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File sharing - What you need to know!
File sharing on p2p is soaring despite the music and movie industry efforts to curb the practice. Regardless of which side of the arguement you are on it is likely that sharing of copyright material will continue in one form or another for the...
How to Produce a Christmas Number One Hit
The worst thing about Christmas has to be listening to Top Of
The Pops and the Christmas Number 1 - Girls Aloud, Robbie
Williams, Westlife and Mr Blobby for goodness sake! Surely
anyone can produce a better Christmas Hit than those. After all,
a...
Living Life Loud
Change is good. Just ask the millions of unsigned artists worldwide trying to get their music heard. Since the music industry is changing drastically, unsigned musicians are able to make their music available to listeners. Record labels are...
Technology Predictions For 2006 And Reflections On 2005
2005 Took the World by Storm
2005 literally took the world by storm. The tragedies of the Asian Tsunami, the Hurricanes that blew through the US Gulf Coast and the earthquakes that swallowed parts of Pakistan have left an indelible mark on 2005....
Turn Benefits Into Sales with Streaming Media
TURN BENEFITS INTO SALES WITH STREAMING MEDIA By Ronni Rhodes The "Wow" factor that accompanied the introduction of streaming media on the Web has long passed, and the technology now has to prove itself to marketers. Its' acceptance by...
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Apple's New IMAC Is Thinnest Yet
Losing weight has become a national obsession. Thin is in and it's not just with the human form. Some of the most desirable technology products of today are thin and the thinner the better. New digital cameras are thin enough to slip into a shirt pocket. Portable mp3 players and even the latest stereo components are losing weight. And let's not forget those wonderful flat plasma TV sets that hang on a wall, and who doesn't want a flat panel computer screen on their computer these days? Unless the computer IS the flat screen. Well that's exactly what Apple has done to its newest generation of iMac computer.
Looking at the new iMacs is like looking at a computer monitor without the computer. Apple has managed to cram the entire computer into a beautifully sculpted display that comes in a wide-screen format. In fact, the new iMac's form looks pretty much like Apple's recently introduced line of 20, 23 and 30 inch screens. The
brushed aluminum base allows the screen to seemingly float above the desk. A touch of the finger lets you pivot the screen to an ideal viewing angle. The base is also part of the iMac's cable management system that guides all of the cables that plug into a vertical array of five USB ports (three USB 2.0), two FireWire 400 ports, a 10/100BASE-T Ethernet and a 56K V.92 modem port on the left side of the reversed screen.
For complete review please go to:http://www.computeramerica.com/content/columns/craig/2004/2004-09-13.htm
Craig Crossman is a Knight-Ridder newspaper columnist writing about computers and technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on computers and technology, Computer America, heard on the Business Talk Radio network weeknights at 10PM ET. In South Florida, you can hear a rebroadcast of a selected Computer America show each Sunday evening at 8PM ET on WJNO 1290AM
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