Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Five Key Facts on Apple’s Colored iPod shuffles






Editor-in-Chief, iLounge


Published: Tuesday, January 30, 2007


Last Update: Tuesday, January 30, 2007









If you’ve been following Apple’s second-generation iPod shuffle since last year, and don’t need all the details found in our updated, comprehensive review, here’s a quick summary of five key things you’ll want to know about today’s colorful update to the shuffle family.










(5) Color - What’s the story? The most obvious change to the
November, 2006 second-generation iPod shuffle is its body coloration.
Apple has added four new colors - pink, blue, green, and orange - to
the prior silver shuffle. All five are still made from aluminum, just
like the multi-colored iPod nano, and the pink, blue, and green nanos
are color-matched to the nano’s vibrant tones. The new orange color is
equally striking, and very close in color to an actual Sunkist we had
sitting around. Notably, iTunes 7.0.2 does not yet recognize the
different shuffle colors, but that will likely change in a future
update.






(4) Has anything else changed to make this shuffle a better value?
Yes, there are other small changes, noted below, but they don’t
radically change the shuffle’s value equation. The colored shuffles
sell for the silver version’s prior $79 price, and still come with one
set of earphones, one Dock, thin manuals, Apple stickers, and an
LED-decoding card, nothing else. These shuffles all have the same 1
Gigabyte (240-song) storage capacity as before.






(3) So what’s new, then - the Earphones? Last year’s silver
shuffles shipped with Apple’s old, somewhat uncomfortable, and
bass-weak earbuds, even though the shuffle came out after two new
iPod/iPod nano models that had lighter, better earbuds. Today, all of
the shuffles come with Apple’s latest earphones, which are also sold
separately for $29 as Apple iPod Earphones (iLounge rating: B+).






(2) How do I tell old and new metal shuffles apart? If you’re
buying a green, pink, blue, or orange iPod shuffle, you’re guaranteed
to find the new earphones inside. But if you’re buying a silver iPod
shuffle, look for a package with gray print alongside the shuffle,
rather than green print. The gray print indicates that new earphones
are inside; the green print indicates that you’re getting the older
ones.






(1) What about the sound quality, or other changes? The latest
iPod shuffles sound the same as the ones shipped last year, which is to
say a step below other iPods - particularly in base level of noise -
when used with high-quality earphones. We still prefer the nano and
fifth-generation iPod to the shuffle by a fair margin. Apple appears to
have left everything else about the shuffle the same.







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Sunday, January 28, 2007

Open Gmail's Attachments in Google Docs

If you receive Microsoft Word files, Rich Text files or documents from OpenOffice and StarOffice, you can open them directly in Google Docs. Gmail has already had this option for Excel attachments.

It's a good idea to use it if you want to see more than just the text of the document (you can do this by choosing "View as HTML") or if you want to edit it, but you don't have an Office suite. The changes will be automatically saved, you'll have access to the previous versions and you can invite your contacts to edit the documents collaboratively. No more sending documents back and forth.

And a bonus tip: if you open the same attachment multiple times, Google Docs will offer you two options: open the existing document or a new copy of the attachment.


- http://googlesystem.blogspot.com

Saturday, January 27, 2007

Log Me In

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Thursday, January 25, 2007

agloco



I don't normally advertise on here, I never have and I don't intend on doing it again but this is something I think a lot of people are gonna wanna see! Make money for sitting on your ass and surfing the net. Just click here or click on the banner above.

Friday, January 19, 2007

What Happens To Your Body If You Drink A Coke Right Now?



Have you ever wondered why Coke comes with a smile? It’s because it
gets you high. They took the cocaine out almost a hundred years ago.
You know why? It was redundant.


  • In The First 10 minutes: 10 teaspoons of sugar hit
    your system. (100% of your recommended daily intake.) You don’t
    immediately vomit from the overwhelming sweetness because phosphoric
    acid cuts the flavor allowing you to keep it down.
  • 20 minutes:
    Your blood sugar spikes, causing an insulin burst. Your liver responds
    to this by turning any sugar it can get its hands on into fat. (There’s
    plenty of that at this particular moment)
  • 40 minutes: Caffeine absorption is complete. Your pupils dilate, your blood pressure rises, as a response your livers dumps more sugar into your bloodstream. The adenosine receptors in your brain are now blocked preventing drowsiness.
  • 45 minutes: Your body ups your dopamine production
    stimulating the pleasure centers of your brain. This is physically the
    same way heroin works, by the way.
  • minutes: The phosphoric acid binds calcium,
    magnesium and zinc in your lower intestine, providing a further boost
    in metabolism. This is compounded by high doses of sugar and artificial
    sweeteners also increasing the urinary excretion of calcium.
  • Minutes: The caffeine’s diuretic properties
    come into play. (It makes you have to pee.) It is now assured that
    you’ll evacuate the bonded calcium, magnesium and zinc that was headed
    to your bones as well as sodium, electrolyte and water.
  • minutes: As the rave inside of you dies
    down you’ll start to have a sugar crash. You may become irritable
    and/or sluggish. You’ve also now, literally, pissed away all the water
    that was in the Coke. But not before infusing it with valuable
    nutrients your body could have used for things like even having the ability to hydrate your system or build strong bones and teeth.

This will all be followed by a caffeine crash in the next few hours.
(As little as two if you’re a smoker.) But, hey, have another Coke,
it’ll make you feel better.





*FYI: The Coke itself is not the enemy, here. It’s the dynamic
combo of massive sugar doses combined with caffeine and phosphoric
acid. Things which are found in almost all soda.


Further Reading/Sources On Healthbolt








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Core 2 Quad





Looks like Sony is first from the gate with a consumer PC wrapped around Intel's new Core 2 Quad processor. Damn straight Jack, Sony's Vaio R Master split-tower, flagship desktop now sports Intel's beefiest of consumer procs: the 2.4GHz Core 2 Quad Q6600. That, on top of a Blu-ray Disc drive, up to 3GB of DDR2-667 memory and 3TB of SATA disk, and nVidia Quadro FX 1500 graphics makes this one smokin' fast box. Only thing is, a fully spec'd -- and we mean fully -- model VGC-RM900CPS with 24-inch, 1920x1200 LCD will set you back ¥995,800 (about $8,241) when these hit Japan February 10th. Still interested?

Engadget





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Wii + iTunes - DOT.TUNES





Multi platform goodness here! With a piece of software called DOT.TUNES you can access your iTunes Library via any web browser (Yes, any Web Browser with Adobe Flash support *cough*Wii*cough*) anywhere in the world.



DOT.TUNES lets you view your existing iTunes music and sort it by Artist, Album or Playlists. Then you can play any MP3 track via its web interface and create custom on the fly playlists with continuous nonstop music.



The best thing about DOT.TUNES, besides its EASY setup is that you can also allow multiple users access to stream or download your music, by creating logins which allow each user to listen only to the playlists which you specify.



A 15 day trial is available, but after that you have to belly up $30 (But I’m gonna ask for some licenses to give away)



Read More [Digg It]



Borrowed from Uneasy Silence





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Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Orchids!

Check out these FABULOUS pics I took!!!


| View Show | Create Your Own

Pics from The Efteling - Dutch Theme Park


RockYou Corkboard - Add a Note - Get Your Own

Freaky site!

Check out this awesome site, go to the about page. I just think the head coming out of the TV is awesome! http://roxik.com/index.html

Tuesday, January 09, 2007

Windows Chat (Winchat.exe)

SUMMARY

This article describes how to use Windows Chat (Winchat.exe) in Windows XP

MORE INFORMATION

Chat Overview

You can use Windows Chat on your computer to communicate with someone on another computer. Both computers must be connected to the same network (for example, a local area network [LAN] or the Internet). Also, each computer must be running a similar protocol, such as TCP/IP.

Chat is interactive. You see a reply to your messages as the other person types it. The Chat window is separated into two panes: one contains the messages you send, and the other contains the messages you receive.


To Start Windows Chat

1.Click Start, and then click Run.
2.Type winchat, and then press ENTER.


To Make a Chat Call

1.On the Conversation menu, click Dial.
2.Click the computer name, or type the computer name, for the person with whom you want to chat, and then click OK.
3.When the person with whom you want to chat answers the call, begin typing in the Chat window. You cannot begin typing until the person you are calling answers.
4.If the person you are calling does not answer, or you want to end the call, click Hang Upon the Conversation menu.
The messages from the person with whom you are chatting appear in the lower pane or the right pane, depending on how your Chat window is arranged.


To Answer a Call

To answer a call, click Chat, which appears on the taskbar when someone uses Chat to call your computer. Or, if your Chat window is already open, click Answer on the Conversation menu.

Note that you must have Chat running or have the Network DDE service started to answer a call. To start the Network DDE service:
1.Click Start, click Control Panel, click Performance and Maintenance, and then click Administrative Tools.
2.Double-click Computer Management, double-click Services and Applications, and then double-click Services.
3.In the Details pane, click Network DDE.
4.On the Action menu, click Start.
To have the Network DDE service start automatically every time you start your computer:
1.Click Start, click Control Panel, click Performance and Maintenance, and then click Administrative Tools.
2.Double-click Computer Management, double-click Services and Applications, and then double-click Services.
3.In the Details pane, click Network DDE.
4.On the Action menu, click Properties.
5.On the General tab, in Startup type, select Automatic, and then click OK.


To Hang Up

To end a call, click Hang Up on the Conversation menu. If the person with whom you are chatting hangs up before you do, a message appears in the status bar. If you quit Chat, hang-up occurs automatically.


To Turn Sound On or Off

To turn sound on or off, click Sound on the Options menu.

If your computer has a sound card, you can change the sound for incoming and outgoing rings. To do so, double-click Sounds and Audio Devices in Control Panel. For more information, click the Help menu in Control Panel.


To Change the Background Color

To change the background color for the Chat window:
1.On the Options menu, click Background Color.
2.Under Basic colors, click the color you want, and then click OK. The color you choose is mapped to the nearest solid color.
By default, the pane that displays your chat partner's conversation uses the background color and font that your chat partner has selected. You can view your chat partner's conversation with the same background color and font that you are using by clicking by clicking PreferencesOptions menu, and then clicking Use Own Font. on the


To Change the Font

1.On the Options menu, click Font.
2.In the Font dialog box, click the options you want.
By default, the pane that displays your chat partner's conversation uses the background color and font that your chat partner has selected. You can view your chat partner's conversation with the same background color and font that you are using by clicking by clicking PreferencesOptions menu, and then clicking Use Own Font. on the


To Change Window Preferences

1.On the Options menu, click Preferences.
2.Under Window Style, click the layout you prefer.
3.Under Partner's Message, click the option you want.
Note that if you choose to view your partner's font, you also view your partner's background color.



APPLIES TO
Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition
Microsoft Windows XP Professional

From Microsoft.com

Saturday, January 06, 2007

HOWTO: Manage multiple libraries in iTunes 7

"iTunes 7 has some new and improved features to help people manage their
music, movies, podcasts and pictures. One of the long-awaited features
is the support for multiple libraries. A library (in the iTunes realm)
is an XML file that stores the information about your media you use in
iTunes. All of the songs you have in iTunes are referenced in the XML
library file. I will show you how to manage multiple libraries with
iTunes 7. This is good for people with iPods. You can have one library
just for your iPod’s music and another for all of your music."



CLICK HERE TO LEARN HOW