A friend of mine owns a Mac, which he bought with a CD-R drive.
Unless that's a typo, I think it's fairly obvious why DVD authoring software won't work with your friend's CD-
R drive
Dude --- 10.1.5 Server to 10.2 Server is a $20 upgrade within a certain window of purchase. Basically if you bought anything to do with Mac OS X Server 10.1.x (on a machine or retail) on/after July 17, 2002, you're eligible to receive 10.2 Server for $20. I don't know if this applies to your specific situation, but I could have very well just saved you $980 (I take cashier's checks, btw). You probably want to check it out and check it out soon: deal expires on Nov. 30 2002.
Actually both alcohol and opium are correct. Poe and many other notables during the Victorian period and then into the early 20th century were huge users of laudanum: opium derivatives dissolved into alcohol. Poe, both Shelleys, Dickens, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Robert Browning, Sir Oscar Wilde, etc. were all laudanum addicts at one point in their lives.
Call them: In the past Apple's been very, very good about upgrading recent (1-2 week) shipments to the latest spec. No charge to the buyer, and often saving the buyer money while getting a better machine.
USD20 for a dongle which supports both VGA and S-Video out. It's cleaner than putting the actual ports on the machine, helping to shrink the overall form factor,
They'd have to modify the board, something they'd be smart to hold-on until they want to do a radical change --- i.e., changing to a G4, adding whatever the hell the next generation of firewire is called, etc.
But it would sure be nice to have access to USB 2.0 stuff like high-end scanners.
Most high-end scanners support either SCSI2 or Firewire. I was pricing USD2000+ transparency scanners which are Firewire only.
Also, last time I checked, Apple was bundling a registered copy of Thorsten Lemke's Graphic Convertor --- it'll open and manipulate damned near any image format.
Or win back the mark and allow its licensing to third parties, effectively capitalizing on the popularity won for the police box by the Dr. Who series.
A similar suit was recently settled in favor of the London Underground. Perhaps those more familiar with international resolution of civil torts can comment.
Yes, and you cna buy the same LCD display in WalMart for $400. But the image pobably looks like ass and stand and case are probably cheaply made. If you're looking to price a comprable product, look to IBM ($950 for a 1280x1024 18.1") or Sony (US$900 for 1280x1024, 17.0")
Saw this just now -- http://www.griffintechnology.com/software/software _imic.html -- specifically the beta for "FinalVinyl"
Final Vinyl 0.6 - beta
Free OS X audio recording application for use with the Griffin family of audio products. Has several advanced features including equalization and built in RIAA curves*.
It's just a beta and requires Griffin's iMic, a USB breakout that does audio-in. Once the software is out of beta, this seems to be exactly what you need:-)
* yes, RIAA curves --- it's simply in reference to a standard employed by the industry, no nefarious evil DRM --- it's freaking vinyl after all
Roxio Toast comes bundled with an app called CD Spin Doctor --- it does exactly what you want:
Do you still have old cassette tapes or vinyl LPs? Use CD Spin Doctor,
included with Toast 5 Titanium, to turn those scratchy records or cassette
tapes into high fidelity CDs. Here are just a few CD Spin Doctor features:
Records from any analog source (phonograph, tape, or microphone)
Special sound filters eliminate noise, pops, hisses, and clicks
Enhancement filters convert mono to stereo and boost Bass or Treble
Wave form display with zoom in and zoom out capabilities
Going through Aladdin's web site requires you to fill out a short (marketing) form before downloading Expander. Fortunately, Aladdin also has anonymous ftp access
No --- VPC also emulates the networking, basically acting as a switch between the host client and the virtual sessions. It's actually quite nifty and clever, but it also means that whatever is running in the virtual machine nevers talks directly to the hardware.
Yes --- and Mac Ach should be held as the shining example to the rest of the Macintosh community: e.g., the recent thread posted by someone who switched to a Mac but just didn't like it. Did he get jumped on like he would on basically any other forum? Hell no. Instead, the replies were more on the line of "Well, at least you tried" and "Hey, don't give up on us yet". Entirely positive, entirely constructive, and very humble. It's an excellence community.
You're a bit confused: the SoundStix are the two satellites plus the sub. The iSub itself it made to work in conjunction with the built-in speakers on the old, CRT iMacs, the built-in speakers on the eMac, and Apple's add-on, amplified speakers. The industrial design of the subs are the same, but the specs aren't.
The most painless, and least fuss route is to simply have a service bureau do it for you. Just provide them with the negs as they've got the equipment to handle massive batch scanning jobs.
A friend of mine owns a Mac, which he bought with a CD-R drive. Unless that's a typo, I think it's fairly obvious why DVD authoring software won't work with your friend's CD- R drive
No -- you're not allowed to copy (back-up, time/space-shift) what you for which you posess no legal right to the source.
Not really --- it's more like an autobody shop keying all the cars in a neighboring parking lot.
Dude --- 10.1.5 Server to 10.2 Server is a $20 upgrade within a certain window of purchase. Basically if you bought anything to do with Mac OS X Server 10.1.x (on a machine or retail) on/after July 17, 2002, you're eligible to receive 10.2 Server for $20. I don't know if this applies to your specific situation, but I could have very well just saved you $980 (I take cashier's checks, btw). You probably want to check it out and check it out soon: deal expires on Nov. 30 2002.
Actually both alcohol and opium are correct. Poe and many other notables during the Victorian period and then into the early 20th century were huge users of laudanum: opium derivatives dissolved into alcohol. Poe, both Shelleys, Dickens, Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Robert Browning, Sir Oscar Wilde, etc. were all laudanum addicts at one point in their lives.
It wouldn't be terribly hard to get it playing a single MP3 or at least a sample.
Hillary Rosen: in spaaaaaaaace.......
Call them: In the past Apple's been very, very good about upgrading recent (1-2 week) shipments to the latest spec. No charge to the buyer, and often saving the buyer money while getting a better machine.
USD20 for a dongle which supports both VGA and S-Video out. It's cleaner than putting the actual ports on the machine, helping to shrink the overall form factor,
They'd have to modify the board, something they'd be smart to hold-on until they want to do a radical change --- i.e., changing to a G4, adding whatever the hell the next generation of firewire is called, etc.
But it would sure be nice to have access to USB 2.0 stuff like high-end scanners.
Most high-end scanners support either SCSI2 or Firewire. I was pricing USD2000+ transparency scanners which are Firewire only.
Also, last time I checked, Apple was bundling a registered copy of Thorsten Lemke's Graphic Convertor --- it'll open and manipulate damned near any image format.
Or win back the mark and allow its licensing to third parties, effectively capitalizing on the popularity won for the police box by the Dr. Who series.
A similar suit was recently settled in favor of the London Underground. Perhaps those more familiar with international resolution of civil torts can comment.
Or Starbucks instead of the Urban shudder.
Yes, and you cna buy the same LCD display in WalMart for $400. But the image pobably looks like ass and stand and case are probably cheaply made. If you're looking to price a comprable product, look to IBM ($950 for a 1280x1024 18.1") or Sony (US$900 for 1280x1024, 17.0")
'Smoke me a kipper' is probably a Red Dwarf reference
No, Apple licensed the concept from Xerox for a large outlay of Apple stock. There was no "stealing"
Do you still have old cassette tapes or vinyl LPs? Use CD Spin Doctor, included with Toast 5 Titanium, to turn those scratchy records or cassette tapes into high fidelity CDs. Here are just a few CD Spin Doctor features:
Going through Aladdin's web site requires you to fill out a short (marketing) form before downloading Expander. Fortunately, Aladdin also has anonymous ftp access
ftp://ftp.aladdinsys.com/
No --- VPC also emulates the networking, basically acting as a switch between the host client and the virtual sessions. It's actually quite nifty and clever, but it also means that whatever is running in the virtual machine nevers talks directly to the hardware.
... to buy cool shit from BluDot, of course. DUH ;-)
Yes --- and Mac Ach should be held as the shining example to the rest of the Macintosh community: e.g., the recent thread posted by someone who switched to a Mac but just didn't like it. Did he get jumped on like he would on basically any other forum? Hell no. Instead, the replies were more on the line of "Well, at least you tried" and "Hey, don't give up on us yet". Entirely positive, entirely constructive, and very humble. It's an excellence community.
You should really just bite the bullet and replace your 128M stick with a 512M --- you'll feel like it's a whole new machine again.
You're a bit confused: the SoundStix are the two satellites plus the sub. The iSub itself it made to work in conjunction with the built-in speakers on the old, CRT iMacs, the built-in speakers on the eMac, and Apple's add-on, amplified speakers. The industrial design of the subs are the same, but the specs aren't.
I've used Chrome Digital before for and had good results. http://www.chromedigital.com/photocd.html
All costs involved, you're probably looking at $10/roll but, like I said, if you value your time.
The most painless, and least fuss route is to simply have a service bureau do it for you. Just provide them with the negs as they've got the equipment to handle massive batch scanning jobs.