Gadgetism.org > Sounds worthy.
[Oceanside, Nevada :: Main Page] It plays music for you and, based upon what you tell it, learns what you like and finds even more interesting music for you. They just made their Mac client available (I understand they previously had a Windows client and maybe one for Linux) as a beta. I just downloaded it to play with it, so I'll try to remember to let you know what I think.
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Some slightly related from Technorati and Google.
[Andrew Currie Online] All About Email for Mac OS X: Arguably Apple’s most innovative new feature in its Tiger OS is Spotlight, giving the user the ability to quickly find anything on the computer, including specific email messages. To accomplish this, version 2 of Apple Mail stores each individual message as a separate file, with .emix suffix tacked on to the end. Certainly not your standard file extension, but it works—I’ve tried searching for obscure keywords hidden deep in long emails, and Spotlight has caught each and every one.
[YukonMac: Macintosh News, Reviews and Shopping] OS X 10.4 Tiger Review: In case you are wondering I am on a Dual 1.8Ghz G5 with 1.5GB of RAM. Overall I think Tiger feels a bit snappier - a friend of mine on a 1Ghz G4 Powerbook, said the speed up feels more dramatic, which makes sense. I noticed that the tear sheets that appear from windows are much snappier, they used to take a second or longer to slide down from the top of a window, now they seem to take only a fraction of a second.
For The H*ll Of It: remember when hunter s. thompson shot himself and how every fucking blog you went to had the same na na na he meant so much to me na na na NA crap like they knew the guy personally and it was one big circle jerk competition of who could write the longest tribute like they were his brother, wasn't that annoying? fuck that, you are a moron douche bag who has a two month old blog, you don't know anything about anything so fuck off.
Ken Bereskin's Radio Weblog: To accomplish this, Safari works in concert with "Internet-Enabled Disk Image" technology introduced in Mac OS X v10.2.3. An internet-enabled disk image is one that can clean up after it is downloaded. For example, if you have a Mac OS X application packaged as a single icon, stored in one of these disk images, all you need to do is download it in Safari and the image will be downloaded, decompressed, and the application package will be copied out of the disk image and placed in your default download folder (usually your desktop).
Macworld: Mac Gems: Mac Gems Weblog: After all, I don’t need to see the status of my PowerBook’s battery all the time, so most of the time the battery status icon in the menu bar is just taking up valuable real estate. (Those who’ve seen my menu bar know that I need all the space I can get up there.) With the appropriate Widget for Dashboard, I can quickly check my battery’s charge and then get back to work. Of the battery Widget’s I’ve seen, BatteryInfo is clearly the best. In addition to being the most attractive, it’s also got the most features: Like Apple’s menu bar battery monitor, it shows a visual representation of your battery’s remaining charge, and you can also have it display the time or percent charge remaining.
Blog O'Stuff: Anyway, this morning I downloaded the latest release candidate, and noticed an improvement in how things display. Before, when viewing a document created on Bagend in OO.o running on SUSE, a lot of words would run together, especially around punctuation marks. I am happy to note that this doesn't seem to be the case anymore with NeoOffice/J.
Wendy McElroy.com: A site for individualist feminism and ...: Part II covers such technologies as microchips, email tracking and camera-based surveillance systems, applying to each the test, "How would this catch terrorists or other criminals without destroying the rights of peaceable people?" Part III imagines a future of resistance against a government tracking of its citizens in the name of security, but offers some hope that American culture does not lend itself to the fanatical control that a high-tech national ID system could make possible. Click here for the Table of Contents.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, Rush Limbaugh, Screenshots, Audacity, Gadgetism.org