Monday, May 30, 2011

wallpaper music notes

wallpaper music notes. music notes sign green picture
  • music notes sign green picture



  • arn
    Sep 12, 01:18 AM
    I really don't care anymore...tomorrow will probably follow a familiar formula - some disappointments, some bullseyes.

    This is what I want after seeing the infamous "cube with a handle" patent that surfaced earlier this week:


    Apple already did that design. It's called the Apple G4 Cube.

    http://www.apple-history.com/?page=gallery&model=g4cube





    wallpaper music notes. Seamless wallpaper with music
  • Seamless wallpaper with music



  • pmz
    Mar 25, 10:08 AM
    Can't believe it's been 10 years. I had my iMac G3 running OS 9 and didn't evenknow about OS X until I visited a friends house, who had the same iMac running OS X. Ill never forget how blown away I was, and that first look was truly the first look at everything that still makes Macs great today.





    wallpaper music notes. Music Note iPhone Wallpaper
  • Music Note iPhone Wallpaper



  • Surely
    Apr 8, 01:12 PM
    You guys don't get it do you, the promotion is not for the iPad, they are going to use some stock of the iPad to promote some other stuff and make money. The iPad is the draw in this case, not the promotion in and of itself.

    Yeah, that makes a little more sense. But what....iPad2 accessories?

    I still have a hard time buying their reason.





    wallpaper music notes. stock vector : Music notes
  • stock vector : Music notes



  • anjinha
    Apr 27, 05:47 PM
    Oh no.

    talking to a friend at the shared open area locker room.

    at some point I said something to the affect, she started really working it and it eventually got hard.

    Nice trip to HR.

    Subject matter; an expoy based resin.

    I can't imagine the accusations that would take place with a unisex bathroom in the united states. Lawyers would take up residence out side of the bathrooms along with a whole new array of tv commercials

    But couldn't sexual harassment issues also potentially happen with lesbians in the women's bathroom or gay men in the men's bathroom? How come that is not issue?





    wallpaper music notes. Musical Notes wallpaper
  • Musical Notes wallpaper



  • RobBookPro
    Apr 16, 12:14 AM
    Everyone keeps saying that aluminum will mess with the signal. But what I'm wondering about is how will the iPad 3G will deal with that? Is 3G iPad going to look different than Wifi model thats currently out?

    Have you not looked at the pictures on Apples website? Big black stripe?





    wallpaper music notes. Bouncing Music Notes Live Wall
  • Bouncing Music Notes Live Wall



  • Highland
    Aug 3, 10:24 PM
    1. Agreed. The only situation governing bodies should step in is in extreme cases. The dead pixel thing is really just a case of Apple trying to push their luck I think. Quite a few manufacturers do that with dead pixels.

    2. :)

    3. The iPod isn't a monopoly, but iTMS might be considered one soon, driven by the fact that it only operates with it's own player (which isn't really any better than the competition). I'm not arguing that iTMS or the iPod is bad. In fact, I think they're both great and might be considered the saviour of the recording industry if we get this DRM mess fixed.

    4. Apple's agreement with users can be changed at any point (according to Apple). That's illegal in some countries, plain and simple. The changes to the situation in Norway might be only "from now onwards", but the iTMS agreement still says they can shift the rules for songs purchased dating back to the launch of iTMS.

    5. Yes and no. Sure, we all vote with our dollars, but when the only players are big companies and the four major labels are all working only with a small selection of online stores, we're not left with enough choices to show how we'd like things done. If you like an artist then you have to put up with whatever's served.

    Another example of how things have been done well in the past for the music industry is the current situation with cover songs. It works really well. Anyone can cover anyone, but the original artist gets paid 100% of the song writing royalties (publishing), while the new performer gets all the mechanical royalties (physical sales). It works, and it's law. I doubt a system like that would be put in place today. Today it'd be all like "I own this song so no one else can touch it!". We all need to mature a little and look at this from a more positive angle for everyone, rather than short term greed.

    6. Yep, time will tell. Although I think you probably do agree that CDs will die, it's just a matter of time, and what they're replaced with. I can't see another physical audio format being introduced and having any mainstream success though.





    wallpaper music notes. wallpaper music notes.
  • wallpaper music notes.



  • SkippyThorson
    Apr 15, 12:41 PM
    Is it just me, or is the writing on the 3rd photo a bit skewed, or rotated in an odd way?

    You're entirely right, it does. It makes sense that the awkward image is the oldest too, since that was the earliest image. The other ones are a bit better because they obviously took time. The angles however on the back of the device, going from the middle out to the corners, are just awkward though.

    I don't see how they would go back to angles after touting the more curved and comfortable 3G / 3GS back. There was a big focus on how much more comfortable the new iPhone was to hold compared to the first.

    Regardless of the validity, I personally think the chances are very high for a unibody type iPhone, it only makes sense. Apple did a unibody macbook (plastic). Its Apple, everything standardizes and is consistent, otherwise Steve's head will explode.

    You could be right too, especially that last line. Things are almost always uniform. However, when the iPod Classic went to metal, and the iPhone went to plastic, that was an unexpected switch. The iPhone has never really been "in line".





    wallpaper music notes. wallpaper music notes. Music Notes for iPhone 4; Music Notes for iPhone 4. hobi316. Jun 9, 02:15 PM
  • wallpaper music notes. Music Notes for iPhone 4; Music Notes for iPhone 4. hobi316. Jun 9, 02:15 PM



  • bakerzdosen
    Nov 23, 04:30 PM
    I haven't seen a lower price on the iSight I bought last year on BF $135 shipped incl tax. (With one possible exception, and that was a clearance/misprint at microcenter that they still honored in a couple cases.) I only paid slightly less for a used one on eBay a month before - and it's an earlier revision. Sometimes it's not that bad of a deal.





    wallpaper music notes. Musical Note clip art
  • Musical Note clip art



  • paduck
    Aug 3, 06:54 PM
    It has a lot of standard features, and seems to be more on the premium targeted market vs. regular sedans.

    Did the Preius start out on the expensive side as well?


    Well, the Prius carries about a $5000 price premium compared with a comprable Toyota or Honda. But it sells for $24k without as big a tax credit (if any). So I'd have to say that the Prius Premium isn't close to that of the Volt. Plus, you can fit three car seats in a Prius. The Volt is a four-seater.





    wallpaper music notes. wallpaper music notes. Seamless wallpaper with music; Seamless wallpaper with music. gregarious119. Jul 14, 02:34 PM. To charge $1800 for a system that only
  • wallpaper music notes. Seamless wallpaper with music; Seamless wallpaper with music. gregarious119. Jul 14, 02:34 PM. To charge $1800 for a system that only



  • 3.1416
    May 3, 03:55 PM
    People who tether use more bandwidth, so the cost associated with their usage is more expensive. The carriers can either charge those people for tethering or they can raise the price for EVERYONE.
    Or they could charge people for the data they actually use, regardless of whether tethering was involved.

    You are not paying for tethering unless you are paying for tethering. The math is simple. People who tether use more bandwidth. Wireless providers set their data prices based on AVERAGE usage. Tethering makes the average usage go up, so the revenue to cover those costs has to come from somewhere.
    People who download videos use more bandwidth than people who don't. So carriers should be able to block YouTube and other sites unless you pay for the "video package", right?





    wallpaper music notes. bat music note design graphic
  • bat music note design graphic



  • x86isslow
    Oct 6, 10:30 PM
    The device should now be the focus. The service should be an afterthought in the background.

    that's called an iPod touch - not a phone





    wallpaper music notes. Music Note
  • Music Note



  • sushi
    Oct 1, 02:04 PM
    Very nice design.

    Wonder what the stairway leads to?





    wallpaper music notes. wallpaper music notes.
  • wallpaper music notes.



  • Liquorpuki
    Oct 6, 02:31 PM
    When I was on Verizon, I could drive from Silicon Valley down to LA and not get dropped once.

    Now that I'm on AT&T, on my 40 mile drive home on the 101 from downtown LA to the West Valley, I regularly get dropped 2 to 3 times - usually at the Lankershim and Winnetka exits.

    It is what it is





    wallpaper music notes. backgrounds music, notes,
  • backgrounds music, notes,



  • Cybbe
    Jul 22, 06:00 AM
    Apple is right now the most disgusting company in the business.





    wallpaper music notes. Music Notes Myspace
  • Music Notes Myspace



  • sheepopo39
    Apr 29, 06:53 PM
    I agree. I am using scroll reverser on Snow Leopard right now and enjoy it a lot. After about a day or two it becomes more natural.

    I booted into snow leopard on another partition after using Lion for a while and I had trouble not scrolling inversely. I've gotten quite used to it.





    wallpaper music notes. music notes wallpaper,
  • music notes wallpaper,



  • KnightWRX
    Mar 13, 12:32 PM
    For me, I do see the iPad (and actually the App Store) as a change in computing. By removing the complex processes that we go through in a computer (eg instead of downloading an app, moving it into a folder, deleting the dmg its a simple case of downloading the app), the iPad is changing our computer experience by simplifying it to the extent that it's only the part we want to use rather than need to use.

    But that is not redefining "Computing" or computers at all. It's simply making them easier to use. If you want it to absolutely be about redefining something, talk about usability, not computing.

    The iPad is still receiving network/USB input for that app, processing the data and eventually storing it. It is still doing the very same concept of computing we were doing 50 years ago on massive mainframes. There is no shift in "computing".

    You again failed to address this point in your quest to see redefinition where there is none. You're thinking at way to precise of a level to even talk about computers/computing.

    The iPad and the App Store process have the potential to kickstart and similarly drastic change in computing as moving from a line based OS to a GUI.

    Again, no change in "Computing" there. You're talking about usability once again. Line based or GUI based, it was all about taking input, processing it, storing the resulting data or outputting it. Be it with printf() statements or XCreateWindow() and then drawing to it.

    The concept of computing is the same in both line based or GUI based interface. The output mechanism is different, the input device is different.

    In this case, "input is not input": a GUI opened up computers to more than just programmers

    You have not proven your hypothesis of "input is not input". It very much is. Clicking and typing are both types of input. I challenge you to prove otherwise.

    but increasingly I think the computer is moving away from the idea of a desktop PC.

    The computer has never been so intimate with Desktop PCs. Every desktop PC is a computer, not every computer is a desktop PC. Again, last 50 years of computing has seen tremendous boost in computer usage in about everything. The desktop PC has been one small segment of computer usage and of the very large computing industry. Embedded systems is another. Mainframe systems are still very much alive. Thin client computing is an idea of the 70s that saw a come back in the 90s with Sun's push ("The network is the computer"). Today, it's all about "mobile" devices, which are a type of embedded system.

    I think you're just very ignorant (not meant as an insult, just a casual observation based on your replies) of what computing and computers actually are that you see a "new segment" as a massive paradigm shift. There is no shift. Again :

    Input. Process. Output. Store.

    There is no more to it than that and until you change this very simple definition, you have not shifted any paradigms in computing.





    wallpaper music notes. music wallpapers for desktop.
  • music wallpapers for desktop.



  • Lord Blackadder
    Aug 7, 12:31 PM
    I think the Volt is a technological dead-end given the steep US$41,000 price and the fact your car is lugging around a big bank of batteries as deadweight.

    <snip>

    There are rumors that a new generation of Euro 6-compliant turbodiesels being developed at Volkswagen, Mercedes-Benz and BMW will likely be offered in the USA as early as the 2012 calendar year.

    I agree. People are so eager to move on to alternative energy sources they are trying to skip the intermediate step - which is to make all internal combustion engines as efficient as possible so out global petroleum use can be stretched as far as possible.

    I'm excited about the large-scale introduction of diesel passenger cars into the US - by the time I'm ready to buy my next car I should be able to choose from new diesels by VW, Volvo, Merc, BMW, Alfa Romeo, possibly Fiat, and the usual Japanese suspects. The Big Three will hopefully follow along with this as well.

    Europe was forced to explore the benefits of diesel cars 40-50 years ago. The USA is only now beginning to face the same stark reality that fuel is scarce, expensive, and getting more expensive by the day.





    wallpaper music notes. wallpaper music notes. music. Butters. Aug 11, 11:28 AM. Ill only buy it if stupid little spoilt english kids dont buy it, i dont mean posh english kids but
  • wallpaper music notes. music. Butters. Aug 11, 11:28 AM. Ill only buy it if stupid little spoilt english kids dont buy it, i dont mean posh english kids but



  • SuperCachetes
    Apr 17, 12:30 PM
    They're not in the records?

    Come on, guy. Does it really matter if somebody were gay? I thought people of a liberal mindset are supposed to be "colorblind" or what have you, yet all of a sudden their sexuality, which has nothing to do with their achievements, should be made an important part of history?

    How hypocritical.

    Treating people equally isn't mutually exclusive of acknowledging what makes us unique. You seem incapable of either. Good luck with that, guy.





    wallpaper music notes. music notes wallpaper.
  • music notes wallpaper.



  • toolioiep
    Apr 10, 03:07 PM
    Just curious, why three televisions instead of just one big projector?

    Fair question - mostly for the flexibility of watching multiple channels and/or playing PS3 while watching multiple channels.

    Plus - given the size of the room it would be difficult to achieve an ideal viewing distance for anything bigger than 50".





    Malcster
    Sep 12, 04:17 AM
    I thought it was 5pm?

    would be but were on BST (GMT+1) matey.





    inket
    Apr 13, 02:54 PM
    Seriously ? You are comparing Windows' networking to that of OS X ? Huge difference.

    How many menus do you have to go through to share a folder ? Change an IP address ? Change networks order ?

    Can you even change interfaces (or "service") order ? I like my Mac to use Ethernet for Internet when I'm connected to both Ethernet and Wifi. Can Windows do that ?

    Can you set up "Locations" ? No, not that stupid "Home, Work, Public" wannabe-secure popup-everytime BS.

    Not even going to talk about system-wide proxies. Those that Windows apps ignore all the time.

    Windows PCs with enabled File Sharing (or whatever they call it, that new confusing Homegroup with a code or password or something) show up in Finder's sidebar. "It just works".

    As for low transfer speeds, that could've been Windows' fault. I had the same; couldn't copy files to a friend's laptop at higher rates than 250KB/s and restarting Windows fixed it.





    Aeolius
    Oct 14, 10:17 AM
    ...it's time to move forward and discover the "future" that we all used to dream about. Floating cars, modern structures...





    hulugu
    May 5, 02:06 PM
    ...A doctor has no way of knowing the circumstances of somebody's homelife--and since there are tens of millions of homes I submit that there is no "One size fits all" to allow some outsider's judgement. He is no expert on firearms use or safety, absent being a "gunny" himself....

    Maybe it's just my doctor, but they tend to ask what would otherwise be rude questions.

    Do you smoke?
    What did you have for dinner last night?
    Have you had unprotected sex?
    What drugs�legal or illegal�have you used in the past six months?

    So, to me a question about firearms in the home seems perfectly within the scope of evaluating risks, and more probably, helping to provide information for parents.

    ...Both should be perfectly legal for the physician to ask about, but common sense and general courtesy would suggest that the physician should stick to more physiology related questioning.

    I disagree, in the case of a farm, knowing this can help the doctor to ask about exposure to organophosphates or ringworm. The more information has, generally, the better the doctor's ability to assess care.

    Doctors shouldn't ask these questions to be busybodies, but to make good decisions and provide care.





    arn
    Jan 5, 10:31 PM
    I am not sure whether or not this has been suggested, but is it not possible for someone in the audience (macrumors.com) to set up a video or audio feed?

    It's been discussed in this thread:

    http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=265739

    It's best summed up here:


    It would be nice, but there are significant hurdles with streaming when you scale up to the volumes that a public keynote stream would attract. There are very few organisations with the infrastructure to serve large numbers of simultaneous streams, and even with donated bandwidth you then have the logistical problem of sending the feed from the source to multiple distribution points.
    ......
    Oh it's definitely possible, but really there's only one company that could realistically cope with the traffic - Akamai - and even they would likely have problems. 150,000 people streaming 300kbit video would be about 44 Gbit/sec, which would be about 10-15&#37; of Akamai's entire global bandwidth usage and 50% of their streams. Even audio would be 10 Gbit/sec for a 64 kbit stream.


    Basically, serving up simultanous traffic for a live feed is very resource intensive. It's a very different thing to serve 100,000 people in a day vs 100,000 at the same time.

    We're incorporating near-real time photos in this year's MacRumors coverage... so it shuold be pretty enjoyable.... barring any unforseen circumstances. :)

    arn



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