Icon Notebook: textual communication avenue for the Microsoft Word averse

It looks like a document. It’s chock-full of documents. But not Microsoft Word documents. Only documents that could dream of one day being scanned in and converted to a Word document. It’s the Icon Notebook, brought to you by the brilliant minds at Brigada Creativa, and it’s on sale now for €6.95 ($9.34) direct from Spain. Which is a whole lot cheaper than a Word license, no matter the font you’re talking in.

Icon Notebook: textual communication avenue for the Microsoft Word averse originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 01 Dec 2010 00:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gorgeous Wooden Case Adds Girth to Already Fat MacBooks

Like the joyfully “heavy” people on TV talk-shows that proclaim they’re proud and “full of life”, you too can celebrate the slab-like heft of your old, fat MacBook Pro with the Blackbox case, a solid oak sleeve that laughs at the supermodel-skinny MacBook Air. The cases, made in Golden, Colorado, are hand crafted and, like the MacBook itself, hewn from chunks of the raw material.

Despite its chunkiness, the wooden case is actually pretty light, weighing in at just 1.5-pounds (which the product page says is the same as a bottle of beer – appropriate for something made in the same town as Coors). If my MacBook ever left the house these days (my iPad has pretty much relegated the laptop to the desktop) then I might be tempted. Right up until I saw the $130 price-tag, that is.

Available now, for 15 and 13-inch MacBook Pros.

Blackbox product page [Blackbox via Uncrate]

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Keepin’ it real fake: ‘MacBook Pro’ runs ‘OS X,’ dodges questions on ‘legitimacy’

Oh, sure — we’ve seen a litany of knockoff MacBook Pro units, but how’s about one that actually ships with OS X? As the level of nerve skyrockets towards infinity, an unnamed manufacturer in an unnamed section of China seems to be hawking a lookalike MBP with Snow Leopard onboard — a feat that even Psystar couldn’t achieve for long. As the story goes, around $466 buys you a 14-inch machine with a paltry 1.66GHz Atom D510 processor, 2GB of RAM, a 320GB hard drive and NVIDIA’s Ion 2 graphics platform. Oh, and a glowing Apple logo on the lid. Unfortunately, the dodgy specifications list seems somewhat reluctant to “admit” that “OS X” is actually loaded on, but it’s there. Trust us. We think.

Keepin’ it real fake: ‘MacBook Pro’ runs ‘OS X,’ dodges questions on ‘legitimacy’ originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Nov 2010 19:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CyberNotes: Online Unit Converters

This article was written on June 17, 2008 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Time Saving Tuesday

Converting from one unit of measurement to another is something that should never be difficult, and luckily there are several online unit converters that make the process drop-dead simple. They save you from having to lookup any conversion values, and often take less than a second to return an answer to you. That’s why today we’re going to outline three of our favorite websites that will do the conversion work for you.

–Unit Converter–

Unit Converter is exactly what you would expect from a conversion utility. First it breaks down the different types of measurements into 14 different categories, and from there you can enter in the starting measurement along with the type of units you’re converting between.

You’ll notice that there is no “submit” button anywhere on the site, and that’s because there’s no need for one! If you change a value in either the “from” or “to” fields it will automatically adjust the result in the other field. That’s definitely nice in the event you have to convert several different numbers.

unit converter.png

–Google–

The search engine that many of you probably use every day, Google, is also one of my favorite unit converters! Whenever you perform a regular search it will try to determine if you’re looking to convert a value. The keywords that you want to be sure to include in your conversion query is either “in” or “to,” which can be seen in these examples:

When performing a search that Google recognizes as a conversion it will show the results immediately below the search box:

google converter.png

Mac users can grab this Dashboard widget which utilizes Google Calculator to perform a conversion. Similarly Yahoo! Widget users (both Mac and Windows) can add a Google Calculator widget.

–Instacalc–

Instacalc is the online solution for performing and managing several conversions simultaneously. Much like the Google Calculator it uses a natural language system to bypass the need for excessive drop-down menus, but it takes it a step further than Google. It’s actually more like a spreadsheet because it lets you add as many rows as you want, and in each one you can get fast conversions:

instacalc.png

We actually covered this site back in October 2007 because we found the Vista Gadget which gives the same conversion power right from the sidebar of your computer. Then just a few months ago they kicked it up a notch by making a bookmarklet that works in Internet Explorer, Firefox, Opera, and Safari. For the sake of convenience I’ve copied the bookmarklet, and all you have to do is right-click on this to save it to your bookmarks:

Instacalc bookmarklet

If you want to see what the bookmarklet is capable of first just try clicking on it. You should see a small “window” open in the upper-right corner of the site where you can perform your conversion. Now how’s that for efficient?

–Overview–

Unit converters have been incredibly useful for me in the past, and Google’s method has quickly become my favorite. We’d love to hear in the comments how you go about doing your conversions!

Copyright © 2010 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

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Apple’s US Black Friday deals posted, exactly what you expected

As Australia drops prices, so too must US prices fall. Apple’s stateside store has finally posted the special’s for tomorrow’s Black Friday rush, and while there’s nothing monumental, you’re still getting $101 off various Mac computers and $41 off of an iPad — plus lots of accessories and absolutely no iPhone deals. Take a gander if you so desire, and get ready for all the Black Friday fun starting tomorrow.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Apple’s US Black Friday deals posted, exactly what you expected originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Nov 2010 18:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple’s US Black Friday deals posted, exactly what you expected (update: now live)

As Australia drops prices, so too must US prices fall. Apple’s stateside store has finally posted the specials for tomorrow’s Black Friday rush, and while there’s nothing monumental, you’re still getting $101 off various Mac computers and $41 off of an iPad — plus lots of accessories and absolutely no iPhone deals. Take a gander if you so desire, and get ready for all the Black Friday fun starting tomorrow.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Update: All the slightly-less-expensive pricing is now live on Apple’s online store.

Apple’s US Black Friday deals posted, exactly what you expected (update: now live) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Nov 2010 18:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Phun: 2D Physics Sandbox

This article was written on August 23, 2008 by CyberNet.

arrow Windows Win; Mac Mac; Linux Linux arrow
The weekend is here, and I’m sure you’re wondering how you can burn through hours and hours of your precious time by doing nothing productive. Like always, we’ve got you covered. Go download the free Phun program, and let your imagination run wild.

What is it? Phun is a 2D physics emulation application that will let you build simple or complex designs, and then watch them work. You can use boxes, circles, lines, and more to create geeky works of art. This video demonstration will give you a better idea of what I’m talking about:

Do all of those things look too simple? Then maybe you should try to tackle a bigger project by building an automated “machine” like this or this.

Learning the ins and outs of Phun might take a little time, but to get you started there are some tutorials you can follow. They walk you through how to build things like towers, cars, rockets, and more.

Go on… you didn’t have anything better to do this weekend anyway. Get Phun for Windows, Mac, or Linux

Copyright © 2010 CyberNet | CyberNet Forum | Learn Firefox

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Netflix CEO says consumers just aren’t interested in long-form video on portable devices

We were undeniably excited about Netflix coming to the iPhone and iPad, but according to CEO Reed Hastings — who spoke on the subject during a Web 2.0 Summit panel discussion — that move has actually had little impact on the company’s business. In his mind, these results indicate that consumers just aren’t interested in streaming long-form video on mobile devices and instead prefer the experience on bigger screens. To support his conclusion, Hastings cited how Netflix integration on the Xbox 360, PS3, and Mac significantly grew its subscriber base. While we personally disagree with his judgment on mobile and grant him honorary captain obvious credentials for his bigger screen preference remarks, we’ll still entertain the possibility that Hastings may know somethings we don’t. That’s not to say the phrase correlation does not imply causation isn’t tickling the back our throat though. But what about you, reader? Are you taking advantage of the little red app on your Apple portable devices or even on your new Windows Phone 7 handset? Hit the poll on the next page to tell us what’s up.

Continue reading Netflix CEO says consumers just aren’t interested in long-form video on portable devices

Netflix CEO says consumers just aren’t interested in long-form video on portable devices originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Nov 2010 04:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA brings the Fermi-packing Quadro 4000 to the Mac Pro

For most Mac users, upgradeable anything is starting to sound like a distant memory, but Mac Pro users bought that big ol’ box for a reason: expandability. Now NVIDIA is here to make it worth their while, releasing the mid-range Quadro 4000 graphics card with that latest / greatest Fermi architecture. With 256 CUDA cores and 2GB of GDDR5 memory, the card should slice through just about anything a pro app (Photoshop, Maya, Snood) can send it, and probably wouldn’t mind popping out a FPS session now and then just to stretch the legs. Of course, when we say “mid-range” we aren’t talking cheap: NVIDIA’s MSRP is $1,199, a good bit more than the card’s $700-ish PC-compatible counterpart. It should be available this month.

Continue reading NVIDIA brings the Fermi-packing Quadro 4000 to the Mac Pro

NVIDIA brings the Fermi-packing Quadro 4000 to the Mac Pro originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Nov 2010 11:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iTunes 10.1 is out, brings video AirPlay and iOS 4.2 compatibility

We’ve already got the Mac OS X update, and here’s iTunes 10.1. Next stop? iOS 4.2. If your copy of iTunes isn’t pushing the update, you can head to Apple’s page where it’ll be there, waiting for you. In addition to paving way for the new iOS, iTunes 10.1 adds the much anticipated video AirPlay feature (it launched as audio only), so fire up that Apple TV and push yourself some vids!

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

iTunes 10.1 is out, brings video AirPlay and iOS 4.2 compatibility originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 12 Nov 2010 13:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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