My grandfathered $140/month mobile plan has 14GB of data; 320MB is 70% of a day's bandwidth, or 2% of the month's.
If I wanted to add another GB I could accrue $100 in overages ($0.10/MB), or pay another $25/month. But Bell will charge for another month in advance if you change the current month's plan.
Strangely enough it was only $5/month to up it from 13GB to 14GB :<
All this despite being able to download at 7MB/s; I could blow my cap in half an hour, and another half hour would cost $1,400 if I didn't up the plan.
Edit: I use my cellphone's data heavily, but 20, 40, 50GB cable internet caps are common with a lot of people not understanding what that means for streaming video / downloading pictures.
The on-board Ethernet on the TX1 is USB3 integrated, IIRC. The system having PCIe is not necessarily a sign of how it gets used or what is using it, unfortunately.
Yes, I changed my initial sentence slightly (you can see the difference in the quote of the original that vram22 included in their reply) to reflect my real intent is to call attention to the context many Vim articles and comments, and not necessarily this specific article. I didn't append an edit note as I often do (even though it was more than an hour after initially commenting) because I considered it a small clarification of my intent, but one was probably warranted. I'll consider your comment and this reply as that edit note now. :)
I think it's somewhat frequent to have app submissions denied, but I haven't heard of Apple banning future submissions in the same way that I hear of Google permabanning developers.
I agree with Android it's slightly different because side loading is at least possible, but I doubt many people are going to find your widget if it's not on the play store.
MD5 and SHA are specifically designed to be fast to compute, they shouldn’t be used for passphrases.
Figured I’d bring it up in case there’s still PHP floating around with the once-typical practice of MySQL + MD5.