.:[Double Click To][Close]:.

Monday, May 16, 2011

nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011

nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. nathan kress and miranda
  • nathan kress and miranda



  • LimeiBook86
    Apr 4, 11:49 AM
    As the story says: "A private armed security guard interrupted the burglars and at some point, gunfire was exchanged with the two male burglars, who were also armed, Facicci said."

    The burglars were shooting at him also. So the security guard acting in self defense. It wasn't like they were unarmed and while they ran away he shot them.





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. Nathan Kress, Jennette McCurdy
  • Nathan Kress, Jennette McCurdy



  • Piggie
    Apr 15, 02:40 PM
    You have to admit this thread is really funny.

    How many times have we heard Apple lovers say it's not all about "specs" and the general public are not interested in "specs" and rubbish others when they say how much better spec their PC might be.

    And yet, now that Apple has the high specs, all of a sudden THIS IS the most important thing.

    No average consumer is ever going to notice the difference between USB3 and Thunderbolt, in fact USB3 will be better for the general user experience as it's backwards compatible.

    But now, sod the typical consumer, the only thing that matters now is specs.


    Oh, you have to laugh don't you :D





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. nathan kress and miranda
  • nathan kress and miranda



  • Psychic Shopper
    Sep 4, 07:20 PM
    "This would somewhat explain why the Paris Expo was given the cold shoulder."
    Cold shoulder to say the least. The same day as the expo, in London, Apple will hold a press conference. If you are a reporter, where do you go?
    Apple distanced itself from the Macworld New York Expo, I wonder if they are doing the same thing with the Paris expo?





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. nathan kress and miranda
  • nathan kress and miranda



  • fblack
    Sep 10, 06:11 PM
    Do you really want to use a monitor from 10 years ago in everyday use? Not likely. I've a 15" CRT from about a decade ago too but it's sitting on a shelf as a spare in case my newer monitor dies.

    Most times I've bought a new computer, I've also bought a new monitor. A widescreen 17" monitor back when I bought my iMac was extortionately expensive. I generally figure on spending about �15-1800 every three years on a computer and about 5-6 years of useful life. It's been going up from a G3 iBook to a 17" G5 Mac to a fully kitted out 24" iMac for that money. I can't imagine what it will be in 3 - 6 years time but I guess it'll make a 24" iMac feel just as obsolete as the 500Mhz G3 iBook with a 1024x768 screen feels.

    I have to conclude that people who want to use their 10 year old CRT are just incredibly cheap and don't value their screens as much as being able to claim how fast their CPU is. I've been programming for 20+ years professionally and your screen isn't something to skimp on. It's THE most important thing if you value your eyes.

    I think you mistook the slant of my post. Notice the big grin face at the end of my sentence in the previous post? I meant it half in jest. It does not mean that as I type I am staring at a 14" screen. As far as my 6 yr old CRT that died it was a 19inch not a tiny screen and certainly hefty at about 60lbs. My 10yr old CRT that has been permanently retired now was in fact used as a backup monitor for my old beige G3. I've had more than one monitor go before and having a backup even if it has small screen real estate can save your bacon if you've got work to do. :p

    I would love to have the budget to replace all of my equipment every 3 years like you can but I dont have that luxury. If I can have a piece of equipment last a little longer you may call it cheap from your fancy perch, but I call it frugal. Good budgeting should never be sneered at...:D





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. nathan kress and miranda
  • nathan kress and miranda



  • Pravius
    Apr 22, 09:02 AM
    Perhaps time machine capsules could go on the cloud?





    They could tattoo the number on people's foreheads as a bar code.

    Welcome to Costco.. I love you.

    http://mcarteratthemovies.files.wordpress.com/2010/03/idiocracy.jpg?w=192&h=280





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. Nathan Kress, Miranda Cosgrove
  • Nathan Kress, Miranda Cosgrove



  • Zwhaler
    Sep 5, 05:54 PM
    Strange, the movie store is the thing that I am least excited about :confused: But I still hope for new imac and/or mbp.





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. Miranda Cosgrove picture
  • Miranda Cosgrove picture



  • kansast
    Sep 13, 09:38 PM
    I am not really crazy about this design. Having to slide the click-wheel down every time I need to use my phone doesn't sound like fun (plus, what would this thing look like open? ...what I'm picturing is ugly).

    I was hoping for an iPod Nano form factor with a numerical keypad... nice an simple.

    I would have thought the same thing.. but I used a Sony Erricson phone for awhile.. iWalk I think they called it ?? but it had a simplified buttons under the screen, if you needed to "Dial" a number you could flip out the buttons. But most often you are either "answering" your phone, or pulling up a number from the directory, either case you don't need a full number pad key for. As it was, I almost never revealed the keypad on that phone.





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. Jerry Trainor and Nathan Kress
  • Jerry Trainor and Nathan Kress



  • rosalindavenue
    Sep 12, 02:23 PM
    80GB iPod seems like the only model with good value/price ratio. :D T

    I respectfully disagree. As someone who paid $399 for a 3G 30 gig (in May 04), $250 for a color, game playing, long-battery life 30 gig seems like a screaming deal.





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. Tagged: Miranda Csogrove, Noah
  • Tagged: Miranda Csogrove, Noah



  • lmalave
    Sep 27, 09:31 AM
    The RAZR was a smash because it was very stylish (which the Apple iPhone will certainly be, too). But it also has been huge because every carrier has had it available on subsidy, and it's been available in more than one color. Something I don't expect from the iPhone.

    It's also been such a huge seller because they are junk inside. I imagine every time a carrier has to replace a RAZR because it was insured Motorola counts it as another "sale".

    You have a short-term memory. Cingular had an exclusive on it for quite some time (at least 6 months), and was only available in one color (silver). I mean, I remember there was a big deal when the RAZR introduced the Black color!

    According to ThinkSecret, the iPhone deal is similar (Cingular exclusive for 6 months, then Apple can sign on with other providers). And, as you indicate, the iPhone will probably only be available in one color. This is desirable for a product launch, though, since it makes production, inventory control, etc. easier at at time when Apple can't predict consumer demand as accurately.

    What I'm hoping for is that Apple uses the metallic finish of its nanos. My Sony Ericsson has a metallic blue finish but is actually made of plastic. It would be sweet to have a real metal phone. I predict Apple will launch in a single metallic color (the nano black or silver), and then within a year or less provide all the nano colors.

    If you think about it from a marketing point of view, this makes total sense so use all the exact same nano colors, strengthening the association between the two. This would position the iPhone as an upsell from the nano. All Apple has to do is ensure that the profit per unit is the same or higher as the nano, and they don't have to worry about cannibalizing nano sales.

    In conclusion, the Think Secret article claims Apple expects to sell 25 million of the iPhones in the year 2007 alone. If Apple can pull that off, they will indeed be eclipsing the sales rates even of the highly successful RAZR. Unfortunately for Motorola, SonyEricsson, LG, Danger, Helio, etc., these eye-popping sales figures will come at the expense of all the othe "cool" phones that consumers were paying a premium for (RAZR, Walkman Phones, Chocolate, Sidekick, Helio). And not because these products necessarily compete head-to-head in terms of features, but rather because each person normally owns only one phone. So once consumers prioritize what they want in a phone, I predict many of them will opt to combine their iPod and phone into the same device. 25 million people making that choice in 2007 is not that far-fetched...





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. nathan kress and jennette
  • nathan kress and jennette



  • nishioka
    Apr 22, 04:22 AM
    Well I can already listen to my music on my MacBook, iPad and iPhone so why would I want it?

    Maybe you wouldn't. I could see a use for it myself - I have a library of music so big you couldn't fit it all on any existing iPhone, and it's annoying to be out someplace and wanting to listen to a song, but you can't because you had to exclude it from your last sync. It would be preferable then for me to be able to link my iPhone to my music library and just have Apple deliver everything to me on demand... be it from the hard drive at home or from a central location.

    Of course, how this is all implemented will play a big role in whether the service is useful to me or not. If I can't listen to the CDs I bought and imported into iTunes for example... that's a dealbreaker as far as I'm concerned.





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. nathan kress and miranda
  • nathan kress and miranda



  • erikh
    Sep 26, 07:58 AM
    did you read the article above?

    "Apple is still in talks with providers in other parts of the world on other exclusive deals"

    :D

    Well, the cell phone markets work in different ways in different parts of the world. While the standard in the US, and other parts of the Americas, is that phone and network follows each other closely (which is why you have a lot of provider-specific phone models, even for the supposedly provider-independent GSM phones), most of Europe has a very weak connection between individual phones and networks.

    Here, the most provider-specific you can go is to get a discounted (yet otherwise ordinary) phone if you sign up for a one-year subscription. Oh, and you may get your provider's GPRS/WAP/MMS settings pre-installed.

    So, it would really be a first if Apple would get "provider-exclusive" distribution deals throughout Europe. And that's not considering the fact that there is no single provider that covers all of Europe, so they would have to go through the troubles of signing different deals in each country. In my thinking, that leads to Apple either dropping the European market, postponing the release in Europe until they have saturated the US market, or just release it on the general market. After all, I believe most of the European cell phones that are available on the US market as provider exclusive are sold "openly" (under slightly different names and color schemes) back here in Europe.





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. nathan kress and miranda
  • nathan kress and miranda



  • DavidCar
    Jul 14, 12:36 PM
    So how soon should I expect to see a Merom in a MacBook? "Some months later," or "many months later" than it's appearance on a MacBook Pro? Why not sooner? Just to differentiate the product lines? I thought Merom would replace Yonah in general. I read one report suggesting Merom would be introduced at the same time as the Conroe official introduction near the end of this month.

    BTW, Hannibal posted his opinion of Core 2 Duo on Ars, along with his opinion of most other reviewers:

    http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060714-7267.html





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. Nathan Kress and Miranda
  • Nathan Kress and Miranda



  • pengu
    Sep 17, 08:25 PM
    WRONG GSM does NOT work in Japan. You can't go to any country and use it. Japan doesn't have GSM.

    ok. see, if you actually READ my post, you would know that I said
    I can take my phone to any country with a GSM network





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. nathan kress and miranda
  • nathan kress and miranda



  • zero2dash
    Jul 14, 10:44 AM
    Conroe benchmarks posted on AnandTech (http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/showdoc.aspx?i=2795) are really good.

    The overclocking features are even more impressive.
    The $316 E6600 with a 2.4ghz cpu clock speed was air overclocked to 4ghz stable. ON AIR. I shudder to think of what they could do with liquid cooling.

    This brings me to think another thing - conceivably Apple could forego the whole "Quad Woodcrest" setup (which will undoubtedly cost a boatload) and they could simply take a Core 2 and (with Intel's help) overclock it with the current air flow setup of the G5 case, and probably double cpu clock speed at a cheaper price.

    But they won't do it. :( a) retail systems (save for the overpriced Dell XPS lineup) aren't usually overclocked and b) it would screw up their whole price scheme. It does bring up another interesting point though...people could coincidentally *possibly* overclock their [Core 2] Macs (since the technology is there in the cpu itself)...for the first time ever? We could see iMacs potentially being overclocked to outperform a Mac Pro. (if someone figures out how to do it that is)





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. Miranda Cosgrove, Nathan Kress
  • Miranda Cosgrove, Nathan Kress



  • longofest
    Oct 12, 12:25 PM
    I hope people like Red, because this is definitely the iPod to buy... goes to a great cause, and doesn't cost you anything more.





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. Miranda Cosgrove, Nathan Kress
  • Miranda Cosgrove, Nathan Kress



  • alphaod
    Apr 19, 02:55 PM
    I'm pretty sure there will countless companies willing to take on Apple as a new customer.





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. Sweet Miranda Cosgrove
  • Sweet Miranda Cosgrove



  • vitaboy
    Aug 24, 05:01 AM
    I hope you're joking about that. iTunes is not about making money for apple

    It may not be making the kind of money that iPod is making, but iTunes is indeed making money for Apple. Indeed, it has become a significant revenue story for Apple, if only recently.

    In fact, contrary to popular belief, iTMS has been marginally profitable for many quarters now, although of course its profit margins are small compared to iPods and Macs.

    Just remember - iTunes is profitable and a billion plus song sales a year makes it a Top 10 music retailer in the U.S., behind only the likes of Walmart, Best Buy, Target, and FYE.

    iTunes Outsells Traditional Music Stores (http://news.com.com/iTunes+outsells+traditional+music+stores/2100-1027_3-5965314.html)

    It's the iTunes wannabes that are neither profitable nor revenue machines! ;-)





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. nathan kress and miranda
  • nathan kress and miranda



  • bigbossbmb
    Aug 28, 05:52 PM
    So with all this dumping going on, Apple better have at least equal hardware. They were first out with the core 2 duo xeon and with yonah.



    I don't know about woodcrest...but they were definitely not the first with yonah.





    nathan kress and miranda cosgrove 2011. Nathan Kress, Miranda Cosgrove
  • Nathan Kress, Miranda Cosgrove



  • kaneda
    Aug 31, 09:16 PM
    new ipod celphone.....celphone w/ a hard drive...w/ widescreen...sync w/ your itunes, iphotos, imovie, address book, mobile ichat...:)

    Time to get a new cel-phone..499 for 60gb...




    JackSYi
    Jul 14, 10:07 AM
    I want my MacBook Pro Core 2!!!.

    Me too.





    Dr.Gargoyle
    Sep 14, 02:44 AM
    Just release te phone already. How hard can it be???
    I dont care if the design looks like the old Nano. I just want a Nano with phone capabilities.





    Manic Mouse
    Sep 9, 10:28 AM
    The real problem isn't the OS as much as it is in applications.

    A well-threaded O/S won't help make Photoshop or Avid run much faster, unless the application code is also able to use all of the cores that are present.

    Some applications are inherently serial - you have to do step A, then step B (because step B depends on step A). It's not a matter of poor programming, it's that the task is serial. (Note that many Photoshop benchmarks quote "MP-aware" filters separately from actions that don't scale.)

    For these "not well-threaded" applications, multiple cores will still be beneficial so that you can run multiple applications simultaneously - all at full speed.

    There are some server-type applications (web or database) that run many (hundreds or thousands) threads simultaneously. (For a web server - each browser session is a natural thread.) For these applications, operating system efficiency is important. The reports that OSX is poor at threading (such as Mac OS X limits server performance (http://www.macnn.com/articles/05/06/15/os.x.server.review/)) aren't really that important for desktop apps that want to use all 4 cores (or soon 8).


    http://www.anandtech.com/mac/showdoc.aspx?i=2436
    The server performance of the Apple platform is, however, catastrophic.
    ...
    Workstation apps will hardly mind, but the performance of server applications depends greatly on the threading, signalling and locking engine.


    Ahh. Nice info Aiden, thanks for that!

    Many BSODs today?

    I must be one of the few windows users who has never seen a BSOD since Win 95...

    I've been using the Vista Beta 2 exclusively since it's release and it's apparently a very unstable OS yet I haven't seen a single BSOD. Looking forward to upgrading to RC1 and all the performance improvements that will bring though! :D

    What I'm wondering is how Leopard will change the performance of the iMacs and Mac Pros. Will having a full 64-bit operating system and applications mean they run faster, or will the end-user see little difference?





    robeddie
    Apr 25, 01:57 PM
    I love the way the Arn writes "the next revision of Apple's MacBook Pro line will utilize a new case design for the first time in several years."

    It's been a couple years. 2 years, 6 months to be exact. He writes as though this design has been around for like, forever!

    The previous aluminum design remained almost exactly the same (except for some almost inperceptable thinning when it became the MacPro) from Jan 2003 (the powerbook G4) to October 2008. 5 YEARS AND TEN MONTHS!





    devman
    Sep 26, 09:26 AM
    Yeah, but not if it's locked. I had to call up my provider and beg for my unlock code so that I could use *my* phone in Asia, and then they said yes, and never sent it to me. Call them back, and...well..rinse, repeat.

    What about people like me who travel a lot and want to pop in SIM cards in other places? I'm sick and tired of the U.S. market and all of its stupid contract / vendor lock-in ********.

    Pity to see Apple on that bandwagon; I hope they just sell the phone in the Apple Store unlocked, and let us choose the carrier we want.

    I had no trouble getting an unlock code from Cingular for a SLVR I bought from them. Here's pix I just took showing it in use back home on the Telstra network.