Thứ Ba, 24 tháng 5, 2011

selena gomez 2011 haircut

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  • rovex
    Apr 22, 05:41 PM
    Um no, they do not break very easily. Maybe a gorilla might break it easily.

    well mine sure did, and my iPad's not responding when I double click for multitasking. I'm no gorilla, it's called "wear and tear", maybe you haven't heard of it?




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  • randyharris
    Oct 24, 09:24 AM
    Wouldn't you know it, my Sister-in-Law's MBP just arrived Yesterday!




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  • masterthespian
    Jul 12, 10:54 AM
    Knock Knock

    Who's there?

    Argo?

    Argo who?

    Argo **** yourself Microcrap!



    my 2.5 scents....

    rob




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  • crees!
    Jul 25, 12:58 PM
    After Jobs walks out, but before he starts the Keynote. Someone should ask Steve to empty his pockets. First the mini, then the nano, this time should be the Video iPod. I am hoping for a couple more things this Keynote.
    Excellent.. excellent idea!



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  • maclaptop
    Apr 26, 02:04 PM
    They have to pays for it...

    Yes they do, and that's why I celebrate the huge value of my Apple investment.

    When it comes to Apple, their's no shortage of buyers. :)




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  • Eldiablojoe
    Apr 26, 03:45 PM
    Ok, well- I want my vote to count for something so I'm changing it To Plutonius.

    Sorry- HTML skills lagging lol

    Fixed :)



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  • ghostlyorb
    Apr 30, 07:54 AM
    I might have to switch to Amazon now... saving money is what I love.




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  • Mystikal
    Mar 15, 08:27 PM
    I think it'd be awesome to organize an Orange County iPhone 5 run. When the time comes, post the thread, and we'll figure something out.

    Most definitely. Would be fun to have a group of 10+ waiting for iPhone 5 :D



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  • digitalbiker
    Jul 12, 07:09 PM
    Apple labels iWork as a "consumer level" app. not me.

    My definition of a "Pro level" app is one that has industry maturity, is excepted as standard industry wide, has many many features which allow it to be versatile and is useful in a variety of professional industries. It probably isn't the easiest app to use because it isn't focused to just one industry.

    I would bet you that not .1% of printshops, publishers, lawyers, engineers, etc. even know what a .pages file is let alone are they working with it daily.

    Very well put. I agree with you 100%. I bought pages thinking it could replace MS Word after seeing Jobs demo at MacWorld a couple of years ago.

    When I tried to use it to build a Messier Catlog viewers guide it was the worst software experience I have ever had. It crashed constantly, it corrupted files. It was difficult to manipulate the graphics and get them where I wanted them. Text flow was clumsy. It was painfully slow.

    I have a G4 1.67 GHz, 1 GB, PB and it took 7 minutes (I timed it) to open the document. The document contained 100 tiffs and 100 jpgs in tables on only 50 pages. It would open, then it would take another 3 minutes to scroll.

    Pages V2 was better but still sucked. I could never make compatible .doc files. Most of my co-workers were on Windows machines running Office 2003 and when I would email the .doc, I would always get an email back saying that something was wrong with my file or that their virus checker said it was bad. Whatever, I had to finally abandon Pages.

    I don't even like pages for quick documents. AppleWorks is better or even BBedit, depending on the type of quick document I need.

    Even Apple doesn't advertise this product as a competitor for Word. They simple sell it as a consumer level productivity tool.




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  • marksman
    Apr 12, 11:24 AM
    The iPhone 4 will still be the best smartphone on the market when the iPhone 5 comes out.

    Holding it back makes a lot of sense at this point.



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  • MegaSignal
    Jul 11, 10:35 PM
    I still don't get the value of wireless in a music player--not in actual practice (battery life and added bulk, vs. the need to plug in to charge, which naturally takes longer than synching anyway).
    Precisely.

    If Apple dumped FireWire IEEE1394 for the sake of slimness, it is highly doubtful that they'd re-clutter and fatten it up with Bluetooth (which, after trying for many years (with other devices) I have now considered to be worthless crap). Really - unless one can charge with built-in solar panels (as Citizen (http://www.citizenwatch.com/COA/English/intro1.asp)does with their watches), wireless is a non-issue.

    The current iPod has panache. It is "sessy". Neither word describes MS at all...and it is because of this that the Argo will have a tough time of it.

    As others have said earlier in this issue, the good that will come out of all of this is that Apple will provide us with a better iPod.




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  • DeathChill
    Apr 23, 12:04 PM
    But you're dealing with Apple customers, they sacrifice themselves for the good of the company.

    Yes, Apple tricks everyone into loving them. That's what is happening; it couldn't be their focus on creating products that people love. Nope.



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  • CEAbiscuit
    Jul 21, 11:29 AM
    reassuring to me even if it only means I will be able to buy computers that run a Mac OS for the next 15+ years.

    Exactly. Stating the obvious, bbut now that you can run windows, I think the growth is unavoidable. All the companies that were "thinking" about converting can give OSX a try while running windows. 5%, here we come!




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  • PghLondon
    Apr 28, 11:11 AM
    As a platform it seems iOS is getting whooped on.

    Except it's not. iOS is on over 50% more devices than Android.

    Want to try again?



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  • amac4me
    Jul 21, 12:26 PM
    You can say you made the 8% prediction, but why don't you back it up with some proof? I can say that I predicted Apple would release software to dual boot an Intel Mac but without proof who would believe me?

    Ok photo-video here's the prediction that I made back on April 7, 2006:

    "My prediction is that Apple will have at least 8% market share by the end of the Leopard Mac OS X 10.5 lifecycle."

    Which can be found at:
    http://switchtoamac.com/site/macs-boot-camp-market-share-switchers.html




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  • mtkagan
    Mar 16, 08:03 AM
    5th in line @ south coast plaza



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  • cvaldes
    Apr 21, 11:08 PM
    This happens all the time, and usually results in the plaintiff paying less for the stuff they're buying from that vendor.
    The likely outcome is that Apple will not pay a dime in fines. There's a small chance that they would be fined a nominal amount, a slap on the wrist.

    Then Apple has the leverage to walk away from Samsung as a supplier, but Samsung needs Apple's business so they will underbid competitors resulting in a net gain for Apple.

    Samsung's smartest course of action probably would have been to work with whatever terms Apple had been offering before legal action ensued.

    My guess is that this is more of the supply chain/operations genius of Tim Cook. When the smoke clears, we will probably see a fresh-looking Apple shake the hand of a bruised and bloodied Samsung, then turn around and walk away with large sacks of money saying, "we will talk again later."




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  • Chundles
    Oct 24, 08:12 AM
    Yea... WHERE THE [censored] ARE THE MACBOOKS?! I want a Core 2 Duo MacBook, not MacBook Pro :mad: :mad: :mad: :mad: :mad:

    Probably next week, Apple like to get as much press as they can. This way they can stretch out the news reports.




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  • Snowy_River
    Jul 12, 06:21 PM
    Well thats fine and I understand many people don't need a professional app. But this person was complaining about a consumer app "Pages" not having all the features that he needed. Yet he claims vehemently that Pages can fully replace Word



    Says who? I have used both and frankly I like Word better for handling graphics. Pages is great if your images work with your templates but if they don't you have to fart around with locking and unlocking, grouping and ungrouping, and it is extremely tedious.




    You must not be able to read. Snowy clearly states that .pdf doesn't work for him because it doesn't allow double sided printing.

    Look, I am not trying to say Pages is useless. It is a very nice "Consumer level" app. Yes, some pros could make use of it but some pros could also use VI in the terminal window too. Does that mean that it is as useful or has the same features as the "Pro App" MS Word. No.:rolleyes:

    Well, it seems that you didn't read my earlier posts. I'm not complaining that Pages doesn't have all the features that I need. I'm asking if there was a way to do what I was trying to do. The answer was yes, and it was quite straight forward.

    Also, I take it that you didn't read what I said about the idea of there being "professional" and "consumer" apps. I think it's BS. These are just tools. In fact, based on the argument that Pages isn't a "professional" app because it can't handle printing this way, then MS Word hasn't been a "professional" app until the latest version, because it couldn't either. That's the problem. Where do you draw the line and say "if it can do XYZ then it's a professional app, if it can't then it isn't"?

    And, yes, PDF will work fine for me. I was objecting to PDF because I was trying to basically "print" my booklet myself to a PDF file that could simply be printed on any printer by any minimum wage employee. But, as was pointed out, print shops have nice big fancy printers run by people who know what they're doing (at least in theory) that will take a simple, sequential PDF file and properly print it to the correct panel and correct side automatically. It probably works much better than MS Word does, and, by letting someone who works with it all day long do their job, it relieves me of one more thing that I have to worry about figuring out how to do. So, PDF will work for me.

    Now, can we drop this whole "professional" vs. "consumer" app business? Lord knows, Pages is quite capable of producing very professional results. I've done it. Just because it doesn't have all of the features that MS Word has doesn't mean it isn't or can't be used as a professional application.

    An analogy just leapt to mind. In the world of Mechanical CAD, there are a lot of programs out there that you can use. One example is Pro-Engineer. This is a top of the line product and you can actually spend more than $100,000 on a single licensed seat (tricked out with a lot of add-ons). There is no doubt that this is a professional application (if only because no consumer in his right mind would spend the money on it). In comparison, consider something like AutoCAD. AutoCAD costs a measly $1400, and it has nowhere near the capabilities of ProE. So, by your logic, AutoCAD must not be a "professional" app, but a "consumer" app.

    I've known a lot of engineers that would find such an assertion highly offensive.

    So, it all comes back to the point that these are tools. It's what the tool is used for that makes it a professional tool or a consumer tool. And I'd guess that MS Word is used quite a bit as a consumer tool, and Pages is being used as a professional tool, too.




    nonameowns
    Apr 22, 08:06 PM
    that would be a cool phone to hold. :cool:




    rmhop81
    Apr 26, 02:24 PM
    Exactly. It's more than just the $5 for the app and the data cap/bandwidth issues. It is wear and tear on a machine that has to be left on 24/7. It is the hydro cost of running that machine 24/7 instead of turning it off when you go out (this alone may well add up to more than $20/year!) If you don't want your main machine on 24/7 then it is the cost of another Mac mini or NAS or other device to act as the server instead.

    It is also wear and tear on your 2 TB drive that has to be on 24/7, as opposed to working more like a backup drive that's only activated occasionally to back up your music files. It is the hassle of ensuring AudioGalaxy and your server and your ISP internet connection are all up and running when you need them to be (dealing with power outages, internet outages, maintenance, restarts, software updates, etc.)

    $20/year might well be worth it for the uptime and hydro considerations alone.

    right on. now if you have multiple machines and you already do that, then it doesn't make sense to do the cloud service. but i'm more of a mobile user and don't like desktops or big setups. The less stuff I own the better.




    littleman23408
    Sep 15, 10:45 PM
    It's a Hexbug. I bought it at Brookstone today.

    It's a robot.

    http://www.hexbug.com/

    I want to get the inchworm next.

    That's cool. I saw the youtube video "Hexbug madness" and I just laughed through the whole video. It makes me want to buy 10 of them and let them run loose around the office at work.




    Scallywag
    Sep 30, 12:14 PM
    Okay, this guy must live in a "garden" apartment or something. I live in NYC and the only place I drop calls 100% of the time is near the Verizon building by the Brooklyn Bridge. Irony of ironies.

    But my dropped call percentage is less that 5%.

    I live in Hell's Kitchen, and I rarely drop calls here, though data speeds during rush hour are pathetically slow.

    I walk near Union Square every day on my way home from work, and every single time I'm at 5th Ave & 13th st. I drop a call... every single time... I can never hold a call near union square.

    AT&T service is really not good in NYC. There's no point in my getting a 3Gs for faster 3G... it's all slow here, regardless of the model iPhone.

    I drop about 15-20% of my calls. Near Union Square I drop 75-80% easily.




    Nabooly
    Sep 14, 09:11 PM
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    Jigsaw?? Is that you?! :eek:



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