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Year: 2008 (Page 44 of 52)

Top Tech Headlines for Thursday July 10 2008

What’s happening in tech today? Trust Dr. Blip to find out!

It’s iPhone 3G Tear-down Time
Engadget – It’s that time again. With the first retail sale of any hotly anticipated device comes the ritualistic tear down.

First iTunes Remote App for iPhone Hands-on
Gizmodo – One of the first apps I downloaded while doing the App Store video walkthrough today was the new iPhone Remote for iTunes. Continue reading

Will it Burn – Episode 2

Dr. Blip follows Jinx the Cat’s example of “hating meeces to pieces” as he continues his experiments with a three-by-four-foot Fresnel lens. This second installment in the series of “Will it Burn” videos brings a mouse (the pointing device kind) to a dramatic and fiery end.

What will Dr. Blip “focus” on next? A ubiquitous product of a very large company that many users hate more than meeces, and an all-American symbol of summer. Be sure to check back regularly! Continue reading

Why I’m Creating an Independent Blog

I’m separating my personal blog from PC-Doctor’s blog. This isn’t an uncommon thing to do, but I suspect that some people will wonder if something went wrong. Nothing did. Many people tend to connect the low canada viagra cheap prices and go for the genuine and branded products. For example, if a new drug like cialis online prices is approved by the FDA, it has been termed as the better, bigger, faster and longer working sexual pill. After that time, however, other pharmaceutical companies are levitra cost of also permitted to make drug, but with a less fee. If tadalafil tablet the pH values are less than 6.6, your body is acidic. Instead, I expect this to benefit everyone.

Read on to find out how.

Where has all the Quality Gone?

A disturbing trend I have been noticing in the last 4 years or so is the general decline in the quality of hardware components released to the market.

Quality may be too broad a term; functionality may be a better fit for my point. Electrically, I believe component quality has improved. It is in the firmware and drivers, the final implementation, that I see the decline. The consumer’s perception of quality is the total package; why it won’t work makes little difference. If any piece of the functionality puzzle is missing, the whole product is perceived as defective.

Continue reading

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