts it as a media player. When you are in the Xoom folder you cannot create files via the Windows explorer file manager. The only way to put things on the device is to copy them.

I don't know what other things you can't do since it is seen as a media player instead of a FAT partition or something else. I'm not as irritated about this device as I would think other people would be because I got mine as a gift.

However, I wish the person who gave me the device would've asked me about it first because I would have gladly gotten a netbook or a laptop instead. If I decide to do any freelance work I can't really do anything all that important on a tablet (OS, filesystem utilities, media editing, etc.) Heck, I could have probably gotten a netbook and had enough money saved to buy all the PC games I want to get this year. I will post my frustrations with it in another thread, as that isn't what this thread is about. NCLI: the difference between the Xoom not working correctly and the PS3 not working correctly is that the PS3 still performed its main function of playing games. Internet on a game console isn't a high priority, download backgrounds are nice but they don't ruin the device, media server could be a big deal depending on who it is (I've never had the need for a media server personally as all my stuff has always been in the same room), and the store is iffy on importance. If games didn't work correctly on it then you would be pissed.

My experience with the Xoom is that lots of advertised features are missing or not working correctly. Last edited by billdotson; March 15th, 2011 at 05:13 AM. I can confirm that the linked solution to file transfer works on Ubuntu. Or at least I did, until an upgrade to Maverick removed gnomad2. The catch - assuming you can install it - is that gnomad2 is very buggy.

Otherwise, it's a matter of waiting for tools to catch up. The MTP libraries are present, they're just immature for want of demand; as most Android devices have used USB storage, there just wasn't much incentive. If the MTP transition w/ Honeycomb is permanent, expect the tools on Ubuntu and elsewhere to become more stable. I can confirm that the linked solution to file transfer works on Ubuntu.

Or at least I did, until an upgrade to Maverick removed gnomad2. The catch - assuming you can install it - is that gnomad2 is very buggy. Otherwise, it's a matter of waiting for tools to catch up. The MTP libraries are present, they're just immature for want of demand; as most Android devices have used USB storage, there just wasn't much incentive. If the MTP transition w/ Honeycomb is permanent, expect the tools on Ubuntu and elsewhere to become more stable.I've found Gnomad has become a bit unnecessary. Banshee can handle MTP devices really well now, and I assume it's the same with other players.

Greetings, update readers. Today, a screed about something that is bothering me.

A few days ago, the biggest story in sports became the disclosure that LeBron James had chosen to return to the Cleveland Cavaliers, his hometown team and the one with which he first achieved stardom. Everyone had been waiting for days for James to make his next move public, and some in the media were chiding him for delaying, teasing, making it more dramatic than it had to be.

Was broken by a writer named Lee Jenkins, in a 950-word 'as told to' piece ostensibly by James himself, appearing on the Sports Illustrated website. This was widely hailed as a huge 'scoop.'

Paul Farhi of the Wapo called it ever for Sports Illustrated. In the sports media, there was general agreement on this point: Great scoop.

Nice going, SI. Several media sites did elaborate tick-tocks on how SI achieved its great reporting feat.

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One discussion string on Twitter was that this was proof that magazines still have relevance in the new world of journalism. Kevin Van Valkenburg, a senior writer for ESPN, tweeted this: A MAGAZINE WRITER BROKE THE LEBRON STORY! IT'S OKAY TO GO TO JOURNALISM SCHOOL! God help us all.

This was not a scoop. It wasn't even good journalism. It was a pure load of crap. There's still reason to go to journalism school - or at least to aspire to be a journalist - but it's mostly to be a foot soldier in the war against the sort of thinking that has us idiotically celebrating this 'scoop.' This 'scoop' has all the earmarks of a punt, a sad, sad, acknowledgment of what journalism has too often become in our current world of all-news-all-the-time, where being first is overvalued and being good is too often beside the point, or financially imprudent. So we settle for being glib.

And, in desperation for eyeballs and bucks, we too often confuse commerce with journalism. Let's take a look at what happened here. What happened here was a perversion of journalism into PR. LeBron James had an announcement to make, and he wanted to make it with the greatest possible fanfare. He is a smart man about these things.

So he correctly calculated that the best way to do it was to maximize the sense of mystery, which he did, and then have a controlled release through one large media source. This is an old trick. You get mass coverage of the event, and then mass coverage of the mass coverage, because you have an added storyline of 'wow, what a scoop!' All of us - media, and readers both - fell for it. We all became his publicists. Shame on we, us, and you.

A 'scoop' that is worthy of calling a 'scoop' is when someone learns and tells us about something that the public needs to know and that someone else doesn't WANT the public to know. A true disclosure, often obtained through ferreting.

There are occasionally great sports scoops, and they're not always in the New York Times or Washington Post. Tim Elfrink of the alt-weekly Miami New Times got a true scoop when he broke the Biogenesis scandal. Sara Ganim of the teensy Harrisburg (Pa.) Patriot News newspaper got a true scoop when she broke the Jerry Sandusky scandal. What just happened with Sports Illustrated?

LeBron James had a story everyone knew was coming, any day now. Nothing unexpected; there was even speculation that he'd do exactly what he did - return home. He decided to give this story to one guy (he knew and trusted this guy, and had good reason - Jenkins had writ a rigorously uncritical 2013 SI piece nominating LeBron for SI's Sportsman of the Year).

Then, SI accepts LeBron's suggestion that the story would be written in the first person, which became the ultimate journalistic punt. Give this story to me, says SI to LeBron, and, sure, we'll abandon all skepticism in return. The story was ghost written to be by LeBron James, meaning it didn't have to be at all objective. It was an essay, not journalism, see? Because it was in his voice, it could be cloying and self-serving, which it was, mending fences, dripping with gratuitous praise of everyone, putting LeBron's decision in the most noble possible light.

It was a PR release, only better than most, because it went through the computer of a professional journalist; it was a PR release with some classy writing - expert PR editing provided free of charge by Sports Illustrated. What a load of crap. And we all bought it like the stupid suckers we are. Do you think Lee Jenkins, on his own, in an objective story in Sports Illustrated, BY Sports Illustrated, would have permitted this pap without some sort of leavening, narrow-eyed analysis of what is REALLY going on, in all its complexity? Here: 'But this is not about the roster or the organization.

I feel my calling here goes above basketball. I have a responsibility to lead, in more ways than one, and I take that very seriously. My presence can make a difference in Miami, but I think it can mean more where I’m from. I want kids in Northeast Ohio, like the hundreds of Akron third-graders I sponsor through my foundation, to realize that there’s no better place to grow up. Maybe some of them will come home after college and start a family or open a business. That would make me smile. Download free hacking safeguard easy software.

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Our community, which has struggled so much, needs all the talent it can get.' - Really, LeBron? This is not in any way about rehabilitating your selfish, greedy image, or anything?

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I don't actually have a problem with SI having agreed to be the first to carry LeBron's PR release on its site. But you have to call it what it is. And to the rest of the too-gullible sports media, shame on you for not calling it what it was.