Wednesday, June 1, 2011

townshend acts images

townshend acts images. of the Townshend Acts.
  • of the Townshend Acts.


  • talkingfuture
    Mar 28, 08:21 AM
    Can't wait to see what they announce. It would be nice to see a bigger jump than usual for iOS and hopefully a shipping date for Lion.




    townshend acts images. Townshend Act
  • Townshend Act


  • melchior
    Jan 7, 07:16 AM
    *snip* I would wait to upgrade until they fix all the problems...

    only another 5 months away? ;)




    townshend acts images. The Tea Act. 1773
  • The Tea Act. 1773


  • Daveway
    Aug 19, 10:10 PM
    I'm no expert, but I don't think this would be ideal for hosting a site on. You would have logon to access files.

    I don't think such a thing would work.




    townshend acts images. UK as a protest as they
  • UK as a protest as they


  • ejfontenot
    Mar 11, 02:56 PM
    Line is from Apple store past kids play area now, well over 200+ people

    Store closes in 30 min. Then opens again at 5

    DP

    Over 200 at Stonebriar? Holy Cow!


    Whats it look like at Willow Bend?



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    townshend acts images. Townshend Acts (6/29/1767)
  • Townshend Acts (6/29/1767)


  • EricNau
    Nov 21, 04:23 PM
    It's an interesting concept that could be very useful for many applications - although I'm doubting their current timeline.




    townshend acts images. the 1767 Townshend Act.
  • the 1767 Townshend Act.


  • zorinlynx
    Jun 21, 12:58 PM
    I really don't get why people who come up with specs don't think ahead. When SD came out it has a 2GB limit. So they updated it, SDHC for a 32GB limit. Now they had to update it again, SDXC for a 2TB limit. They should have just designed the format to scale in the FIRST place.

    For example: CompactFlash came out in like 1994 and has scaled all the way up to like 137GB, when the first cards were under 1MB.



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    townshend acts images. by the Townshend Acts.
  • by the Townshend Acts.


  • hipsigti
    Jan 28, 06:02 AM
    I read somewhere awhile back that this same technology was in passports and and licenses and was very easy to read the information and hack in to the chip with some sort of device you can purchase or make from your local radio shack like a frequency scan tool like back in the old days with car alarms with code hopping technology! interesting video check out the whole vid the rfid part starts at 6:20sec. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuBo4E77ZXo




    townshend acts images. In 1767 the Townshend Acts
  • In 1767 the Townshend Acts


  • DeSnousa
    May 23, 04:37 PM
    Thanks this is awesome little widget. Thanks for taking time to make it. :)



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    townshend acts images. The Stamp Act
  • The Stamp Act


  • mi5moav
    Sep 25, 10:41 AM
    All Apple software and hardware can be demoed for free at any Apple store. I have brought in cameras, printers, monitors, etc... and was allowed to test them and demo them before I purchased. It's an amazing place go visit sometime.




    townshend acts images. No higher resolution available
  • No higher resolution available


  • thegreatluke
    Nov 12, 11:53 AM
    Hmm, omoshiroi...

    This is sort of off-topic, but is anyone else very amused at the voice they gave for the French John Hodgman? (http://www.apple.com/fr/getamac/)



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    townshend acts images. At
  • At


  • kevinkt
    Jun 18, 03:08 PM
    Can someone tell me how can a small SD card be able to hold 2t. If this is the case why are most External HD so much bigger?




    townshend acts images. American History: Tarring and
  • American History: Tarring and


  • Juventuz
    Apr 1, 10:50 AM
    TV is trash anyway. Who has time left to waste watching commercials & shodily slapped together shows?

    Have time to kill? Do something constructive on Inkpad or iDraw.
    Want some light entertainment on while you do something productive? Netflix
    Want something cheap and raunchy? Youpr0n

    There is nothing TV does that one of these other things doesn't do better.

    And yet if it weren't for those shows, most people wouldn't care about Netflix streaming.



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    townshend acts images. Government Act- Restricted
  • Government Act- Restricted


  • onemoof
    Sep 20, 10:18 AM
    Originally posted by wilburpan

    Well, the price differential is not inconsiderable. Based on the www.cpuscorecard.com website, I just spec'ed out a Dell computer with a 2.4 GHz Pentium 4 (closest processor to the dual 1.25 Ghz Powermac) and compared it to a similarly outfitted Powermac from the Applestore:


    Although you are correct that there is a HUGE premium on the top of the line Power Mac. The simple fact is that only corporations buy those machines. The lower end Power Mac is targeted more for actual people so the pricing is much more reasonable.

    (Also the laws of economics dictate that the price of any product is exactly the price that people are willing to pay, and has no relation to how "fair" the price is.)




    townshend acts images. by the Townshend Acts.
  • by the Townshend Acts.


  • BeSweeet
    Apr 12, 02:56 PM
    No matter how much you polish a turd, it's still a turd.

    That's Apple for ya!



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    townshend acts images. Townshend Acts,
  • Townshend Acts,


  • Oppressed
    Apr 17, 08:56 AM
    First thing that comes to mind is Brasso, but an abrasive such as that might actually tarnish the matte coating around the scratches which would just make it worse. Long story short I think we may be out of luck.




    townshend acts images. stamp townshend united
  • stamp townshend united


  • F123D
    Mar 24, 03:30 PM
    Glad I browse these forums at work. Just called my local Verizon and they're holding their last 16GB wifi for me. :D

    I can't even get someone on craigslist to sell me their used one for this price!!



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    townshend acts images. Townshend
  • Townshend


  • Rend It
    Nov 21, 06:24 PM
    ... sooo, a thermocouple (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermocouple) on a chip? Thermocouples have horrendous efficiency. I don't see how a such a chip in an enclosed environment (like a laptop motherboard) can achieve enough of a thermal gradient to produce enough current to be useful.

    I dunno, i'm skeptical.

    Skeptical you should be, but these aren't really thermocouples. The same physical principle applies, but thermocouples are really only for temperature measurement. These are thermoelectric coolers. See here (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peltier-Seebeck_effect).

    If you want to power the temperature change yourself, you need a high current. But if you want to generate electricity from them, then just connect them into a circuit with out any powersupply i.e. stick a fan's power terminals on that, stick one side of the TEC on a hot chip or cup of tea etc. to setup the delta T. (temp difference) then the fan will start spinning!


    Dan :-)

    While what you're saying is true in principle, I seriously doubt the practicality of what you're suggesting. TECs are moderately efficient at converting electricity into a temperature differential (or being used as a heat pump), but their efficiency in the other mode of operation (Seebeck effect) is very, very low (typ. < 5%). If you take a chip-sized (~ 1 cm^2) TEC, connect it between a hot processor core at 100 C and ambient temperature at 25 C, you will not have enough power to turn a computer fan at any modest speed. Furthermore, even if you could harvest that electricity and store it, the added energy would be less than 0.1% of a typical laptop battery. :rolleyes:

    If you wanted to use a larger TEC module (say 16 cm^2) on top of the 80 C CPU case, then the added energy would be less than 1%.

    Estimates based on info here (http://www.ferrotec.com/technology/thermoelectric/thermalRef13.php).




    townshend acts images. acts for their trouble.
  • acts for their trouble.


  • Unorthodox
    Sep 25, 10:01 AM
    The Apple Store isn't even down..... :(




    townshend acts images. the Townshend Acts,
  • the Townshend Acts,


  • jelloshotsrule
    Sep 19, 10:38 AM
    well, i'll agree with the majority that say it doesn't seem too hopeful. however i'll also say.... what do you have to lose? i don't know of a "best" approach, but it seems ideally that you go in there to buy something, she's there.... you get her to help or at least not run away. and after you buy something (or at least prove interest in the store besides seeing her), you ask her if she'd like to hang out sometime.... preferably in the course of a conversation, but worst case, get your questions answered and move on.

    my brother asked two girls out who we saw in mall stores... he was 50%. worth a shot!




    George Knighton
    Apr 23, 02:27 PM
    Trump is very rich ....

    Are you sure? Many people cannot find more than about 3 billion US $.

    Depends on how you hide things, I guess.




    fivepoint
    Mar 16, 09:24 AM
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_truck_manufacturers
    ranking of world wide 16+ ton vehicles sales in 2007

    you migth have missed it when Volvo and Daimler went on their buying frenzy

    Excuse me, I was talking about consumer pickup trucks, not large16+ Ton HD shipping trucks.



    There it is folks. The American consumer is at fault for the problems of the US auto industry.

    In a roundabout way, perhaps. The companies are almost exclusively at fault for letting the unions take them over and reduce their ability to produce competitive vehicles at competitive prices. Certain consumers are to somewhat to blame for basically falling for it... for not paying attention to build quality, value, and instead simply purchasing something because it was 'made in America.'




    FX120
    May 6, 08:07 PM
    Eh.

    I use Windows 7 at work and recently just built myself a new workstation. Total price including shipping with licenses for Windows 7 Business and Office 2010 was under $850 for a very good performing machine that does everything I need it to do (from Photoshop to AutoCAD) with ease. Right now I've got it totally loaded down and am using 7GB out of 8GB of RAM, and it's ticking along just happily.

    I can't honestly say that I would be any more productive by using OS X, and I certainly don't go about my day missing anything in the OS.

    Frankly I think it's all fine and good if you want to buy a Mac, but don't fool yourself into thinking that there aren't perfectly good and equally functional options out there for less money. I think the comparison of computers to cars is a stupid one. The difference between a Audi S4 and a Civic is a measurable, but I don't think that is a fair comparison. A more accurate example would be two Civics with equivalent engines and transmissions, only one has upgraded paint, rims, headlamps and leather upholstery while the other is base trim.

    Apple serves a growing niche market of high end computers and without a doubt bests nearly every competitor with their excellent industrial design, and a price that reflects the engineering, materials, and slave labor craftsmanship.

    But not everyone with a home stereo needs or wants to spend thousands of dollars on Krell mono block amplifiers when what ever comes in their home theater in a box is sufficient for their needs, and they don't want the cool design and minute performance increases.




    ogdogg
    Oct 6, 05:29 PM
    iPhone Mini (3.5") and iPhone Maxi (4" or 4.5") would be so awesome!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11111

    I'm holding out for the iPad Maxi.

    :rolleyes:




    scaredpoet
    Dec 27, 08:35 PM
    You're talking about a whole country. As it is right now there are more iPhones in NYC than anywhere else. In order for this to be true it would mean tens of thousands of NYers, at least, are having their personal info stolen.

    Why is that not unrealistic? NYC has 8.3 million people as of 2008. Even if 99,999 people had their identities stolen for iPhones, that's only 1.2% of the population. Consider that as of 4.6% of the population were victims of ID fraud according to the Federal Trade Commission.

    I think it would take less than 99,999 cases in a concentrated area for AT&T to consider potential fraud a problem. Even 50,000 iPhones and accounts lost due to fraud would cause about $15 million in losses, assuming an average $300 subsidy per iPhone.


    Also: it's not just ID theft that could be the issue here. there are other ways to scam iPhones off AT&T and resell them.

    Also, why only the iPhone?

    Because it's a hot item, and continues to outsell other smartphones quarter after quarter?

    Because lots of people are looking to buy "nearly new" iPhones on eBay and cragislist, and are willing to pay more in some cases than retail for them?

    Because it's easy to jailbreak and unlock, and can be sold that way at a premium to countries where it's in short supply or not yet sold?


    Wouldn't these thieves with all their stolen info just move onto another AT&T phone that costs just as much? Such as BB?

    Because BB's aren't as easy to unlock, the BB PINs are traceable by the Blackberry network regardless of carrier, and they're just not as much in demand. People don't stand in lines for Blackberries. They have for iPhones.



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