![]() I'm sure you could sell the mini and buy something up to the task. ![]() all kinda important if you intend it to be a carputer of some sorts perhaps also being your audio system playing music off a SSD or cheap HDD. You can do that all under Linux or Windows, and for a fraction of the cost of ~any IOS device, and with Mo Powa, memory/storage space. Sounds like it wouldn't have mattered any how as far as TS goes. My hope was to be able to have it double as a Nav system/plot charter as I have seen a few others do now- unfortunately for me I blew it thinking it was the mini they were using for the nav and it was not- It was the Ipad as it has the larger connector. There is an 8" at $99 with only 1GB mem/16G storage I cannot recommend. Not really terribly usable w/o touchscreen and wifi as a tablet, ~OK laptop w/keyboard attached (and wifi stick on a USB hub) These can run Linux OK, but the touchscreen is ~undocumented/isn't supported in mainline yet, and the wifi/BT combo chip requires some shennanigans. They run circles around the shiny fruit flavored wares, and the 10" has a $40 optional keyboard/cover that is quite decent, as is the IPS screen. I bought 10.1" one for my wife, its quite decent. There are quad core Atom 2GB memory/32GB ssd Win8.1 (AKA real x86 Windows not RT) touchscreen tablets going for $139 and $200 at microcenter, even has BT and a full size USB3 port. IOS has no JAVA support last I checked, as well as no serial comms support via BT or anything else unless someone has paid Apple for the "privelege" of doing so lately. ![]() These tricks apply to all versions of Safari, Chrome, Firefox, and iOS Safari, in Mac OS X, and for respective versions of the same web browsers on Windows and Linux too.Most recent, decent Android tablets can run Linux userland in the background, including java, and TS. Javascript is heavily integrated in nearly every website in existence these days, and without it you will not have the complete modern web experience. Regardless, remember to reenable Javascript to have a full web experience if you have disabled it temporarily. Also, you may find it to be disabled, in which case you may want to enable it. Generally speaking, most users should keep Javascript enabled on their web browser, but sometimes it must be disabled for specific purposes, for troubleshooting, performance, security, or a variety of other reasons. Switch Javascript to “ON” or “OFF” depending on your needs.Toggling Javascript Off or On with Mobile Safari for iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch: Check or uncheck the box next to “Enable Javascript”.Open Preferences and click on “Content”.Find Javascript then click “Do not allow any site to run JavaScript” to disable, or “Allow all sites” to enableĮnabling and Disabling Javascript in Firefox:.Click on “Under the Hood” and then “Content Settings”.Pull down the “Develop” menu and select “Disable Javascript”, a check signifies it’s disabledĭisabling and Enabling Javascript in Google Chrome:.Click on “Advanced” and check the box next to “Show Develop menu in menu bar”.How to Disable or Enable Javascript in Safari, Chrome, & Firefox Enabling and Disabling Javascript in Safari: Need to re-enable or disable Javascript in Safari, Chrome, or Firefox? Fortunately, most modern web browsers make it very easy to toggle on or off, and while it’s almost always recommended to keep javascript enabled, there are cases where developers and other users need to turn it off.
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