Found this story interesting... so... just how many of the NeoWin users have a cell phone...? And when was the last time you got interrupted by a cell phone user while in a public place ??? Answers on a postcard please :D
The mobile phone, whether you use one or not, is a useful device. But bloody annoying too.
No matter where you are - train, theatre, shopping mall - you can bet your life that some inconsiderate fool will leave their phone ringing, on full volume, usually in an awkward, dark recess of their bag annoying the hell out of you for a good few minutes.
According to a study from statistics generator TaylorNelson Sofres which claims this week that as many as 62 per cent of UK citizens would support a set of wide-ranging restrictions to limit the use of mobile phones in public places.
Those 62 per cent, however, are not mobile phone owners. The owners themselves are not quite so convinced that restrictions are a good idea: only 45 per cent said they would support some sort of ban.
Add this together and you have some clear discontent. Thirty-three per cent of UK residents said that they'd had their enjoyment of a public event spoilt by a mobile phone.
In other European counteries, Finland and Italy, where 80 per cent of the population use mobiles, more than 70 per cent claimed to be in favour of mobile phone signal blocking technologies in public places. In France the figure rose to 85 per cent.
Overall, it seems we're not very happy with the disruption that this new mode of communication can bring. But are jamming technologies the way forward?
News source: vnunet
The mobile phone, whether you use one or not, is a useful device. But bloody annoying too.
No matter where you are - train, theatre, shopping mall - you can bet your life that some inconsiderate fool will leave their phone ringing, on full volume, usually in an awkward, dark recess of their bag annoying the hell out of you for a good few minutes.
According to a study from statistics generator TaylorNelson Sofres which claims this week that as many as 62 per cent of UK citizens would support a set of wide-ranging restrictions to limit the use of mobile phones in public places.
Those 62 per cent, however, are not mobile phone owners. The owners themselves are not quite so convinced that restrictions are a good idea: only 45 per cent said they would support some sort of ban.
Add this together and you have some clear discontent. Thirty-three per cent of UK residents said that they'd had their enjoyment of a public event spoilt by a mobile phone.
In other European counteries, Finland and Italy, where 80 per cent of the population use mobiles, more than 70 per cent claimed to be in favour of mobile phone signal blocking technologies in public places. In France the figure rose to 85 per cent.
Overall, it seems we're not very happy with the disruption that this new mode of communication can bring. But are jamming technologies the way forward?
Here's what's new
- Support for ICS format (Image Cytometry Standard) (PlugIn)
- Support for CDR/CMX format (Corel Draw Format) (Preview only)
- Improved MPG thumbnail support
- MPG/AVI frames can be extracted from the Options menu
- Option to control keeping of JPG EXIF/IPTC/Comment data (Save options->JPG)
- Option to save files with original date/time (Save and Batch dialog)
- Option to edit extensions for browsing (Properties->Extensions dialog)
- Option to import palettes (PaintShopPro format, menu: Image->Palette)
- New option for batch rename: Overwrite existing files
- Added RAW saving (Formats PlugIn)
- New option in "Properties->Misc. 2": Send short file name to external editor
- Improved "Edit->Add Text" feature
- Change DPI option moved to Image->Info dialog
- New command line option: /filepattern="pattern"; read specific files only
Example: i_view32.exe c:images /thumbs /filepattern="*.jpg" => Go to folder "c:images" and show JPG thumbnails only
Example: i_view32.exe c:images /thumbs /filepattern="123*.jpg" => Go to folder "c:images" and show JPG names "123*" as thumbnails
- New command line option: /gray
Example: i_view32 c:test.jpg /gray => Open 'c:test.jpg' and convert to grayscale
- New command line option: /rotate_r
Example: i_view32 c:test.jpg /rotate_r => Open 'c:test.jpg' and rotate to the right
- New command line option: /rotate_l
Example: i_view32 c:test.jpg /rotate_l => Open 'c:test.jpg' and rotate to the left
- New command line option: /swap_bw; Swap black and white color in the image
Example: i_view32.exe c:test.bmp /swap_bw
- These PlugIns are changed/added, please install the newest versions: EXIF, IPTC, Formats, CRW, ECW, MP3 http://www.irfanview.com/plugins.html
- Some minor bugs/features fixed/added (EXIF, Batch)

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!
Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.