Archive for: March 2008

March 25, 2008

XM & Sirius merger approved

Filed under: News — Alex @ 2:50 am

xm sirius

WASHINGTON — The Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division issued the following statement today after announcing the closing of its investigation into the proposed merger of XM Satellite Radio Holdings Inc. with Sirius Satellite Radio Inc.:

“After a careful and thorough review of the proposed transaction, the Division concluded that the evidence does not demonstrate that the proposed merger of XM and Sirius is likely to substantially lessen competition, and that the transaction therefore is not likely to harm consumers. The Division reached this conclusion because the evidence did not show that the merger would enable the parties to profitably increase prices to satellite radio customers for several reasons, including: a lack of competition between the parties in important segments even without the merger; the competitive alternative services available to consumers; technological change that is expected to make those alternatives increasingly attractive over time; and efficiencies likely to flow from the transaction that could benefit consumers.

There You Have It Read More

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March 21, 2008

Gate your Friends iTunes Music over the Net with Mojo

Filed under: Helpful Tips — Alex @ 4:15 am

mojo

Share any song in your iTunes library and download any song from your friend’s iTunes libraries over the internet with freeware application Mojo. Essentially, Mojo makes sharing music with your friends through iTunes wildly simple, from its simple interface to its brilliant implementation. If you’ve ever used un apps like ourTunes to download music from shared libraries, you have an idea of what Mojo does, but you should still prepare to be amazed.

Read More

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DIY - Reverse Macro Ring

Filed under: Helpful Tips — Alex @ 3:30 am

Reverse Macro Ring

Macro lens are expensive. This how to will show you how to creat a macro reverse ring for almost nothing.

Reverse rings can be used to shoot macro shots using non-macro lens.

The only thing that you need is an old Camera Body Cap, Unused camera lens filter, Some Quick setting glue (Super Glue)
and Some Epoxy Glue.

For step by step instructions click here

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March 10, 2008

(Update) My Favorite Firefox Extensions - Part 2

Filed under: Helpful Tips — Alex @ 4:32 am

Firefox

In No Particular Order

Adblock - Once installed, it’s a snap to filter elements at their source-address.
Just right-click: Adblock: done. Filters use either the wildcard character (*)
or full Regular Expression syntax. Hit the status-element and see what has or
hasn’t been blocked.

DictionarySearch - Looks up a user selected word in an online dictionary

Google Preview - Inserts preview images (thumbnails) of web sites and Amazon products into the Google and Yahoo search results pages.

BugMeNot - Bypass compulsory web registration via Firefox’s right-click context menu. Compatibile with Mozilla and current Firefox releases. Visit bugmenot.com for full details of their service.

StumbleUpon - StumbleUpon lets you “channelsurf” the best-reviewed sites on the web. It is a collaborative surfing tool for finding and sharing great sites. This helps you find interesting webpages you wouldn’t think to search for.

VideoDownloader - Download videos from Youtube, Google, Metacafe, iFilm, Dailymotion… and other 60+ video sites ! And all embedded objects on a webpage (movies, mp3s, flash, quicktime, etc) ! Directly !

Tab History - TabHistory provides two histories of the tabs.

The first history is automatic. Whenever you change tab, the tab you change to will be added to this history. To go back to the previous tab, press Ctrl+, (Ctrl+comma). To go to the next tab in the history, press Ctrl+. (Ctrl+dot).

The second history is manual. To add a tab to this history press Ctrl+Shift+M (think "mark tab"). To go back to the previous tab in this history press Ctrl+Shift+, and to go to the next tab in this history press Ctrl+Shift+.

This saves you from the situation of having many many tabs open and not being able to remember which one you were previously at and thus having to spend ages searching through all your open tabs.

Tab Effect - Add effects when current tab is changed. this extension uses DirectX 8.

Sage - Sage is a lightweight RSS and Atom feed aggregator extension for Mozilla Firefox. It’s got a lot of what you need and not much of what you don’t.

Super DragAndGo - Drag a link or anything like a uri (e.g. "abc.com" ), and throw it to anywhere blank on the webpage to open the it in a new tab.

Colorful Tabs - The most beautiful yet the simplest add-on that makes a strong colorful appeal. Colors every tab in a different color and makes them easy to distinguish while beautifying the overall appearance of the interface. An essential.

IE Tab - IE Tab - an extension from Taiwan, features: Embedding Internet Explorer in tabs of Mozilla/Firefox.

FireFTP - FireFTP is a free, secure, cross-platform FTP client for Mozilla Firefox which provides easy and intuitive access to FTP servers.

Along with transferring your files quickly and efficiently, FireFTP also includes more advanced features such as: directory comparison, syncing directories while navigating, SSL encryption, file hashing, and much more!

GreaseMonkey - Allows you to customize the way a webpage displays using small bits of JavaScript.
Hundreds of scripts, for a wide variety of poular sites, are already available at http://userscripts.org.
You can write your own scripts, too. Mark Pilgrim’s definitive Greasemonkey guide, diveintogreasemonkey.org will show you how.

Image Zoom - Easily zoom in, zoom out, fit image to screen or set custom zoom on individual images within a web page. All this can be done by using the context menu or a combination of mouse buttons and scroll wheel. Handy to see the finer details of smaller pics or to make very large pics fit within your screen.

Auto Copy - Select text and it’s automaticaly copied to the clipboard. Like Linux or mIrc.

gTranslate - With gTranslate you can translate any text in a webpage just by selecting and right-clicking over it. The extension uses the Google translation services to translate the text.
gTranslate is not affiliated with Google Inc. in any way.

Foxmarks - If you use Firefox on more than one computer, you’ll want Foxmarks. Install Foxmarks on each computer, and it will work silently in the background to keep your bookmarks synchronized. As a bonus, log in to my.foxmarks.com from any computer anywhere to access your bookmarks.

A simple wizard guides you through the startup process. After that, just forget about it. It’s simple and solid.

URL Fixer

URL Fixer is an extension for Mozilla-based Web browsers that corrects typos in URLs that you enter in the address bar. For example, if you type google.con, it will correct it to google.com (asking first, if you enable confirmation).

Speed Dial

Speed Dial allows fast access to your most visited websites. It loads in a tab, and will show thumbnail views of it’s assigned websites. Those thumbnails will be refreshed automatically in the background.

Firefox Showcase

Showcase provides a new way to manage your Firefox tabs and windows by showing them as thumbnails in a single window, tab or sidebar. Includes a find bar that will filter the thumbnails, and the capability to select the thumbnails in the same way you would select files in your system.

Zotero

Zotero is a free, easy-to-use Firefox extension to help you collect, manage, and cite your research sources. It lives right where you do your work — in the web browser itself.

PicLens

PicLens instantly transforms your browser into a full-screen, 3D experience for viewing images on the web. Photos will come to life via a cinematic presentation that goes well beyond the confines of the traditional browser window. With PicLens, browsing and viewing images on the web will never be the same again.
NEW! Immerse yourself in 3D Style.

I will add to this list when I find more my favorite Firefox Extensions.

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Giant Mirrors as a Milestone for Science

Filed under: science — Alex @ 4:02 am

Space

The Large Binocular Telescope on Mount Graham, has taken celestial images using its twin side-by-side, 8.4-meter (27.6 foot) primary mirrors together, achieving first “binocular” light. U.S., Italian and German partners in the telescope, known as the LBT, are releasing the images today. First binocular light is a milestone not only for the LBT– now the world’s most powerful telescope – but for astronomy itself, the partners say. The University of Arizona owns a quarter of the telescope’s observing time.
The LBT has a light-collecting area equivalent to a single 11.8-meter (39-foot) surface and will combine light to produce the image sharpness equivalent to a single 22.8-meter (75-foot) telescope. It is located on 10,480-foot Mount Graham in southeastern Arizona.

“To have a fully functioning binocular telescope is not only a time for celebration here at LBT, but also for the entire astronomy community,” UA Steward Observatory Director, Regents’ Professor and LBT Corp. President Peter A. Strittmatter said. “The images that this telescope will produce will be like none seen before. The power and clarity of this machine is in a class of its own. It will provide unmatched ability to peer into history, seeing the birth of the universe.”

Read More here and video here

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March 8, 2008

Hidden Screen Savers in OS X

Filed under: Helpful Tips — Alex @ 1:04 am

It doesn’t seem to work in Leopard.

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March 4, 2008

D-Link quadband DIR-855 wireless N

Filed under: Gadget — Alex @ 4:56 am

D-Link DIR-855

D-Link is pushing the 5GHz radio band as the future of wireless by announcing the launch of the quadband DIR-855 wireless N router.
The DIR-855 can support true 802.11n transmission over both 2.4GHz and 5GHz channels at the same time, with that supporting multiple wireless devices with up to 600Mbps of available bandwidth.

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March 1, 2008

Mvix Wireless HD Media Center

Filed under: Gadget — Alex @ 5:28 am

Mvix Player

This bring your own hard drive enclosure got a little kick under the hood. You can put any size 3.5″ IDE or SATA hard drive. It connects to your network either via Ethernet or 802.11b/g/pre-N MIMO. It’s a media player that connects to your HDTV via composite, component, s-video or DVI.

It’s support massive files, Mpeg-1/2/4, VOB, WMV 9, DivX, and Xvid. It’ll play MP3’s, WMA’s, AAC’s, Ogg, WAV and AC3 files. All from its internal hard drive, stream off of your pc over the network or an external USB drive.

Supports resolution of 1920 x 1080 Progressive Scan (1080p) video output. price at $299.99 at Thinkgeek

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