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PC and Desktop BSD review |
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Miscellaneous
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Tuesday, 27 November 2007 |
During the chaos I call my life I did get a chance to install and play around with two really nice BSD Unix operating systems. If you are familiar with Linux then Unix isn't too much of a change, but the big releases, like NetBSD , OpenBSD , and FreeBSD can be a major pain to install for new users. If you are not aware, FreeBSD is what Apple's Macintosh OS X operating system is built from. |
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Software
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Wednesday, 14 November 2007 |
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It's has been a very hectic couple of months! My wife and I started remodeling one of the rooms in our home when all hell broke loose. This has left me very limited on time, but I did find a cool application I found worth while if you want to put video on your iPhone or iPod touch, and possibly other devices. It integrates with iTunes allowing you to sync the video to your device once the conversion is complete, which really makes it convenient. |
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Rants
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Wednesday, 24 October 2007 |
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After listening to some pod casts and reading news about music on the internet I have to wonder why this topic is so over analyzed. Honestly we think the internet has changed the way we think about music and the music industry, but it really hasn't changed it that much at all. |
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Web based applications rock |
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Software
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Monday, 01 October 2007 |
I noticed some hard core code geeks complain that web, or scripted, applications are not real applications. They certainly are missing out on a world that has a lot of potential. Not only are internet based applications accessible from anywhere, they are accessible on most platforms including smart phones and PDAs! I do believe Steve Jobs is seeing this trend and this is why he chose web applications over an open API on the iPhone. Scripting languages run pretty fast these days and high speed internet connections allow for many applications to work reasonably well in the browser. |
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Miscellaneous
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Saturday, 29 September 2007 |
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So Apple warns their latest update will likely trash your iPhone if you unlocked or jail breaked it. If you unlocked it, which would allow you to use a provider other than AT&T, you're most likely sitting with an iPhone in a bricked or simi-brincked state. Why the hell would you risk the update? The warnings were all over the net from Apple as well as others. It seems anyone with half a brain would have set the phone back to it's original state prior to the update then update to the latest one once it was released. Then you simply wait for others to unlock with the current updated version before moving forward with another unlock. Either way, your phone may not work and you cannot take it to Apple, because you voided your warranty! |
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Miscellaneous
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Wednesday, 19 September 2007 |
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I am not a big fan of cell-phones nor am I a big Mac guy, but my wife loves Apple and went nuts over the iPhone. Of course I argued the logical, it's expensive, it's proprietary, it locks you into a single service provider, and iTunes (Apple) has you by the nuts and for what? A phone! She actually listened, but as time went on I noticed the iPhone hackers were making this phone actually more worth while, even breaking free from AT&T for those brave enough to give it a go.
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