I would confront him about it, & tell him that if he doesn't have any interest in you anymore, to tell you, and to quit making you look like a dumby, because obvisouly, you can do way better, :)
get the hell over it
If he's your boyfriend you should already be dating... shouldn't you.... you just don't call a random guy your boyfriend!
It is (or should be) used to ensure that the numbers are called out in as close to a random fashion as possible.
well if you find random lip gloss in your boyfriends room and he doesn't have a sister then something is definantly up cause no girl should be in his room but you ya dig
No, your applications should be backed up and restored during installation, however, memos, call logs, playlists, speed dial numbers, folders, and app shortcuts(widgets) will be deleted.
I'm not a mathematician, but as far as I know the word 'random' means there is no pattern to a sequence of occurrences. So, if you selected a series of numbers at random, you should not be able to find any mathematical pattern or relationship between them.
Ask him about the numbers and why he has them. He should feel comfortable with letting you look at the numbers and communicating with the girls in his phone. If he doesn't let you, then something is up.
Most computers generate pseudo-random numbers - these are numbers which are created using a formula, but due to the way the formula works, the sequence of numbers generated appears random and is good enough for most applications. The random number generator can be seeded so that the same sequence of "random" numbers is generated every time. Some systems improve on this by using unpredictable "real-world" events to create a more truly random sequence: The Apple ][ computer when waiting for a key press from the user would keep incrementing the current "seed"; thus the seed was influenced by the random event of the user pressing a key but if a series of "random" numbers was then taken, they were strictly pseudo-random. Linux has a pseudo-random number generator in a library function, but it also has in the kernel itself an "entropy pool" which is filled by environmental "noise" created by device drivers, etc. By accessing /dev/random a series of numbers is created from this pool; if the pool empties then the device will block until more "Noise" has been collected. /dev/urandom acts similarly, except that if the pool empties, then it falls back onto a pseudo-random sequence. As the entropy pool is limited in size, the random values being read should be used where security is important, eg in creating the key for an encryption, in small doses.
A random sample should be taken from an entire population.
No it cannot get deleted automatically. The history should be cleaned explicitly by the user.
your boyfriend.............never ask your boyfriend to a date seriously
They should have deleted scenes and extended features:D