jeudi 3 mai 2012

Re: [apple-iphone] iTunes users griping about Apple's security questions

 

No offense Alice, but audiobooks and dictation are hardly lazy. I have an hour commute one way, and audiobooks are a Godsend. I use dictation less, but it can often save me time on some projects.

I still read and type much more than listen and talk, but I like the option. With audiobooks and eBooks, my reading has increased dramatically.

Gretchen
Sent from my iPad

On May 3, 2012, at 7:44 PM, lwr32 <whiterabbit32@gmail.com> wrote:

> Dictation certainly is the lazy way of doing things for those of us who don't really need it. Audiobooks too. There are those that really need it and it's great for them. I'm one that Doesn't need dictation, so haven't used it.
>
> Reading, writing and typing are becoming lost forms of communication. Audiobooks have made it so most people don't read books anymore. Siri and other forms of dictation software have made it so people don't type anymore. One wonders why quite a few businesses want degrees even for low wage jobs. Could it be that having a degree means you can read, write and form complete sentences?
>
> To those that gripe about having to answer a few simple security questions: it is better not to answer the questions with real answers. Real answers are easier to figure out for your average hacker.
>
> 🐰 Alice

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