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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Wireless Thermometer Uses iPhone for Readout

Cooking nerds, I have some fantastic news for you. It’s called iGrill, and it’s the coolest kitchen gadget you have seen this year. IGrill is a combination of two parts. First, there’s a probe thermometer which skewers your meat, cake or other target food. This unit has its own readout, and can be used with one or two probes (it ships with one). It also has Bluetooth, which brings us on to…
The iPhone app. Instead of beaming its info to a dedicated box like most remote thermometers, the iGrill sends it to an iPhone, iPod or iPad (it’s a universal app). The Bluetooth signal will go up to 200-feet, and tells you phone what is happening back in the oven.
And because it runs on a touch-screen computer, there’s more than just a temperature readout. As well as the current temp (along with a scale reminding you not to cook your beef over 140ºF, for example), you get a timer, an estimate of the remaining cooking time, and a handy feature to dial in the food type and required doneness, which spits back the correct target temperature.
There’s also a browser and recipe book, but those are icing. The main meat (if you’ll excuse me for the pun) is the thermometer, meaning that the iPhone has replaced yet another piece of hardware.
The iGrill itself costs $100, and the app is free. An additional probe adds $20 to the price.

Summary

THIS IS ANOTHER STUPID IPHONE APP. it does a whole lot of nothing unless you have the right kitchen equipment. it can change the temp on the grill and oven if you have the right equipment. it pretty much sucks. BLACKBERRY RULES

Free iPhone App Wirelessly Syncs Photos to Computer

Syncing an iPhone to a computer stinks: You have to physically plug in the device using USB, and iTunes still takes forever to copy your files. Apple hasn’t delivered a cloud-based iTunes yet, but a new iPhone app at least offers a wireless syncing solution for photos.
With the app Cinq, you can snap photos and save them straight into a folder on your computer even when you’re outside. Here’s how it works:
  • You download the Cinq app for Mac or Windows to create a server on your computer. Register to create an account.
  • Then you download the Cinq app for iPhone and log in with your Cinq account.
  • From here on, you can pop open Cinq and tap the camera icon to snap a photo, and it will save straight into your Cinq folder on the desktop.
  • You can also choose photos stored in your iPhone’s photo library and save them into Cinq.
It’s a pretty nifty app, especially for iPhone shutterbugs who haven’t gotten in the habit of plugging in and syncing to iTunes and iPhoto on a regular basis.
I just have a minor complaint: When choosing stored photos from an iPhone album to send to Cinq, we can only select one photo at a time. It’d be much more efficient if we could select multiple photos, or even the entire camera roll, to wirelessly sync with our Cinq folder.
But hey — Cinq is less than a week old, so hopefully future software updates will make this a really sweet app. It’s a free download in the iTunes App Store; there’s also a $2 version that’s ad-free.


SUMMARY
This new iphone app can sync stuff wirelessly to a computer of your choice. it pretty much sucks

summary

Apple’s iPad Camera Connection Kit is a wonderful thing, although overpriced at $30. Not only can you use it to inject photos from your camera direct into the tablet’s brain, you can also hook up all manner of USB peripherals, from keyboards to microphones to thumb-drives.
MIC Gadget’s 3-in-1 adapter does all this, and more. It combines Apple’s two small, easy-to-lose widgets into one slightly larger, slightly harder-to-lose package, putting an SD card reader and USB port into one plastic box. The extra is a micrSD slot, which is actually all but useless: the only way it would work is if your cellphone saves its photos into a standard folder named “DCIM”, which is what will trick the iPad into reading them.
There’s one thing that MIC Gadget’s version had in common with the official Apple version: it costs $30. I’d stick with Apple’s overpriced kit: it works, you only have to carry the part you need and it is built to last. It is also available now, unlike this 3-in-1 solution, which ship after Christmas.

SUMMARY
This article is all about like a thing that plugs into the ipad

summary

Carbon’s Domino Clock is pretty much just what it sounds like: three giant dominoes hanging on the wall and telling the time in a difficult-to-read fashion that would make Tokyo Flash proud. With a little deciphering, though, you can work out what it says. In the picture above, the clock reads 12:59 (at least I think it does).
More interesting than the aesthetics is the mechanism. The dots flop over like the numbers on those old digital flip-clocks, although instead of plastic leaves it uses a solid multi-sided block that only draws power when it is rotated. The dots use a custom actuator, with the magnet actually running around the coil. The motors were designed to flip the dots slowly enough to give a sense of heft and gravity.
This adds a nice mechanical touch and makes things exciting when all the numbers cascade at once, although it runs in deathly silence, and will run on batteries for a couple years, which is impressive given the size.
Sadly, you can’t buy one. But you can watch this video of how it works:

SUMMARY
This article is about this huge freakin' clock thats also a domino

Summaries

Free iPhone App Wirelessly Syncs Photos to Computer

Syncing an iPhone to a computer stinks: You have to physically plug in the device using USB, and iTunes still takes forever to copy your files. Apple hasn’t delivered a cloud-based iTunes yet, but a new iPhone app at least offers a wireless syncing solution for photos.
With the app Cinq, you can snap photos and save them straight into a folder on your computer even when you’re outside. Here’s how it works:
  • You download the Cinq app for Mac or Windows to create a server on your computer. Register to create an account.
  • Then you download the Cinq app for iPhone and log in with your Cinq account.
  • From here on, you can pop open Cinq and tap the camera icon to snap a photo, and it will save straight into your Cinq folder on the desktop.
  • You can also choose photos stored in your iPhone’s photo library and save them into Cinq.
It’s a pretty nifty app, especially for iPhone shutterbugs who haven’t gotten in the habit of plugging in and syncing to iTunes and iPhoto on a regular basis.
I just have a minor complaint: When choosing stored photos from an iPhone album to send to Cinq, we can only select one photo at a time. It’d be much more efficient if we could select multiple photos, or even the entire camera roll, to wirelessly sync with our Cinq folder.
But hey — Cinq is less than a week old, so hopefully future software updates will make this a really sweet app. It’s a free download in the iTunes App Store; there’s also a $2 version that’s ad-free.

SUMMARY
This article is about how the Iphone is so amazing because it has all these cool aps. But the blackberries are way better so Iphone can suck it

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

LOGOS



They are successful because they are cheep and tasty

They are successful because anyone can post videos

they are successful because they are reliable



They are successful because they sell a good product

Monday, November 22, 2010

STUFF

Nike
1. It shows famous people wearing nike
2. nike is responsible
3. Famous people

Sean John
1. Shows P.Diddy wearing there clothing
2. Sean John
3. P.Diddy being famous

Roca Wear
1. It shows cool people wearing there clothing
2. Roca Wear
3. Being Cool

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Questions.

1.ummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 2-3
2.MCDIC's, A&W, Wendy's, etc.
3.GREASY hobo's who work there
4.$$$$$, and billboards
8.ummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 2 hours average a day mostly after school or late evening.
9.Funny, funny, funny.
10. Family Guy, AFV, Treehouse channel
11.PETER, and STEWIE, and MEG! because Meg is stupid and Stewie is soooooooooooooooo funny and peter is fat.
12.i hate commercials i love funny.
13.KILLING POLAR BEARS
14.NEVER!!!!

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Next Android Version Includes E-Wallet for Real World Purchases

eric schmidtGoogle’s newest iteration of its Android phone OS will include a wallet that lets you use your phone to make payments by tapping it against a cash register, CEO Eric Schmidt revealed Monday.
“This could eventually replace credit cards,” Schmidt said.
Android 2.3, codenamed Gingerbread, will be released in a “few weeks,” Schmidt said on stage at the Web 2.0 Summit conference in San Francisco. Schmidt showed off how so-called Near Field Communication would work using an unnamed smartphone he called an unannounced product. Using the software from Android and a NFC chip in the phone, Schmidt was able to “check in” to the conference, launching Google Maps, by touching the phone to a conference sign that had a built-in antenna.
(For geeks, there was little doubt Schmidt was showing off the Nexus S, a device thought to be made by Samsung as the successor to the original Nexus One. Unlike most other Android phones sold, the Nexus S will run the stock Android OS with no carrier modifications, making it the perfect phone for app developers and tinkerers.)
Near Field Communication sounds fancy, but it’s the same technology build into debit cards that can be used to make a payment by bumping against a reader at a store or gas pump. Android 2.3 devices that have the right on-board chip will be able to make payments using stored credit card numbers or other payment systems such as PayPal.
While U.S. geeks have long hungered for their phones to take the place of plastic credit cards, the NFC technology is not likely to replace credit card companies. In fact, Schmidt said those companies are excited about Near Field Communication because they think it will reduce fraud.
Despite running its own payment solution called Google Checkout, Google will be aggregating many payment systems, not trying to replace them, according to Schmidt.
“Ultimately, it is a personal, secure and aggregating technology,” Schmidt said.
Schmidt says he’s bullish on mobile and says it will be a core focus for Google.
“I don’t think people figured out how much more powerful the mobile devices would become than desktops,” he said, referring not to their processors, but to their ability to keep a user connected to the net everywhere and use location to customize the net.
Schmidt imagines a future where mobile users who opt in to getting notices and suggestions will have local merchants sending targeted deals their way. Companies with smart algorithms and knowledge of your likes and dislikes (such as Google) can send you suggestions — such as where you might like to go for a coffee, or even remind you that you needed dental floss and there’s a drugstore around the corner having a sale on it.
There’s a lot Google could do with mobile if it knew more about users’ friends and family — their so-called “social graph,” but right now, that data is mostly locked up in Facebook, Schmidt said.
“We think that link structure has great value,” Schmidt said “This kind of information is generally open so that its owners can move it around. I’m worried, as a general statement, that business structures are causing people to keep too much information private.”
“It’s possible to build these businesses using open protocols,” Schmidt said, clearly referring to Facebook’s Open Graph protocol, which data-portability advocates say is more about keeping people tied to Facebook than being open to all comers.
Photo: Google CEO Eric Schmidt holds up his Google phone as he speaks at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, Monday, Nov. 15, 2010. Credit: Associated Press/Paul Sakuma
Follow us for disruptive tech news: Ryan Singel and Epicenter on Twitter.

Summary: With this amazing awesome new phone the Android you can purchase stuff online with the new app called "E-Wallet" its alot like paypal it takes money straight from your bank account. Thats all.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Netflix PS3 App Ditches Disc, Adds HD and Surround Sound

PlayStation 3 just leapfrogged Xbox 360 and snagged the best Netflix experience on a videogame console yet.
The new Netflix application for PS3, rolling out for download Monday, will enable Netflix subscribers with PS3s to watch movies and TV without a disc. Some titles will even stream in 1080i HD and 5.1 digital surround sound.


Read More http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/10/netflix-ps3-streaming-app-adds-hd-surround-sound-ditches-disc/#ixzz12SNuI9P1
Netflix’s “Watch Instantly” streaming-video feature has been available for PS3 since late last year, but it required a Blu-ray disc in order to access the service. Now, by running Watch Instantly as a native PS3 app on the console, users can ditch the disc altogether. Netflix also has a new user interface, optimized for the PS3 controller’s analog joysticks.
In the new UI, search especially seems smartly designed for the PS3 controller, using an alphabetical grid and intelligent auto-complete to minimize the pain of text entry, as seen in this still:


Read More http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/10/netflix-ps3-streaming-app-adds-hd-surround-sound-ditches-disc/#ixzz12SOLE86b 

I even like the way the controller buttons control common text-entry commands in context — like Space, Delete and Enter. There are keyboards available for PS3, but being able to use the controller well is a real asset.
Netflix has not only continued to bring its streaming service to seemingly every device with a screen, but to make that service better. Still, among consoles, the announced PS3 app stands out: Xbox users don’t have 1080i or surround sound, and Wii users have only now added search to their service, which still requires an “Instant Streaming” disc.
Adding media services has become part of the continued rivalry between Xbox and PS3, along with new motion-capture interaction devices like PlayStation’s Move controller and Xbox’s Kinect.
Besides videogame consoles, Netflix can now stream to personal computers on Windows and Mac; TiVo, HD, Roku, Logitech and Apple TV boxes; Windows Phone 7 and all iOS devices; and a wide array of net-connected TVs and Blu-Ray players, including those using Google TV.
Roku’s players, which began as Netflix-only boxes, will soon be available in retail stores through a partnership with Netgear.


Read More http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/10/netflix-ps3-streaming-app-adds-hd-surround-sound-ditches-disc/#ixzz12SOSduhg






Summary: Netflix which is a movie player for internet users. ummmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
it is cool i guess because ps3 got it now. Now i can watch
movies on a tv screen not a computer screen.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

5 W's

And Then He Shot Me
Who – Ryan White
What- Got Shot
When- May 23
Where- Saskatoon
Why- He was being jacked

LeClerc Resigns Seat
Who –LeClerc
What – Resigns
When –Thursday
Where – Saskatoon
Why – Accusations of Drug abbuse

Alleged Stabber Had Criminal Past
Who – Joseph Paproski
What – stabbed someone          
When – Monday
Where – Saskatoon
Why- he was Pissy

Friday, September 10, 2010

Terms & Definitions

Terminology


Conglomerate - anything composed of heterogeneous materials or elements.


Demographic - a single vital or social statistic of a human population, as the number of births or deaths.


Early Adopter - A person who adopts early


Coolhunting - Someone who "Hunts" or searches for what is "Cool"


The paradox of Coolhunting - Going around and looking for trendsetters


Synergy - Combined action or function


Horizontal Integration - When a company expands it's business into making other products


Ancillary Markets - something that serves in ancillary capacity


The feedback loop - Kids telling people what they like

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Relationship between McDonalds and Disney

McDonalds and Disney have similar marketing ideas they both appeal to the young age group.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Sony

Sony is a music label and a brand of electronic devices.
They've recently made a 3D TV that you don't need glasses for
Sony owns many stores that sell all there products they make.

Monday, August 30, 2010

What I Think Mass Media Is........... HMMMMM

Mass Media is different ways to send information and other things to many viewers at the same time.

What is Cool?

Cool is cool you gotta be cool to know. If you gotta ask you ain't cool. I know im right because when im right im right and when im wrong i coulda been right but im still right cause i coulda been wrong. YA DIG???

Smoking is also cool.......

Clothes Jew K. Wears

Adidas – Athlete


Bluenotes - Comfortable

Reebok – Athlete

Willson – Comfortable

Nike – Athlete

Metal Mullica - Hard Core

Chinese Ink - Gangsta