supergeek13579
supergeek
supergeek13579

It looks like he's using the magic trackpad while also running windows, i'm curious how well that works and more importantly if the scrolling and other multi-touch gestures work and are as smooth as under native osx?

I just installed chrome on your netbook running windows 7. All of the chrome goodness along with my beloved Microsoft office and a real operating system. Plus it's up an running almost instantly because i have enough battery life to always suspend to ram, no drawn out hibernations and i only have to reboot it every

I actually believe the holes are to let sound out and increase the acoustics of the earbud. If you cover up the holes with your finger the sound will get very muted and generally sound bar. and the reason why outside sound gets in is because no seal is made between the ear and the earbud, so sound just goes right

If anyone is looking for an android alternative Epistle is free and has an almost identical feature set. [market.android.com]

The qr code in the graphic goes to lifehacker.com ... In case anyone wanted to know.

i sure hope so, now that Google released docs for android i would love to be able to keep it in sync with dropbox so i can edit and view all of my docs on my phone without having to ditch word & dropbox for my computers.

Nope, my router was surge protected but the actual cable going out of the house and to the internet obviously wasn't and that was what i guess fried everything.

One thing to remember is to unplug other non-power cables. A house a few doors down from us got struck by lightening and we lost everything plugged in to Ethernet, it was all surge protected but that didn't help.

i still find it hard to find wallpapers big enough to fit my dual monitor setup, since i've got one monitor in portrait the wallpaper needs to be at least 3120x1920 to fill the screen. i've resorted to using textures that i can just tile to cover the desktop, it's actually been working out surprisingly well [goo.gl]

I still have a problem with the expensive contracts you pay at any mainstream carrier. i'm rocking my 600mhz (806 oc'd) optimus v on virgin mobile and regardless of midrangieness of the actual handset the killer is $25 a month for unlimited data and 300 voice minutes. and since i use google voice i technically have

i know i can use a tool like dameon tools but untill there is one that automatically mounts an iso when i run an executable i don't want to bog down my machine.

applications(games) that require the origional cd to be inserted to run. i'm not a pirate but i've got a stack of cds next to my computer and it's a pain to have to dig through them to play my games.

i've been using underclocking for a while and it works wounders, i set a profile to underclock my phone to 480mhz when the screen is off. i've already been running my phone for 6 hours today and it's only at 80% battery!

if it's under $2 i will usually read the description, then the reviews, and make my decision that way. if it's more than that than i'll usually look up a real review online and see if it's really worth my money.

the best thing about truecrypt is plausible deniability, you can create another volume that is opened up with a different password so if you have to give up a password all they get is a bunch of dummy files you plant.

i still wish sales tax was required to be included in the advertised price. it's always a pain to work around, especially for more expensive items.

i don't see what you guys are complaining about, i haven't had to replace the batteries in my mouse yet! [dl.dropbox.com]

very similar to the first one, i recommend it's higher resolution variant. Great for stretching across two monitors! [goo.gl]

rofl! that's great!

but i really want them to! besides, i like to think that their hate for Google is much smaller than their hate for Apple.