Tom Piwowar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What kinda novice are you?? It's a dead link!! ...or maybe it's only gud4
macs!! ;^)
Works for me. It must be information Microsoft does not want you to have.
Dude, the obvious problem is a line break. I used tinyurl to fix:
http://tinyurl.com/2zgfec
A few thoughts on this topic...
*) None of today's units seem to be able to play the newest streaming audio
format AAC (successor to .mp3).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Audio_Coding
*) Presumably these units will be worse than cell phones in an emergency.
Especially since the
I had to buy a new card reader that specifically states it can handle SD HC.
Other card readers wouldn't recognize the SD HC card.
david
David Turk
Manager, Preservation Imaging Services
Indiana Historical Society
450 W. Ohio St.
Indianapolis, IN 46202
(317) 232-4592
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Can someone tell me how to save an iMovie in iDVD onto a DVD, so that it plays
as a regular DVD on a player? All I keep seeing are references to saving as a
project. I know these are supposed to be simple programs, but I'm not finding
the info I need in the Help sections. tia.
FileBurn to DVD ?
The option may not be available until the encoding is finished. There's a
status button somewhere to check on it.
On Dec 10, 2007 10:25 AM, David Turk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can someone tell me how to save an iMovie in iDVD onto a DVD, so that it
plays as a regular DVD on
John H. Davis wrote:
Christopher Range wrote:
While it is staying cool, it still gets awfully dusty. Is that one of
the omens of having a computerthat, the inside of a computer will
invariably get dust on the inside, eventually?
Christopher
Just think of it as a whole house air
Richard P. wrote:
And to think that I wasted all that money on a furnace purification
system... Now I know why the filters aren't getting dirty... ;-)
Richard P.
Funny :-D
Christopher
* == QUICK LIST-COMMAND
I don't know the theory behind case design as far as computers go, but
in other equipment that I'm familiar with, the case design controls air
flow (via the fans), especially to the other components that don't have
a fan. The (metal) case also provides some EM protection. As far as dust
Perhaps. But not on the horizontal parts. Again, the more air you circulate
the more dirt you're throwing at it. Tear out the carpet. Buy some parquet.
On Dec 10, 2007 12:48 PM, Christopher Range [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ok. I do have one quandry on the 'air circulation' issue. I was
reading
At 11:15 PM 12/9/2007, b_s-wilk wrote:
Best feature is finding all the stations on its own. Worst feature is finding
stations you like out of the thousands it loads. Finding a dozen or so out of
thousands of radio stations on a shortwave radio is hard enough. I'd like to
see what kind of
I think I mentioned previously that the Roku site provides a free applet
you can download and which provides a web browser interface to the radio
to setup and program presets. Check the link to the user manual I had in
a message earlier today for screen shots.
Fred Holmes wrote:
At 11:15 PM
Air flow is very important if you have passive cooling (for quietness) or
dead spots in your case where air doesn't typically circulate and
electronics provides a heat source.
Being a man of refinement, Tony, I have hunch that you would love this case
for its open design:
Ok. I do have one quandry on the 'air circulation' issue. I was
reading the other day that, leaving the case open while using the
computer would actually allow more dust to get on the iinside of the
computer yet, that is what one person mentioned, that they do.
Who cares? Why do you think a
If you live in an area with little or no dust it would be easy to think
this. Dust? What dust? I've seen it completely block airflow over vents.
Inside it's a thick covering on everything. The small fans on video cards
are even more likely to be stopped or slowed because of dust. If you smoke
14 matches
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