Since the advent of smart phones, thousands of applications have come on the market. You can buy one to help identify bird calls or constellations. Another makes random sounds -- a drum roll or a sad trombone for example. I-steam fogs up the screen of your phone, allowing you to write things with your finger, and now Virginia's Department of Game and Inland Fisheries is working on an app to make hunting and fishing simpler. Why would get anyone get excited about an app promising to put all the hunting rules in one place? That's what Kenny Hale is trying to fathom as he flips through the official Virginia hunting pamphlet at the counter of his gun store in Albemarle County. "A lot of the good ole boys aren't plugged in, like me, you know." Not everyone who wants to harvest wildlife has such confidence in page-flipping. Consider Andrew Sneathern. Although he's an attorney certified by the Virginia Bar association, this recent arrival to Charlottesville wonders about his own ability to
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