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Tip of the Day Blog (Free subscription) | yesterday
Your Photos, Off the Shelf at Last By DAVID POGUE A recipe for Toxic Photo Soup: Layer 1,000 photos in a large, watertight plastic storage tub. Place high on basement shelving unit. Fail to notice small, leaky basement window nearby. Marinate, unattended, three to four years. Open and serve. Yield: 1,000 blank sheets of sopping photo paper and four gallons of black, stinky, toxic rainwater-chemical...
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inFlightHQ (Free subscription) | yesterday
I don’t normally fly Delta airlines, so I haven’t been tracking the number of redundant screens on their automated check-in kiosks the way that David Pogue has, but I do know that most airlines have a pretty mediocre check-in interface. It turns out that a new Delta software system has been in development for months, [...]
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迷客科技 (Free subscription) | 08/19/2008
Section: Apple News , Software + Apps , .Mac , MobileMe , Mac + Computers , Software A lot of people are looking at Apple’s new MobileMe service and seeing push delays, e-mail server outages and other oddities that have led to the service being dubbed ” Apple’s MobileMess ” by New York Times columnist David Pogue. Me? I’m looking at it and seeing, as of this morning, a total of 90 days...
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Eastman's Online Genealogy Newslett (Free subscription) | 08/16/2008
... For all I know, she could have had an eye patch and a mohawk. The above words were written by David Pogue. However, the similar stories could have been written by any of thousands of other people. Many of us store old photographs in less-than-ideal conditions. Even worse, these are often our only copies! David Pogue then goes on to describe an inexpensive and very practical...
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swissmiss (Free subscription) | 08/18/2008
You’d be forgiven, then, for raising an eyebrow at the offer made by a California company called ScanMyPhotos.com . It says it will professionally scan 1,000 photos for you, the same day it receives them, and put them on a DVD for $50. Your Photos, Off the Shelf at Last , by David Pogue
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迷客科技 (Free subscription) | 08/16/2008
... the full-length keynote in high quality for your Front-Row viewing pleasure. Circuits with David Pogue : A bi-weekly video podcast from the quirky New York Times personal technology columnist himself. Usually features a review and demonstration of some sort of cool new gadget. Pogue is a well known Mac fanboy. An example of his work for those who would like to see: The Alan...
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Memex 1.1 (Free subscription) | 08/14/2008
The only reason I ever run Windows is because I sometimes use Dragon Naturally Speaking, the only dictation software I've used which does what it says on the tin. I was therefore touched to find this ingenious application of the software described in a message to David Pogue and reproduced in his New York [...]
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Seattle Times (Free subscription) | 08/14/2008
New York Times technology writer David Pogue published a reader question in his blog and weekly e-mail today: "Q: David: I've noticed this for a year, and have not been able to get Microsoft to change it: Type 'Obama' or 'obama' in Microsoft Word or Outlook, and the spelling checker recommends 'Osama' as the corrected spelling. How could this continue month after month, especially...
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Gadling (Free subscription) | 08/14/2008
Filed under: Gadling Gear Review All those Kodak 4x6 prints tucked away in who knows how many shoeboxes? You can finally scan them to your computer with a new service that costs pennies per print. It's the latest tip from David Pogue, the New York Times' personal-tech columnist (he writes frequently about cameras, mobile gadgets, and other nifty tech stuff that flashpackers and the mobile...
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Wired (Free subscription) | 08/15/2008
... and use a laptop from your car. Just be sure to keep your eyes -- and your mind -- on the road. David Pogue’s Mailbag [The New York Times] (Photo credit: Asurroca/Flickr)
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International Herald Tribune (Free subscription) | 08/14/2008
... where nobody ever looks at them. Is that really the proper fate for a photo?MultimediaBlog: David Pogue's Gadget List of 2008» Digital photos, of course, are another story. They can be instantly and inexpensively duplicated a million times, stored in lots of different places, stashed online, sent around to relatives. And the modern world of screensavers, slide show, software, digital...