Italian Day Horsham 2011, a set on Flickr.
More cars and bikes on day 2 of the event in Horsham town centre.Pagani Zonda, Lamborghini, Ferrari, Alfa Romeo, Fiat, Lambretta, Vespa etc
Italian Day Horsham 2011, a set on Flickr.
More cars and bikes on day 2 of the event in Horsham town centre.Pagani Zonda, Lamborghini, Ferrari, Alfa Romeo, Fiat, Lambretta, Vespa etc
Italian Day Horsham 2011, a set on Flickr.
Lots of bikes, cars, food and drink in Horsham, West Sussex this weekend.
Ducati’s (including mine) and Ferraris today. Lamborghini, Maserati, Zonda, Alfa, Fiat and others on Easter Monday !
Loads of Italian food stalls and other fun stuff going on all weekend – enjoy !
Available from here
I wasn’t going mad yesterday. My OneAndOne (1&1) hosted domains really did disappear from the web.
Seems they had some sort of DNS ‘overload’ problem – response to my support call yesterday:
“Thank you for contacting us.
We sincerely apologize for the inconvenience that this had caused you. DNS propagation for domains has been interrupted due to overload on the system which resulted to an intermittent on the connection for the Website and emails of the domains. Our system specialists have resolved the concern and have monitored this case to avoid future downtime of service. Thank you so much for your patience while we have worked on the resolution.
If you have any further questions please do not hesitate to contact us.”
I’ll add to this lot as and when I get useful tips – feel free to chip in.
1. Google Maps version 5 is a background battery killer – when you don’t need it, make sure you kill off all the background map processes. There’s a lot of discussion around which aspect of maps seems to be causing issues – latitude, background caching of map data etc…..
2. Voice recognition using the UK English setting is terrible – switch to US English – you’ll thank me.
Anyone in the UK who has seen this video and sworn at their phone while trying to copy the voice commands will understand:
3. To save a bit more battery I found that switching off automatic brightness and setting to minimum is just fine for most indoor uses. You can always use the quick select widget to boost the brightness when you go outside.
4. Save a bit more battery – switch NFC (Near Field Communications) off in settings. As far as I know, only Pret a Manger in the UK uses this as a payment mechanism so unless you want to buy a sandwich with your phone you don’t need it – yet.
5. Use a task manager such as ‘tasker’ about$ 3.99 in the Android market – helps automate the switching on and off of services based on a bunch of settings you provide about time, location etc. I also found a (currently) free application called ‘Sweet Dreams’ – a simpleer version that switches off non-essential services at night. Useful if you forget to put the device on charge and need the juice in the morning.
6. Some have reported that switching on USB debugging in settings/Applications/Development helps reduce battery life. Apparently limiting battery use by preventing the /init process running wild – allegedly a known bug.
Perhaps I should have titled the article ‘top power saving tips’ – I’m guessing a lot of new users will be focused on power until the maps issue is resolved.