2008년 7월 28일 월요일

IN STOCK - Xbox 360 Guitar Hero World Tour Band Kits - $190 S/F

Rating: 0 Posted By: deeter0
Views: 635 Replies: 3

For those who are still unable to find one at your locate retailer, it is still in stock at RedOctane.com. The Wii version is also available in addition to the rest of the consoles.

Xbox 360 Guitar Hero World Tour Band Kit - $189.99 w/Free Ship
Xbox 360 Guitar Hero World Tour Deluxe Band Kit - $239.99 w/Free Ship (includes many bonus items)

Wii Guitar Hero World Tour Deluxe Band Kit - $219.99 w/Free Ship (includes many bonus items)

PS3 Guitar Hero World Tour Band Kit - $189.99 w/Free Ship
HOT DEAL - PS3 Guitar Hero World Tour Deluxe Band Kit - $209.99 w/Free Ship (includes many bonus items)


Black Friday 2008




It's for a test: This post is crawled from http://www.fatwallet.com/t/18/874508 (Fri Oct 31 06:01:17 2008).

10 cosas que tal vez no sabías sobre los agujeros negros

Desde el siempre recomendable Bad Astronomy llega esta recopilación de detalles curiosos sobre los agujeros negros, titulada Ten things you don’t know about black holes

  1. No es su masa, es su tamaño lo que los hace poderosos
  2. No son infinitamente pequeños
  3. Son esferas. Y no tienen forma de túnel o embudo
  4. Los agujeros negros giran sobre sí mismos
  5. Cerca de un agujero negro, suceden cosas realmente extrañas
  6. Al aproximarse a un agujero negro, uno moría de formas realmente divertidas, extrañas y horribles a la vez
  7. Los agujeros negros no siempre son oscuros
  8. En ocasiones no son peligrosos
  9. Pueden llegar a ser realmente grandes
  10. aunque también pueden tener una densidad muy baja

(Víazzzzzzzuck… Bad Astronomy Blog.)

# Enlace Permanente




It's for a test: This post is crawled from http://www.microsiervos.com/archivo/ciencia/10-cosas-agujeros-negros.html (Fri Oct 31 10:15:18 2008).

2008년 7월 21일 월요일

You're invited to the new AdSense Help Forum

The AdSensePro team would like to cordially invite you to the opening of our new English AdSense Help Forum.


We hope that by now you've found the AdSense Help Forum to be the best place to ask questions and share tips with other AdSense publishers. We've been listening to your feedback about forum features you'd like to see, and we're excited to announce that we're moving the English Forum from Google Groups to a brand new platform. (For those who participate in the Forum in another language: rest assured that our engineers are working on making this new platform available in additional languages, although we don't have a set date at this time.)

As of today, we've closed up shop and moved the English Forum next door to the AdSense Help Center. We've been jealous of the Help Center for a while now. Its innovative interface, clear categories, and snazzy search powered by CSE left us feeling like the odd man out.


Now we've almost got it all. We have the look and feel of the Help Center with the same CSE to search across the Forum, the Help Center, and the blog. We have the same categories as the Help Center, so you can easily transition from one category to the another. We even have some extra things we hope you'll really like: a system of levels to reward your contributions to the Forum, and profiles where you can put a picture next to your name. You can subscribe to the Forum (or to individual discussions) by RSS feed. You can post a question and receive your answer by email. You can even vote on which response best answers the question and mark a best answer to a question you asked.


We hope you'll come take a look, and we hope you'll stay a while, sign into your Google Account, and ask and answer questions.




It's for a test: This post is crawled from http://adsense.blogspot.com/2008/10/youre-invited-to-new-adsense-help-forum.html (Thu Oct 30 08:26:00 2008).

7 Tips To Work Productively On Your Windows Computer

Written on 10/13/2008 by Abhijeet Mukherjee. You can catch him at Jeet Blog where he blogs about different Web 2.0 apps a nd online tools and how they can help you become more productive.Photo Credit:
Travis Hornung


peace PCFor an average computer user working on a Windows PC (which is currently the majority of the PC users), there is a fair chance that most tasks take a little longer than needed.

There are 2 primary reasons for this: the computer isn't optimized well enough to make it faster and better, and second, the person isn't aware of the tricks and tools that can be employed to easily skyrocket productivity. This article points out 7 such tips.

Although there are many more advanced methods, I have tried to isolate the simplest and the most essential tricks. The goal here is to help everyone from basic user to geek to advanced geek.

Speed Up Your Computer
Speeding up your computer would refer to reducing the time it takes to start up and reduce its usage time (the time it takes to open programs and carry out tasks). One of the best ways to reduce the startup time is to remove unnecessary programs and services from starting up automatically using msconfig. You uncheck the programs that you want to prevent from starting up automatically thereby reducing the computer startup time considerably.

To speed up the normal functioning of the computer, there are several options. Some which are discussed in Top 12 Ways to Speed Up Your Computer. If you aren't a big fan of the colors and graphics in Windows, you could even optimize your computer for better performance by turning them off. Here's a microsoft article which shows how to do it. The steps given are for XP and are almost the same for Vista.

Learn Keyboard Shortcuts
Switching between mouse and keyboard frequently is certainly more time consuming than using just the keyboard or mouse. You may not be able to do everything using the mouse but if you get acquainted with the keyboard shortcuts you could definitely do almost everything on the PC using keyboard. Here's a big list of Windows keyboard shortcuts for you, which is easy to learn once you start using them everyday.

Use Application Launchers
Application launchers help you open applications and programs using your keyboard and hence save you time by preventing you from mousing every time you need to open an application. Check out this list of best application launchers.

In case you usually toggle between only one or two important apps and you think you don't need an application launcher for that purpose, you could still save time by creating keyboard shortcuts for important folders. Although, the article talks about folders only, you could apply the exact same steps for creating a keyboard shortcut to open an application like Firefox or Outlook.

Declutter and Organize Desktop
A clean and organized desktop would definitely make you more productive. Clearly, not having so sift through 80 desktop icons will lead to you locating it faster. As I mentioned above, you could use application launchers to open applications, files or folders so you really don't need to clutter your desktop with a lot of icons.

You could also use a tool like Google Desktop which lets you access important things like calendar, feeds and a to-do list neatly placed in a sidebar on the desktop.

Access Important Folders In The Taskbar
This is a tip that has helped me a lot and I am sure it would help all of those who are in the process of gathering data and resources from the web and saving it offline. You could create a new toolbar to include those folders in your Windows taskbar and access it immediately when required. This method only works with some folders because you really wouldn't want to clutter your taskbar with a lot of them. I've explained in this article how you can achieve this.

Use AutoHotKey
I didn't mention AutoHotKey earlier because it may not be one of the simplest tips and is probably aimed at advanced users. Anyway, it's a great tool to avoid repetitive tasks like typing the same sentence again and again. AutoHotKey is a free tool and here's a quick start guide to it.

Use Automation and Timing Tools
Using automation tools like AutoHotKey certainly do a great deal in making you more productive by helping ensure you only spend time on the important tasks. For example, LifeHacker recently talked about WakeupOnStandBy, a free automation and timing tool for Windows, which can automate the tasks of putting the computer to sleep mode, hibernate mode or shutting it down. There are many more such tools available. You just need to decide which task you would like to automate and then search Google for such app. I'm sure you will find it and I am sure you will backup your system before simply installing random apps.

Hope you liked the tips. As I mentioned initially, there are many more tips and hence I'll be closely watching the comments section to learn how you manage your PC and your time.

Cheers,

Abhijeet




It's for a test: This post is crawled from http://www.dumblittleman.com/2008/10/7-tips-to-work-productively-on-your.html (Mon Oct 13 01:43:00 2008).

2008년 7월 14일 월요일

Kevin Rose

Download the MP3 (10.63 MB)




Topics we cover in the interview





  1. What’s the creative process behind digg?


  2. How do you think up new features? Do you use a digg-like consensus approach to them?


  3. How have you seen digg affect traditional media?


  4. How will digg-spawned sites and web apps be in the future?




Full transcription of the interview





SD: Do you do programming as well as design or are you one of the individuals who’s able to see the big picture and how the pieces fit together?



KR: As far as my daily activities on the site, working for digg, it’s all about creating new features for the site, so it’s all about working with the graphic designer, Daniel Burka to come up with these features. So basically I’ll draw them up on a piece of paper and they look really ugly, and then I pass them to someone that knows how to make them look pretty, so that’s kind of how it’s been working for the last couple of years.



SD: Can you tell us a little bit about your creative process?



KR: Well, it’s a very strange one in that most of it is done almost randomly, just driving around or whatever it may be, and I’ll just think of a feature and how it might impact the users and how they might use it. I’m constantly thinking about the site and so it doesn’t feel like work, more like a way to figure out how users want to communicate and share information with each other. We’ve come up with dozens of different features, a lot of them that we’ve thrown away because we don’t think they’re a good fit, or features that we just haven’t time to build, create and roll them out yet, so it’s really looking at how the users are expressing themselves on the site and seeing what they are doing with the site, what are the pitfalls? Where do they get lost in the navigation? Can they not discover stories because of one reason another? Is there a story that falls through the cracks because it wasn’t highlighted in a certain way, and how can we draw out the best information presented to the users and then give them the tools that they need to be able to share it with all of their friends using digg?



And so we keep that in mind and think about - I know this sounds really strange and basic - but what would be cool and useful, what people would really like to do, and what would keep them coming back and really finding the information they want to find.



SD: Do you use something that’s parallel to digg, where it’s kind of a consensus vote into what you feel will actually work? Do you take that into your in-house creative process?



KR: Well, it’s really myself and Daniel, and so we sit down and we come up with different things and eventually we’ll turn them into mockups. So after there’s a design that’s been on a piece of scratchpaper it’s handed off to him and he’ll come up with a series of different mockups and different layouts for that particular feature or design. We’ll take a look at it, then present it to the rest of the staff and let them play around with it, see what they think about the feature, take their feedback and then ultimately we’ll just make the decision on whether we should push it out or not.



SD: Do you have demographics on your core users? Who are the people that are sitting and spending large chunks of time to vote the stories up?



KR: It typically tends to be your standard eighteen to thirty-four year old male user for the most part, but there’s different types of users on the site, and we’ve really seen that split and fragment when we rolled out the new sections in digg version three. For the longest time we were a technology news site, so it was all about the tech fans and tech enthusiasts, but right after we launched version three we saw a huge explosion in user registration and it was from a lot of users that don’t fit our typical demographic because they’re interested in other types of news online. So the number two most popular section on our site today is our political section - those are very hot topics, and then actually followed by videos, so videos is our first stab at content outside of just news and has been extremely popular for us, and it’s been a great way to expose users to a lot of cool videos around the web.



SD: Are you finding that larger news agencies or advertising agencies are starting to use digg as a poll factor?



KR: You know, it’s really shortening the length of the feedback loop. It’s one of those things where they are using it to find out what is hot at any given moment in time, especially as you can sort most diggs in any given section and you can see what people are talking about, where they’re gathering around, what stories are very interesting for a given day, etc.



I’ve gotten a lot of feedback from writers that said, hey, y’know what, I pulled up on the day that Apple announced all of their new products, and looked up a digg swarm (which is basically a Flash visualisation of all the users as they’re swarming around the different stories), and they were able to watch that over the course of a few hours and see where the most attention was [and work out] which product did they want to focus their article on. They found out that it was the iTV, the little set-top box, that was an extremely popular story that day and so they created content around that because they knew that that was going to be a hot topic. So it’s helping journalists and writers in that way, in that they can find out in real-time what the pulse is of the community is online.



SD: And how about advertising agencies - are they referencing back to digg to see how to shape their next story or campaign?



KR: You know, we haven’t had a ton of ad agencies contact us, other than the fact that they’ve said they would like to have their ads diggable, and I don’t know if our users want to digg advertisements! So that’s one of those things where I was like, “Can we get back to you on that one?! But not really at this time, not that I know of!



SD: What do you think are the long-term implications for social content? If we look two or three years down the line, what is the digg universe going to look like, what are the digg-spawned applications and websites going to look like?



KR: Well, I think that digg is a great tool for sharing your interests with others, and I think that there has never really been a tool online where there’s - I’m trying to think of what I can say and what I can’t say! We really want to build out a profile of users’ interests and be able to group these together and get recommendations on different things based on people that you trust. So whether that be your news, or other different types of content online, it’s really about not only getting recommendations but suggestions and also introducing you to new things that you might not know of through people that you’re connected with, and people that you’ve never met.



So one of the things that we’re doing at digg right now that’s very exciting to us (that we haven’t launched yet) is we’re learning a lot about what individual people are digging on the site and so what we really want to do is allow the users - I mean, we should do everything in our power to give back to the users based upon what they’re giving us. So they’re giving us history and they’re sharing their history with everyone based on what they’re digging. What we can do is, on the back end, do the math to make comparisons to other users and say, ok, based on what you’re into, I know you love sports cars and I know you love oolong tea, I can make a connection there with other types of stories, and I can also make a connection with people that you haven’t met before, so it’s going to be really interesting when social networking sites are no longer based on just, “I think this person is attractive and I want to meet them,” but more along the lines of, “I know I have a connection with this person in one way or another because we digg the same comments, we like the same stories, and we might even live close to each other and might want to meet up,” so there’s going to be a whole nice range of tools that we’ll be providing to the community over the next year that are going to allow them to explore these relationships in ways that they never thought possible.



SD: Very cool. What is the relationship between, say, digg and Flickr? Is something like that a possibility?



KR: Well, y’know, it’s one of those things where we really want to give users the power to digg and share whatever is important to them and we’re not limiting that to any one particular type of content online so whether it’s pictures or you name it, anything where there is an abundance of information that needs a large collaborative filter applied to it to sift through that, we’ll be going. As long as it’s relevant too, I mean there’s certain things that you really wouldn’t want to dig - you couldn’t really apply digg to an online dating service because you wouldn’t want to digg someone that you’re interested in because then everyone else would want to go out with them! So we know there’s limitations to the concept, but there are a lot of really cool areas that we can apply the concept to, so you’ll see that rolled out, definitely some new areas in the next few months.



SD: Any last comments?



KR: Thanks for having me, and just thought I’d let you know that I’m huge fan of the site and I digg your stories all of the time. It’s awesome!



SD: Thanks Kevin.



Transcribed by Scott Morris



digg.com logo Like this article? Digg it!










It's for a test: This post is crawled from http://www.thinkvitamin.com/interviews/webapps/kevin-rose/ (Mon Nov 13 08:00:35 2006).

Weekend Window on Lake Pend Oreille

From towering cliffs to dizzying depths, Lake Pend Oreille is a natural gem.




It's for a test: This post is crawled from http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=5900978&page=1 (Sun Sep 28 18:33:50 2008).

Rhode Island School of Design is seeking an Assistant Professor of Illustration in Providence

coroflot_design_jobs.jpg

Assistant Professor of Illustration - Graphic Design
Rhode Island School of Design

Providence, Rhode Island

The successful candidate must possess experience in both teaching and professional practice as an illustrator, with expertise in visual communication/illustration concepts, traditional and digital media, and the history of illustration and visual communication.

» view

The best design jobs and portfolios hang out at Coroflot.

(more...)




It's for a test: This post is crawled from http://www.core77.com/blog/featured_items/rhode_island_school_of_design_is_seeking_an_assistant_professor_of_illustration_in_providence_11590.asp (Fri Oct 31 14:59:57 2008).

2008년 7월 7일 월요일

Chayanne: Vivo


Grammy-nominated Puerto Rican pop sensation Chayanne offers up a dynamic live performance for an enthusiastic, standing-room-only audience of fans at this concert from River Plate Stadium in Buenos Aires. Songs include "Si Nos Quedara Poco Tiempo," "Este Ritmo Se Baila Así/Baila Baila Medley," "Dejaría Todo," "Provócame," "Torero," "No Te Preocupes Por Mí," "Te Echo De Menos," "Y Tú Te Vas," "Yo Te Amo/Atado A Tu Amor Medley" and many more.


It's for a test: This post is crawled from http://www.netflix.com/Movie/Chayanne_Vivo/70108611 (Sat Nov 1 11:38:09 2008).

2008년 7월 6일 일요일

blablabla



Shall we dance?

2008년 7월 2일 수요일

Imitation Eagle Foot


Realistic imitation eagle foot in an open position. These can be mounted on dance sticks or used for other projects.