If there was airplay, I would definitely buy this. Thanks for the find.
If there was airplay, I would definitely buy this. Thanks for the find.
I have always been amazed that iTunes (or iOS) doesn't do queue based listening. One thing iTunes is doing right though is making it so that once a file is added to the library, it doesn't matter where you move it to, you can play it with ease without knowing the location.
Yodlee is the backbone of most commercial services, so I would start there. [www.yodlee.com]
I am surprised you didn't cite the recent arguments before the Supreme Court about GSK and whether off-hour emails/etc count as overtime. [www.marketplace.org]
Bobby Hinds agrees, [www.cbsnews.com]
Thanks to all for the answers. I think these sound like pretty good arguments about the size staying reasonable. I will wait then.
I am going to jump on the iOS bandwagon with my next phone, and my Sprint renewal just came up. I like the size of the iPhone in its current iteration, but am worried the iPhone 5 will be huge. I really don't like how big smart phones are these days and an iPhone or HTC One S are as big as I want to go.
So does a decent DAC make an iPod comparable to a Cowan, Archos or Creative PMP sound quality?
I have been budgeting forever and have found this to be true: where a little over here and a little over there ends up in big overage.
I have an legit medicine cabinet on the back of a door, and love it (got this from work as someone was throwing it out, [obi2.vwrsp.com] ). No more rummaging around under a sink for meds.
That's a good point, and I feel like something did happen once to goo.gl. I guess since it has never happened and google is hige, I don't worry about it. I also don't backup my bookmarks or gmail, so really, I am very susceptible to google data loss. BUT, if that happens, I figure a lot of things are gonna suffer, and…
I use them (goo.gl) a ton for for note taking (e.g., supporting information in large data tables in excel), and the occasional download link via SMS. In the former, an example is combing a shortened link with [tab.bz] so that I can fit a link to 6+ papers in a cell next to a biomolecule I am working on so as to…
I normally use canary, and I needed my laptop for a full day, and so instead of leaving it open for chat and email, I did Adium and Sparrow. Just got me [over] thinking programs and their battery use.
Is there a best program for checking email and saving your laptop battery? The reason I ask is because of the LH article about how chrome kills your battery (I have a mac). [lifehacker.com]
I will need to check one of those out, but how thick are they? I think that is the best thing about the cleaver is that it is essentially a wedge which is why its so handy for melons/potatoes/etc.
Just like natakuoo said, we have a kitchen supply store that does it. Just drop them off and come back in a couple days (or that day sometimes). I swear they seem to hold their edge longer, and its better than I can get with my honing steel (meaning, longer).
Completely agree. Two additional points: getting a knife sharpened professionally is cheap ($0.20/in) and amazing; a cleaver can do almost anything and is great for cutting things other than meat like melons or potatoes. How many sets come with a cleaver, versus how useful it is.
Time Machine could back up to a share, so just install something with AFP3.x and you should be fine. There some other program (which I can't find right now) which essentially behaves like timemachine but with jungle disk, so maybe applicable to an FTP.
In the case of bad weather, probably move to something like the [www.spc.noaa.gov]
At least they aren't asking for your password. That's pretty amazing, IMO.