From Electoral-Vote.com:
A theory has been circulating that the Donald Trump tweets that come from an Android device are from the candidate himself, while the ones that come from an iPhone are the work of his staff. David Robinson, a data scientist who works for Stack Overflow, decided to test the theory. His conclusion: It's absolutely correct.
Robinson did some text-mining (using R) to analyze roughly 1,400 tweets from Trump's timeline, and demonstrated conclusively that the iPhone tweets are substantively different than the Android tweets. The former tend to come later at night, and are vastly more likely to incorporate hashtags, images, and links. The latter tend to come in the morning, and are much more likely to be copied and pasted from other people's tweets. In terms of word choice, the iPhone tweets tend to be more neutral, with their three most-used phrases being "join," "#trump2016," and "#makeamericagreatagain." The Android tweets tend to be more emotionally charged, with their three most-used phrases being "badly," "crazy," and "weak."
(Score: 2) by DannyB on Monday August 15 2016, @03:29PM
The fourth tweet is possibly a legitimate complaint, but if so, then demonstrates unfitness.
I don't care about the crowd size or enthusiasm.
I care about issues. Policies. Isn't that what politics is about? Not about reality show personalities, insults, ratings, and sensational drama.
Can Mr. Trump clearly articulate he ways that he will make my life worse than HRC ?
As for unfair media coverage. There was a recent Trump statement. Covered widely. I won't mention which one. A right leaning media outlet interviewed Trump and in the interview gave him a total out. "Didn't you really mean X? Right? You were just misinterpreted." But Nooooo. Trump says something like (parphrased): "No. What I really meant was the crazy thing. And in the most insane way you could possibly interpret it." So please Mr. Trump. Don't blame the media.
The lower I set my standards the more accomplishments I have.
(Score: 2) by Capt. Obvious on Monday August 15 2016, @03:50PM
While I also care about policies, I recognize that puts us in the minority. Even Clinton has pivoted away from focusing on policies (to appeal to voters).
Fox News certainly likes Trump, even during the primary. However, some of the media is stretching the truth. That whole baby thing seems to be a case study in taking things out of context (which seems to be the usual way people lose elections, crazy out of context stuff.) And what offends me there is, there's no need to do that. Enough real craziness/stupidity happens. You don't need to claim that "Qualye cannot spell potato" or "Gore claims he invented the internet".