Let’s face it, the iPhone and Twitter are the peanut butter and chocolate of the mobile age. They “just work” together.
via @TheiPhoneblog: Now with Mo’ Better Twitter! | The iPhone Blog.
Damn straight.
Let’s face it, the iPhone and Twitter are the peanut butter and chocolate of the mobile age. They “just work” together.
via @TheiPhoneblog: Now with Mo’ Better Twitter! | The iPhone Blog.
Damn straight.
(© Landmark Entertainment Group. All rights reserved.)
Before there was the Apple Store that we know and love today, there was the Apple Cafe — well, almost. On November 12, 1996, Apple announced plans to open a chain of cybercafes around the globe. State-of-the-art, even by today’s standards, Apple Cafes promised health-conscious food (served up via a high-tech ordering system), video conferencing with neighbouring diners, and on-demand access of movies and music videos. A screenshot from an old promo gives us a few clues as to how some of this might have worked.
via Guifx Blog : Blog Archive : The Apple Store That Almost Was.
YouTube – Left 4 Dead 2 – E3 09: Multiplayer Gameplay.
THIS. IS. AWESOME.
Gameplay order:
#1: Safe Room
#2: Garden Maze
#3: Stop The Alarm
#4: Axe Ownage
#5: Dock Start
#6: Kitchen Smoker
#7: Fire Ammo
#8: Frying Pan Domination
Margret’s four-hundred-and-fifty-second most annoying habit is to stealthily turn off the central heating (then light the gas fire in the room she’s in, natch). I’ll suddenly notice that, sitting typing at the keyboard, I can see my own breath while from the bedroom one of the kids will call out, ‘Papa, I can’t feel my legs…’ And I’ll shiver down the stairs to find the central heating set to ‘Summer/Hypothermia/Cryogenic Suspension,’ and Margret in the living room watching the TV in a door frame warping furnace.
via Things my girlfriend and I have argued about.
It’s not talking about me (somewhat obviously), but it’s still one of the most hilarious things on the interwebs at this point in time.
It is a little long – reading the whole thing in one go isn’t recommended. Unless you’re studying for exams. And procrastinating. :p
The final date has passed and the following people have won a FlashMint WordPress Template: Benny Ling, Simon | Teenius and Amanda. Congratulations to the winners!
via Giveaway contest – FlashMint.com Premium WordPress Themes.
So it turns out that I’ve won a free premium WordPress theme. Cool, yeah?
What isn’t so cool is that most of the designs suck. It’s not the designs themselves, it’s just that the design’s aren’t me. For a personal blog, that’s important.
What to do? If I do choose a theme and it’s not customisable to my own requirements, then I probably won’t use it. If I choose a theme and don’t decide to use it, well, there’s not a whole heap I can do about that either.
I’ll probably choose a theme just for the hell of it – and use it on another site I’m developing at the moment. Radi8’ers, this one’s for you. 😉
Now there are many things Mac OS X does better than Windows 7 and vice-versa. I’m not taking advantage of either OS and it’s features. I’m sure Windows 7 has lots more up it’s sleeve than I know about. Ditto Mac OS X – I know I don’t use all the things in Mac OS X like I should because I’m too lazy to seek it out. The aim of this experiment isn’t to choose a winner, or declare Mac OS X THE BEST OS EVAR SCREW YOU MICRO$OFT! It’s to see what Windows is, how it works, what it does and what it does differently. Everyone’s computer use is different, so you need to make up your own mind as to whether Windows 7 or Mac OS X is for you. It’s great to have competition and choice. Windows 7 is way better than I expected and very competent.
[…]
So while the HP is much cheaper, has better specs, a built in card reader, HDMI and digital TV, loads more ports and a snazzy webcam, it has some real livability faults. The LCD is rubbish and even a layman can tell it looks awful, it’s that poor. The trackpad is virtually useless with it’s total lack of glide. If the screen was slightly higher quality and the trackpad not so crappy, it would be a vastly better experience. I’m actually confused as to why HP sent me this laptop to replace the MBP. The MBP retails for $3,199 – you’d think they’d send something a bit more upmarket.
via A Week Without Apple – Day Two, A Lesson in Understanding | MacTalk Australia.
I concur wholeheartedly.
This is why I use a Mac – even though I’m more than proficient at using both either/all OSs well.