E-volve reversible neoprene sleeve case cover for netbook / laptop / notebook – Flare design – in size: 8.9 inch 9″ /

Posted by Nikos | Posted in apple | Posted on 01-03-2010-05-2008

0

  • To fit laptops up to size: 25mm x 19 mm x4mm
  • Suitable to absorb day to day wear and tear whilst in transit
  • Vibrant colours with designer patterns
  • Suitable for netbooks up to 8.9 inch (22.86cm) screen / device size: up to 25cmx 19cm x 4cm
  • One Reversible case included (2 shown on picture illustrates both sides of sleeve)

Product Description
Evolution in style, this e-volve neoprene sleeve is designed to protect your device, while offering a switchable choice of colour.Your high-tech lifestyle demands flexibility. Add a bit of fun to your day with a wild spl… More >>

E-volve reversible neoprene sleeve case cover for netbook / laptop / notebook – Flare design – in size: 8.9 inch 9″ /

Will Linux be the dominant OS for consumer electronics?

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 22-02-2010-05-2008

0


companion photo for Will Linux be the dominant OS for consumer electronics?

Jim Zemlin, the executive director of the Linux Foundation, is one of the platform’s most vocal cheerleaders. He never misses an opportunity to point out that many important emerging trends in the technology industry are contributing to Linux growth and adoption. During his keynote address at the recent Maemo Summit in Amsterdam, he suggested that the trend towards mobile convergence is favorable for the open source software operating system.

As netbooks and smartphones redefine the boundaries of computing, he argues, Linux will take on even greater importance. Although he says it’s not clear what kind of form factors will dominate when the dust settles, he’s convinced that Linux will become the dominant platform of the transforming mobile and embedded ecosystem. Thanks to greater flexibility, freedom from lock-in, and lack of licensing costs, he believes that Linux “enables consumer electronics like no other platform.”

Read the rest of this article...


Originally posted 2009-10-16 18:25:58. Republished by Old Post Promoter

iBookstore won’t mean the disappearance of $9.99 e-books

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 18-02-2010-05-2008

0

Publishers happily signed on to distribute e-books for the iPad via Apple’s iBookstore, in part because it allowed more flexibility in pricing books above Amazon’s $9.99 ceiling on new and bestselling titles. Though prices are expected to be in the range of $12.99 to $14.99 for new titles in hardcover, that won’t mean titles as low as $9.99 will disappear.

According to anonymous sources speaking to the New York Times, the agreements with publishers include provisions to discount book prices on bestsellers, similar to the practice used in brick and mortar stores such as Borders. Furthermore, prices for e-book editions of titles that retail below the typical $26 price for a hardcover would be sold below $14.99 as well.

We likely won’t know more details until the iPad ships and the iBookstore is open for business, but it seems like the agreements between publishers and Apple offer something for both groups. Publishers get more flexibility in pricing, and Apple gets to offer some titles at comparably discounted prices.


WordPress To Posterous Users: Graduate to a Full Blog

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General, SEO, Twitter | Posted on 09-02-2010-05-2008

0

In an effort to remind you that WordPress can be just as flexible and e-mail-friendly as Posterous, the company has released a Posterous importer for users who want to “graduate” from the mini-blogging site to “a full blog with the features, flexibility and reliability of WordPress.com.”

The new WordPress.com utility can be found via the Tools section within the Dashboard. All that’s required to run the import is your Posterous host name, user name and password, and it can import all of the following: posts, tags, comments and images.

On the flip side, Posterous has supported the inverse functionalityimport from WordPress (and other blog platforms) — for several months, along with an autopost to WordPress option.

Now that you can get your content both in and out of Posterous and WordPress, it seems as if there’s a battle brewing between the two services, which serve overlapping purposes but offer unique advantages. We see the value in both, but we’re curious if WordPress’ we’re-just-as-dead-simple-as-the-other-guys strategy will convince you to switch over. Share your thoughts in the comments.

Tags: posterous, Wordpress


Warner CEO: iTunes price increase led to lower sales, recession might also factor in

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 09-02-2010-05-2008

0

Don’t pat yourself on the back too much for calling this one, but Warner CEO Edgar Bronfman Jr. has now confirmed what many have suspected: higher iTunes pricing has led to slightly slower sales. Specifically, he says that while the variable pricing introduced early last year has been a “net positive” for the company, revenue growth on iTunes slowed to just eight percent in the last quarter, compared to a hefty 20 percent a year earlier. He is also quick to point out, however, that raising prices 30 percent during a recession may not have been the best idea in hindsight. Interestingly, Bronfman seems to think that e-books actually stand a better chance at holding to up to price increases than music, noting that the “book publishing industry, on the iPad, has much more flexibility than the music industry had.”

Warner CEO: iTunes price increase led to lower sales, recession might also factor in originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Feb 2010 15:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAllThingsD  | Email this | Comments

Home security on your iPhone

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General, Twitter | Posted on 24-01-2010-05-2008

0

Filed under: , , ,

We all know how the iPhone can secure itself, but you can get it to secure your entire house as well.

A while back, I briefly toyed with the idea of going without a landline. It’s an alluring prospect, and strikes me as satisfyingly post-modern. But one thing held me back: my home security system, which relied on a landline to connect it to central monitoring. So even though I went through a brief affair with Vonage until Verizon FiOS Triple Play pulled me back in, I had to keep a limited line connected to the house for our security system.

I tried to get rid of it. Oh, how I tried. But until recently, retrofitting the system to go cellular, or swap it out with a more modern system using (for example) a secure cellular connection, always cost more than it was worth. Then our home security monitoring contract price went way up and all of a sudden, the price difference between retrofitting and acquiring a new system went down. That made getting the new system worthwhile.

I went about trying to find a security system that would give me the flexibility I needed, as well as the knowledge that I wasn’t compromising home security. I already ran a small security program in the house to run a video baby monitor, but for the whole house, I needed some kind of central monitoring. Enter Alarm.com.We all know how the iPhone can secure itself, but you can get it to secure your entire house as well.

A while back, I briefly toyed with the idea of going without a landline. It’s an alluring prospect, and strikes me as satisfyingly post-modern. But one thing held me back: my home security system, which relied on a landline to connect it to central monitoring. So even though I went through a brief affair with Vonage until Verizon FiOS Triple Play pulled me back in, I had to keep a limited line connected to the house for our security system.

I tried to get rid of it. Oh, how I tried. But until recently, retrofitting the system to go cellular, or swap it out with a more modern system using (for example) a secure cellular connection, always cost more than it was worth. Then our home security monitoring contract price went way up and all of a sudden, the price difference between retrofitting and acquiring a new system went down. That made getting the new system worthwhile.

I went about trying to find a security system that would give me the flexibility I needed, as well as the knowledge that I wasn’t compromising home security. I already ran a small security program in the house to run a video baby monitor, but for the whole house, I needed some kind of central monitoring. Enter Alarm.com.

TUAWHome security on your iPhone originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sun, 24 Jan 2010 16:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Manually schedule Software Update ‘the OS X way’ with launchd

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General, Twitter | Posted on 10-01-2010-05-2008

0

Filed under: ,

In response to a Macworld article, TidBits’ Chris Pepper elaborated on ways to run Software Update, Apple’s means of delivering updates and patches, on your own schedule. Beginning with the fact that Software Update schedules its next update based on the time it’s currently being run, setting the time for the next update is as easy as running it manually at the time you want it to be scheduled for in the future.

Later, Pepper delves into the command line method of updating, using the softwareupdate tool (which we’ve talked about on TUAW, too) to run it from Terminal. Taking that a step further, it’s suggested that you run the command from cron, a UNIX command for scheduling tasks, to automate the command-line updates. However, while it still works fine and is perfectly capable of the task, cron has technically been deprecated in OS X since Tiger. I thought I’d mention the newfangled “Mac OS X way” of handling scheduled tasks, and demonstrate a little of its flexibility.

Launchd is Apple’s replacement for several UNIX ways of doing things, including init, rc.d scripts and cron. It provides a uniform, XML configuration method and — in many cases — is more secure than the replaced methods. Launchd can trigger applications and scripts at boot time, at intervals or even when a file or the contents of a folder change. It can also make sure a daemon or an application keeps running, with the ability to respawn and throttle it. If that’s just a bunch of nerd-speak to you, don’t worry, this isn’t going to be an overly technical post. You can read more specifics about launchd on Apple’s developer site, if you want more geeky goodness.

Launchd configuration files, like much of OS X, are XML files. Each process has one, and they can exist just about anywhere. A tool called launchctl is used to add and remove them from launchd. While these files are technically human-readable, they’re not the most fun to create and edit. In the interest of keeping this as non-technical as possible, I’m going to use a very handy utility called Lingon. The latest version (2.1.1) can be found at Sourceforge. It’s no longer under active development, but it’s working fine in Leopard and Snow Leopard. Grab a copy, put it in either your Applications folder or into Applications/Utilities, and launch it.

You’ll see all of your existing daemons and agents in Lingon’s sidbar. Unless you know exactly what you’re doing, you’ll generally only want to edit/add scripts in the “My Agents” section to avoid breaking anything at the system level. Create a new script using the plus button in the upper left, and name it something unique in section 1 of the edit area; I prefix my launchd scripts with my own name, e.g. com.brettterpstra.awesomescript, but anything will work.

Section 2 is where our command goes. In this case, we’re running the softwareupdate command, and we want it to automatically download any available updates in the background. We’ll use /usr/sbin/softwareupdate --download --all in that field.

Section 3 gives us the various options for running the command. In Lingon’s interface they’re pretty self-explanatory, so I won’t go through each one. We’ll just use “At a specific date:,” “Every Day,” and whatever time works best for you (and your bandwidth allowances). Make sure the enabled checkbox in the upper right is checked, hit the save button at the top, and you’ve got your own Software Update scheduler. Change the time at will, or use one of the other options to control how often it runs. If you enable this, you’ll probably want to disable the automatic checking in Software Updates panel in System Preferences.

There are other possibilities, too. For example, if you wanted to be notified as soon as possible about available updates, you could write a script that ran softwareupdate with the “-l” option (to list available updates without downloading them), parse the output and have it send you an email or a direct message if it found any updates. Run it about every 15 minutes and you could be among the first to know about an update! You can also use the launchd manager (launchctl), or Lingon to disable background processes that other programs have added, but that you don’t want running. Whether you’re a UNIX user still hanging on to cron, or are just a regular user who wants something besides iCal for scheduling scripts and launching applications, this will hopefully get you started with the ‘new’ OS X way of doing it.

TUAWManually schedule Software Update ‘the OS X way’ with launchd originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sat, 09 Jan 2010 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Invetech 3D bio-printer is ready for production, promises ’tissue on demand’

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 31-12-2009-05-2008

0

Say hello to “the world’s first production model 3D bio-printer.” What you’re looking at is a machine capable of arranging human cells and artificial scaffolds into complex three-dimensional structures, which result in such wonderful things as replacement liver and kidney tissue, or such simple niceties as artificially grown teeth. All we’re told of the internal workings is that the bio-printer utilizes laser-calibrated print heads and that its design is the first to offer sufficiently wide flexibility of use to make the device viable. Organovo will be the company responsible for promoting the new hardware to research institutions, while at the same time trying to convince the world that it’s not the fifth sign of the apocalypse. Maybe if the printer didn’t have a menacing red button attached to it, we’d all be a little less freaked out by it.

Invetech 3D bio-printer is ready for production, promises ’tissue on demand’ originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 31 Dec 2009 18:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gizmodo  |  sourceLive Science  | Email this | Comments

Win a copy of Things for Mac and iPhone

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General, Twitter | Posted on 24-12-2009-05-2008

0

Filed under:

I have used a lot of productivity apps on my Mac and my iPhone. I wound up using Things every day because, for me, it struck the perfect balance of features and flexibility. Now three lucky winners will get a chance to see the Mac-iPhone sync, the keyboard shortcuts and the excellent tagging features in Things. As you can see in the picture, I keep the Things app [iTunes Link]handy on my iPhone as well — it is an excellent complement to the desktop application.

Here’s a pro tip for Things if you use MailPlane (an excellent Gmail front end for your Mac): Select some text in an email, press Shift-Ctrl-Option-Command-P (yeah, that’s a lot of keys) and the HUD will pop up with a link to the email and the selected text in the notes section. As I loathe Mail.app for serious work, this has been a huge productivity booster. Google’s task tool simply isn’t up to par either.

OK, the rules are the same as always: US-only (sorry, promo code thing), 18 and up, only one entry per person (we’ll check!) and three winners. To enter just leave a comment below telling us how you “get things done” right now, and whether or not it’s working for you. Good luck!

  • Open to legal US residents of the 50 United States and the District of Columbia who are 18 and older.
  • To enter leave a comment telling us what you use to stay organized/productive and if it works for you.
  • The comment must be left before Wednesday, December 30, 2009, 11:59PM Eastern Standard Time.
  • You may enter only once.
  • Three winners will be selected in a random drawing.
  • Prizes: One copy of Things for Mac (Value: US$49.95 and one promo code for Things for iPhone ($9.99).
  • Click Here for complete Official Rules.

TUAWWin a copy of Things for Mac and iPhone originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 24 Dec 2009 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Make a DIY Monitor Stand on the Cheap [Dual Monitors]

Posted by Nikos | Posted in General | Posted on 12-12-2009-05-2008

0

Loathe to spend more on monitor stands than you spent on your monitors? Built one yourself and save big.

Lifehacker read Nanu was happy with his dual monitors, but not so happy to spend a whole lot on a fancy dual monitor stand. He visited the local hardware and with a little elbow grease put together a sturdy stand for about $15.

The trade off is a loss of flexibility, you’d better measure three times because the stand and monitor angle will be fixed in place. Even with that kind of trade off however, you’re still saving hundreds of dollars and getting a very tidy stand with excellent cable management in the process. Check out his build guide at the link below for full details and pictures. Have a sweet DIY project to share? Let’s hear about it in the comments.



Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes

Powered by Yahoo! Answers