By pairing (via bluetooth) a Sony Ericsson S710a with a Dell Axim X50V you get: Compact Flash Storage (4 Gigs) SD Storage (2 Gigs) Memory Stick Storage (1 Gig) 802.11b Wifi Edge data transfer Megapixel Digital Camera 640X480 Resolution
(...)because sirius is going down faster than.... something that goes down very fast pending a stupid business decision[see: 1/2 a billion dollars for howard stern + fewer subscribers than xm]).
I would think securing popular content would be a good business decision for a content provider.
The "1/2 a billion dollars" isn't being paid up-front, so Stern has to deliver.
I looked at data projectors when I was shopping for TVs a few months ago. The costs are similar (or higher) when you look at the price of doing it right.
Some things to consider: - If you can't sufficiently control the light in the viewing room, you'll need a screen. Tab-tensioned glass bead screens are not cheap. - You will probably want to buy a projector mount. - You'll need to run signal/power to the projector. - Controls are not as intuitive for non-tech types. - Most data projectors are loud.
Passenger: Me too. I could really go for some Mexican food.
OnStar: Hi, this is Jack from OnStar. I've been notified that you're hungry for Mexican food. LaCasita is 7 miles away from your present location and has 2-for-1 Margaritas. Don't drink too many though, we'll be reviewing your Visa bill before we'll allow the vehicle's engine to start. Shall I make reservations and give you directions?
I think this is like a photographer taking pictures for a model's portfolio. They'll take anyone's pictures (and charge you for it) but they won't guarantee you'll get in a magazine. The photographer makes money either way.
Most of the bands submitting material will have little chance for comercial success. I'm sure CDBaby is just banking on the $40 up front. 15% of 0 is still o.
American Express Co. is testing a contactless key-fob product that the card issuer plans to use small-ticket purchases. The product, which is called "ExpressPay by American Express," uses radio-frequency technology, says David Bonalle, AmEx's vice president and general manager for advanced payments and enterprise development.
Bonalle tells CardLine today that he can't talk about a rollout, but "we definitely see there is a lot of opportunity." So far ExpressPay is being used solely by AmEx employees, and it is accepted at only a few locations, including the cafeteria in AmEx's big processing center in Phoenix, and some local stores.
Users who wave the key-fob by a payment terminal reader can spend up to $150 per day. The average transaction takes 8.9 seconds compared with 12.4 seconds for cash and 15.4 seconds for credit card sales requiring no signature, according to Bonalle, who spoke today at Thomson Media's 15th Annual Card Forum & Expo in New Orleans.
Value for the card can be prepaid or charged to a regular AmEx card account. Users can get online monthly statements. Bonalle would not discuss pricing other than to say that AmEx is "following the discount-rate policy that's in place for mag-stripe (cards)."
AmEx began planning for a micropayments product late in 2001, he said, and AmEx is working to ensure that ExpressPay's technology is interoperable with other key-fob radio-frequency products such as Exxon Mobil Corp.'s Speedpass and MasterCard International's PayPass.
By pairing (via bluetooth) a Sony Ericsson S710a with a Dell Axim X50V you get:
Compact Flash Storage (4 Gigs)
SD Storage (2 Gigs)
Memory Stick Storage (1 Gig)
802.11b Wifi
Edge data transfer
Megapixel Digital Camera
640X480 Resolution
I would think securing popular content would be a good business decision for a content provider.
The "1/2 a billion dollars" isn't being paid up-front, so Stern has to deliver.
Sirius has the content - let the market decide.
The magic date was 4/17.
d Compare/
http://www.registrarstats.com/Default.asp#GraphAn
The "Move any mountain" single included all the samples. "Monkeys" was my favorite.
I have the Charter plan through AT&T wireless with unlimited minutes for $99/month.
The hotcake market is actually really bad right now thanks to the Low Carb diet fad. Our restaurant has had to switch to selling iPods.
Welcome back the 3.5" floppies!
The versions of the D5 which are shipping now don't have the extra HD button or the sticker on the back.
There's plenty of room to mount extra drive caddies inside. I've got a TB+ in mine.
I looked at data projectors when I was shopping for TVs a few months ago. The costs are similar (or higher) when you look at the price of doing it right.
Some things to consider:
- If you can't sufficiently control the light in the viewing room, you'll need a screen. Tab-tensioned glass bead screens are not cheap.
- You will probably want to buy a projector mount.
- You'll need to run signal/power to the projector.
- Controls are not as intuitive for non-tech types.
- Most data projectors are loud.
I went with a LCOS Wega.
Really? How do I get the 7.5 million I paid for business.com back?
Supermarkets are using scales in conjunction with barcodes in the current self serve checkout solutions I've seen.
I guess 4 pounds of retagged ground beef would be hard to distinguish from 4 pounds of steak with an unattentive attendent on duty.
I'm sorry Bill, we're going to have to let you go. Your Galaga scores just aren't high enough.
It has a trackpoint.
Driver: I sure am hungry.
Passenger: Me too. I could really go for some Mexican food.
OnStar: Hi, this is Jack from OnStar. I've been notified that you're hungry for Mexican food. LaCasita is 7 miles away from your present location and has 2-for-1 Margaritas. Don't drink too many though, we'll be reviewing your Visa bill before we'll allow the vehicle's engine to start. Shall I make reservations and give you directions?
This is a bad idea if we want to keep the US competitive in the global spam market.
Taxing spammers will just move all the good US spamming jobs overseas.
I remember the first domain I registered with Network Solutions. $70 for 2 years.
I remember the hours of customer service muzac I got to listen to the first time my domain was hijacked.
I remember the registrar transfer refusal email they sent me. It seems they couldn't stand to see me go.
I remember the fake renewal reminder notices I got when I finally did successfully change registrars.
Ah memories.
.cc and .tv are country codes that are being sold-off by private companies. Big difference.
I think this is like a photographer taking pictures for a model's portfolio. They'll take anyone's pictures (and charge you for it) but they won't guarantee you'll get in a magazine. The photographer makes money either way.
Most of the bands submitting material will have little chance for comercial success. I'm sure CDBaby is just banking on the $40 up front. 15% of 0 is still o.
If you don't pay full-boat retail and buy an older model (5500) it should only cost you a couple hundred dollars.
I personally hate dragging around a desktop replacement laptop.
AMEX TESTING KEY-FOB TECHNOLOGY
CardLine (Thomson Media) (Front Page), May 23, 2003
American Express Co. is testing a contactless key-fob product that the card issuer plans to use small-ticket purchases. The product, which is called "ExpressPay by American Express," uses radio-frequency technology, says David Bonalle, AmEx's vice president and general manager for advanced payments and enterprise development.
Bonalle tells CardLine today that he can't talk about a rollout, but "we definitely see there is a lot of opportunity." So far ExpressPay is being used solely by AmEx employees, and it is accepted at only a few locations, including the cafeteria in AmEx's big processing center in Phoenix, and some local stores.
Users who wave the key-fob by a payment terminal reader can spend up to $150 per day. The average transaction takes 8.9 seconds compared with 12.4 seconds for cash and 15.4 seconds for credit card sales requiring no signature, according to Bonalle, who spoke today at Thomson Media's 15th Annual Card Forum & Expo in New Orleans.
Value for the card can be prepaid or charged to a regular AmEx card account. Users can get online monthly statements. Bonalle would not discuss pricing other than to say that AmEx is "following the discount-rate policy that's in place for mag-stripe (cards)."
AmEx began planning for a micropayments product late in 2001, he said, and AmEx is working to ensure that ExpressPay's technology is interoperable with other key-fob radio-frequency products such as Exxon Mobil Corp.'s Speedpass and MasterCard International's PayPass.
Most people thought it was a sewing machine.
Actually DCC vs MiniDisc would be a more apt comparison. DAT was introduced 6 years (1986) before either format. That's quite a head-start.
Well as far as I know, Slashdot doesn't get any click-through revenue from these retailers.
Can FatWallet say the same?
If something is wrong you fight it. You don't wait until someone donates legal services.