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Show Notes > Show 460

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January 15, 2009, at 10:05 AM by James -
Changed lines 173-174 from:

Another option is from [http://www.rodemic.com/|RODE]], they make a great mic called the Podcaster.

to:

Another option is from RODE, they make a great mic called the Podcaster.

January 15, 2009, at 10:05 AM by James -
Changed lines 111-116 from:

There is a hard drive password which can be more secure. But a BIOS password is far from secure. Newer laptops like Lenovo are being sold with better hard drive encryption.

Try TruCrypt which will encrypt your drive every time you log off so no one can get to the data. Great for USB keys as well.

Another option is The Iron Key which will lock up your data by pulling the USB flash drive out.

to:

There is a hard drive password which can be more secure. But a BIOS password is far from secure. Newer laptops like Lenovo are being sold with better hard drive encryption.

Try TruCrypt which will encrypt your drive every time you log off so no one can get to the data. Great for USB keys as well.

Another option is The Iron Key which will lock up your data by pulling the USB flash drive out.

Changed lines 123-126 from:

Chances are, the current configuration is beyond what it was designed for and as such, he’s only getting the front end.Get an AV Receiver. Denon makes a great mid-priced receiver. Look for one with Dolby, DTSs and even THX. That way you can hook your TV audio inputs into the AV receiver for decoding the 5.1 surround audio and send it to the proper speakers. Onkyo is another good brand. But regardless, you’re looking at dropping a good grand on a proper system to handle it.

Check out Ultimate AV Mag and its buyer’s guide for more ideas.

to:

Chances are, the current configuration is beyond what it was designed for and as such, he’s only getting the front end.Get an AV Receiver. Denon makes a great mid-priced receiver. Look for one with Dolby, DTSs and even THX. That way you can hook your TV audio inputs into the AV receiver for decoding the 5.1 surround audio and send it to the proper speakers. Onkyo is another good brand. But regardless, you’re looking at dropping a good grand on a proper system to handle it.

Check out Ultimate AV Mag and its buyer’s guide for more ideas.

Changed lines 129-130 from:

That’s just about right for a 42″ set. Key is where you’re going to put it. In a darkened room or an all purpose room? If Dark, an LCD is best because it’s brighter and gives good display. Vizio is very good, as is Olevia. Both are lower cost but high performance HDTVs. Worth taking a look at.

to:

That’s just about right for a 42″ set. Key is where you’re going to put it. In a darkened room or an all purpose room? If Dark, an LCD is best because it’s brighter and gives good display. Vizio is very good, as is Olevia. Both are lower cost but high performance HDTVs. Worth taking a look at.

Changed lines 135-136 from:

Look for Steve to announce the iPhone vs. 2.0 at the Worldwide Developers Conference in June. Rumor is that AT&T may subsidize the iPhone price down $200. And the memo to employees taking no vacations is for June 9–18th. So that’s a clue.

to:

Look for Steve to announce the iPhone vs. 2.0 at the Worldwide Developers Conference in June. Rumor is that AT&T may subsidize the iPhone price down $200. And the memo to employees taking no vacations is for June 9–18th. So that’s a clue.

Changed lines 145-146 from:

There are programs out there that can read the iPod, copy the stuff off. SciFi HiFi makes one called PodWorks. Best for copying your iPod’s data off before you reinitialize it for the Mac.

to:

There are programs out there that can read the iPod, copy the stuff off. SciFi HiFi makes one called PodWorks. Best for copying your iPod’s data off before you reinitialize it for the Mac.

Changed lines 153-154 from:

YOU BET! Dell offers one for around there as well. It’s a good size. Take a good look, verify the quality and go for it!

to:

YOU BET! Dell offers one for around there as well. It’s a good size. Take a good look, verify the quality and go for it!

Changed lines 165-166 from:

Go to support.microsoft.com and look for tech note #308421. Follow the steps, and you will re-own your files again.

to:

Go to support.microsoft.com and look for tech note #308421. Follow the steps, and you will re-own your files again.

Changed lines 169-176 from:

There’s a company called BLUE which makes very fancy professional microphones. But they also got into the affordable USB microphone’s early on. Blue’s Snowball is about $120, but Leo isn’t too thrilled with it. Doesn’t have “alot of headroom.” Breaks up alot.

But Leo really likes their Blue Snowflake. Very cute with a pro-like mesh screen that can either sit on a stand of hang from the laptop. Cost is $60.

Another option is from [http://www.rodemic.com/ | RODE]], they make a great mic called the Podcaster.

M-Audio makes a good one for about $150.

to:

There’s a company called BLUE which makes very fancy professional microphones. But they also got into the affordable USB microphone’s early on. Blue’s Snowball is about $120, but Leo isn’t too thrilled with it. Doesn’t have “alot of headroom.” Breaks up alot.

But Leo really likes their Blue Snowflake. Very cute with a pro-like mesh screen that can either sit on a stand of hang from the laptop. Cost is $60.

Another option is from [http://www.rodemic.com/|RODE]], they make a great mic called the Podcaster.

M-Audio makes a good one for about $150.

Changed lines 179-182 from:

Computers don’t output to the hardware. Best bet is an ATI All in Wonder card. It has both VGA and RCA so you can output to both computer and TV set. There are probably VGA to RCA converters, but they’re not cheap - about $100. They will allow you to split the output.

His website is called SKYLINE TIMES. He’s doing news programming on the net. This is the future of broadcasting.

to:

Computers don’t output to the hardware. Best bet is an ATI All in Wonder card. It has both VGA and RCA so you can output to both computer and TV set. There are probably VGA to RCA converters, but they’re not cheap - about $100. They will allow you to split the output.

His website is called SKYLINE TIMES. He’s doing news programming on the net. This is the future of broadcasting.

Changed lines 191-192 from:

The other way is virtual machine. VMWare and Parallels are the best for this. Leo uses Parallels. And as long as you aren’t doing gaming, today’s computers are powerful enough to run both OSs virtually. The negative is that you need a LOT of RAM, at least 2 GB, but 4GB is preferred. And you’ll need to use FAT32 if you want both OS read the files.

to:

The other way is virtual machine. VMWare and Parallels are the best for this. Leo uses Parallels. And as long as you aren’t doing gaming, today’s computers are powerful enough to run both OSs virtually. The negative is that you need a LOT of RAM, at least 2 GB, but 4GB is preferred. And you’ll need to use FAT32 if you want both OS read the files.

September 11, 2008, at 09:41 PM by Leo -
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(:table align=center border=1 width=50%:)

to:

(:table align=center border=1 width=60%:)

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(:cellnr align=center:)
Posted one week after broadcast…

to:

(:cellnr align=center width=50% :)
64kbps MP3
(:cell align=center width=50% :)
16kbps MP3

May 26, 2008, at 08:56 AM by Leo -
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Ron Rossberg - Early Adopters

to:

Ron Rosberg - Early Adopters

Changed lines 75-76 from:

Chris Marquart, Tips from the Top Floor Podcast, talking Photography tips.

to:

Chris Marquardt, Tips from the Top Floor Podcast, talking Photography tips.

May 26, 2008, at 08:55 AM by Leo -
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http://leoville.com/images/leolaportesig.gif
May 26, 2008, at 08:54 AM by Leo -
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Starting with this show we welcome a new member to Team Tech Guy. James DeRuvo will be doing the show notes from now on. Sascha got a job working for O2 - the big cell phone carrier in Britain so he’s moving on.

James was the long time producer for Marc and Mark on KABC and knows computers and talk radio. I’m really glad to have him on the team, and he’ll be an important part of the Tech Guy web site as it evolves.

May 26, 2008, at 08:40 AM by Leo -
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http://www.marinetrack.com/eventviewer/images/roz3.jpg

May 26, 2008, at 08:37 AM by Leo -
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Follow her on Twittr at @RozSavage. We’ll be checking in with her from time to time, as this is a tech story since she’ll be Twittring while she rows her high tech row boat, which is manned with a satellite phone, two mac computers, GPS navigation & tracker, five iPods (with 300 book mp3 courtesy of Leo) and three video cameras which she will use to update everyone on her journey. And all powered by solar panels on her boat. Her trip will take her to the Hawaiian Islands, then to Fiji, then to Australia. If she succeeds, she’ll be the first female rower to cross the pacific with no support craft.

to:

Follow her on Twiiter or via her web site. Check out the marine tracker on her blog where you can follow her progress in real time.

We’ll be checking in with her from time to time, as this is a tech story since she’ll be Twittering while she rows her high tech row boat, which is manned with a satellite phone, two mac computers, GPS navigation & tracker, five iPods (with 300 book mp3 courtesy of Leo) and three video cameras which she will use to update everyone on her journey. And all powered by solar panels on her boat. Her trip will take her to the Hawaiian Islands, then to Fiji, then to Australia. If she succeeds, she’ll be the first female rower to cross the pacific with no support craft.

May 26, 2008, at 08:35 AM by Leo -
Changed lines 26-27 from:

In honor of the great Douglas Adams, author of the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Towel Day was created to honor the most useful item to take while you travel!

to:

In honor of the great Douglas Adams, author of the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Towel Day was created to honor the most useful item to take while you travel!

Changed lines 30-31 from:

Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.

to:

Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.

Changed lines 35-36 from:

Although space is wide open, there’s still adventure here on earth. Leo’s friend Roz Savage began her quest to row across the Pacific, which left underneath the Golden Gate Bridge last night at midnight. This is her second trip, and it’s not an easy go of it. The hardest part is actually rowing away from the Golden Gate Bridge!

to:

Although space is wide open, there’s still adventure here on earth. Leo’s friend Roz Savage began her quest to row across the Pacific, which left underneath the Golden Gate Bridge last night at midnight. This is her second trip, and it’s not an easy go of it. The hardest part is actually rowing away from the Golden Gate Bridge!

May 26, 2008, at 08:34 AM by Leo -
Added lines 24-31:

Today is TOWEL DAY!

In honor of the great Douglas Adams, author of the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Towel Day was created to honor the most useful item to take while you travel!

NASAs Phoenix Probe to land on Mars

Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.

Changed lines 33-82 from:
to:

Roz Savage begins a solo journey across the Pacific in a rowboat.

Although space is wide open, there’s still adventure here on earth. Leo’s friend Roz Savage began her quest to row across the Pacific, which left underneath the Golden Gate Bridge last night at midnight. This is her second trip, and it’s not an easy go of it. The hardest part is actually rowing away from the Golden Gate Bridge!

Follow her on Twittr at @RozSavage. We’ll be checking in with her from time to time, as this is a tech story since she’ll be Twittring while she rows her high tech row boat, which is manned with a satellite phone, two mac computers, GPS navigation & tracker, five iPods (with 300 book mp3 courtesy of Leo) and three video cameras which she will use to update everyone on her journey. And all powered by solar panels on her boat. Her trip will take her to the Hawaiian Islands, then to Fiji, then to Australia. If she succeeds, she’ll be the first female rower to cross the pacific with no support craft.

Guests

Dick Debartolo, The Giz Wiz

Dick is aboard the Queen Mary 2

  • The most high tech ship afloat, the Queen Mary 2 is 23 stories high and 1300 feet long. It’s stacked with WiFi, Satellite Internet Access (which is rather slow for things like Skype, Twittr, etc). Cost is about .50 a minute, but packages are available to make that cost a lot cheaper.

The one problem though is limited outlets, so if you bring a lot of gadgets to charge, you need something like Outlets to Go or the Belkin Freedom Plug to make sure all your tech gets the juice.

The Queen also comes with an acoustic canon, which is used to warn off any ship that comes too close. It’s an acoustic weapon that targets any ship and scares them off by barraging it with non lethal, but targeted sound waves.

Leo remembers crossing the Atlantic on the original Queen Mary, as well as the USS United States (which is rusting away in Philadelphia).

Ron Rossberg - Early Adopters

  • Want movies streamed to your television in minutes try the Roku Netflix Player. Price $99.95

You’ll need a Netflix account for it, however. Fantastic quality. No stuttering, no buffering. Almost like onDemand.

  • Here’s a great review of the Roku Netflix Player
  • Verizon’s Blackberry Curve #8330 with EVDO High Speed Broadband. Online Price w/2 Year Contract $199.00 plus $50.00 mail in Rebate.
  • Don’t Overpay for Audio/Video (HDMI) Cables Check Out MonoPrice
  • Best Noise Cancelling Bluetooth Headsets the NEW Jawbone Skin MSRP $130.00

Chris Marquart, Tips from the Top Floor Podcast, talking Photography tips.

Tips for improving your photography …

  • Read the camera manual. You’ll learn all your camera is capable of.
  • Get CLOSER. Try to walk a few steps close and pick out a detail to focus on. You’ll remove unwanted clutter from the picture. Experiment by taking 10 pictures, each one closer, and you’ll see the difference.
  • Pay attention to the foreground. Joining things up may not be a good idea. Branches growing into someone’s ear, a horizontal line coming into the head, etc. Look for things that stand out and take away from the photo.
  • Learn exposure compensation. Your camera is easily fooled by ambient light. Using exposure compensation will help save a picture by adding a few “f stops” to brighten a picture up when the automatic settings want to stop it up too much because of strong ambient light.
  • Use a lens hood. It will prevent light from bouncing around the lens and take away a picture’s contrast. It also protects the lens elements in inclement weather.
  • Beware of backlighting. If you place your subject with their back to the light, then fill the front with equal light in order to balance it. Other wise the backlight will cause overexposure. You can also use reflected light to take make some beautiful lighting effects.
  • Don’t use the red-eye reduction flash. It will give your subject warning of a photo and you end up with “photo face,” which isn’t too natural.

Two more of Chris’ workshops are in Portland, Mn (Studio Shooting), and in Nashville, TN, Chris will be teaching about Concert Photography. Check out at Discoverthetopfloor.com for more information and how to register for these classes.


Changed lines 85-106 from:
to:

Q Carol from Los Angeles - her nephew wants to build a website, but he’s too young for MySpace.

Leo thinks it’s a great idea for a kid to have a website. They learn alot about typing, writing, and it’ll be surprising at the skills they acquire.. Give them a venue and let them go. Try a hosted journal from Live Journal or Blogger.

Another idea is VOX. Easy to upload pictures and movies, blog, you name it. Give him a Flip camera to make his own videos, he’ll love it. And the comments section of VOX is rigorously controlled and limited only to Vox members, and there’s privacy controls (which means he can limit to friends and/or family). Easy to use and the best part is, it’s FREE!

Q Gary in Gary, IN - Got the dreaded “blue screen of death” after unplugging his wife’s Sansa MP3 player.

Chances are, the Sansa’s driver is crashing the system. Reboot into “safe mode” (usually by pressing F8 when starting the computer). It’ll go into a boot menu. Choose Safe Mode and it will load the minimum set of drivers just to get the OS started. Once up, uninstall the Sansa stuff and reboot normally. Then download the latest software and drivers from the Sansa website.

If you can’t get into safe mode, it’s just coincidental and you may have a worse problem like a failing hard drive.

Q Ron from Milpitas, CA - Put a password in the BIOS. Is that safe?

No. Most PCs have back doors in the BIOS. It’s as easy as googling the computer’s manufacturer plus backdoor and find out how to hack it. The BIOS password only protects against the casual hacker, not the serious ones.

There is a hard drive password which can be more secure. But a BIOS password is far from secure. Newer laptops like Lenovo are being sold with better hard drive encryption.

Try TruCrypt which will encrypt your drive every time you log off so no one can get to the data. Great for USB keys as well.

Another option is The Iron Key which will lock up your data by pulling the USB flash drive out.

Added lines 111-136:

Q Nate from Minneapolis, MN, on Skype - His stereo system connects to speakers wired all over the house. But the cheap surround sound system isn’t wired for the bottom room. Suggestions?

Chances are, the current configuration is beyond what it was designed for and as such, he’s only getting the front end.Get an AV Receiver. Denon makes a great mid-priced receiver. Look for one with Dolby, DTSs and even THX. That way you can hook your TV audio inputs into the AV receiver for decoding the 5.1 surround audio and send it to the proper speakers. Onkyo is another good brand. But regardless, you’re looking at dropping a good grand on a proper system to handle it.

Check out Ultimate AV Mag and its buyer’s guide for more ideas.

Q Chuck in Mobile, AL - in the market for a 42″ HD TV. Budget $1100

That’s just about right for a 42″ set. Key is where you’re going to put it. In a darkened room or an all purpose room? If Dark, an LCD is best because it’s brighter and gives good display. Vizio is very good, as is Olevia. Both are lower cost but high performance HDTVs. Worth taking a look at.

Q Jason in the Chat Room wants to hear of the latest iPhone release rumors.

Good luck, Steve Jobs is way too good at plugging leaks coming out of Cupertino. Going even so far as to fire whole groups of people that he’s fed disinformation to and then waited to see if anyone spills the beans. And if one does, they all go. So anything coming out is pure speculation.

Look for Steve to announce the iPhone vs. 2.0 at the Worldwide Developers Conference in June. Rumor is that AT&T may subsidize the iPhone price down $200. And the memo to employees taking no vacations is for June 9–18th. So that’s a clue.

But the big news is that in addition to a newer high speed data network, there may be a MacTablet (this rumor never dies). A few weeks and we’ll know.

Q Mindy in Tustin, CA - Computer’s CD player is hanging up through Windows Media Player.

The CD doesn’t even show up in My Computer. Burned CD. Plays in the car. It’s possible that your PC’s disc drive is aligned slightly differently. Chances are it’s broken or, more likely, the cable isn’t properly “seated” or fallen from the drive or motherboard. The good news is, it’s an easy fix. Turn off the PC and unplug it. Open the computer and check the connections. If they’re fine, replace the CD drive. Take it back to the maker of the computer and ask for a replacement drive. But you can do it yourself. Drives are cheap.

Q Max from Palos Verdes, CA - His 3rd Generation iPod was geared for PC. Can’t synch it with his new mac without wiping his iPod completely.

There are programs out there that can read the iPod, copy the stuff off. SciFi HiFi makes one called PodWorks. Best for copying your iPod’s data off before you reinitialize it for the Mac.

Added lines 141-184:

Q Dillon in the Chat Room is wondering if $239 is a good price for a 22″ Widescreen monitor.

YOU BET! Dell offers one for around there as well. It’s a good size. Take a good look, verify the quality and go for it!

Q David from Venice, CA - Wants to know about burning a DVD-RW in Adobe Premiere Pro, but the image is really poor.

Wow. David’s going high end with Premiere Pro. He’s tried using AVI, MPEG and so far not happy with it. Using NERO to burn. Just like the days of CD, you can burn either a “data” disc or a real DVD, which works with a specific format that stores information in VOB (video object) files. So make sure you’re not burning a Data disk. Encode your video files in MPEG2 at the proper frame rate and aspect ratio. Your best results is to encode in MPEG2 through Premiere. Then Nero will just accept it and burn it, bypassing it’s own encoding utility. In fact, Premiere will burn the DVD and that may be the best way to go.

Also, make sure it’s deinterlaced. Interlacing really screws up in a progressive scan DVD. It was invented in the 60s when color was just coming out but we had small bandwidth available for broadcast.

Q Dan from Chesapeake, VA - His secondary HP PC is running XP. He had to use the recovery disks. His second drive can’t be accessed!

You don’t have the rights since you restored the PC. You need to “Take Ownership> of the files on your secondary drive.

Go to support.microsoft.com and look for tech note #308421. Follow the steps, and you will re-own your files again.

Q Sandy, in the Chat Room - wants an affordable podcasting microphone. Sub $100.

There’s a company called BLUE which makes very fancy professional microphones. But they also got into the affordable USB microphone’s early on. Blue’s Snowball is about $120, but Leo isn’t too thrilled with it. Doesn’t have “alot of headroom.” Breaks up alot.

But Leo really likes their Blue Snowflake. Very cute with a pro-like mesh screen that can either sit on a stand of hang from the laptop. Cost is $60.

Another option is from [http://www.rodemic.com/ | RODE]], they make a great mic called the Podcaster.

M-Audio makes a good one for about $150.

Q Danny from Raleigh, NC - wants to create a teleprompter using a monitor.

Computers don’t output to the hardware. Best bet is an ATI All in Wonder card. It has both VGA and RCA so you can output to both computer and TV set. There are probably VGA to RCA converters, but they’re not cheap - about $100. They will allow you to split the output.

His website is called SKYLINE TIMES. He’s doing news programming on the net. This is the future of broadcasting.

Q Ryan from Malibu - General Electric is coming out with a holographic DVD recorder that will fit 100 movies on a single disc!

Leo thinks this is very interesting, but he’s skeptical. G.E. has a habit of announcing things for the press coverage. Even though holographic discs would be 3D discs and the capacity potential is amazing, it’ll also be VERY expensive. The technology is in it’s infancy. So the chances are that this won’t happen for a long time, if at all.

Q Dave in Los Angeles - lookin’ to get a MAC Book and wants to know about how to have both OSs run.

There are two ways. Use a “dual boot,” which is built into Apple’s Leopard OS that let’s you install both OS’s and you get a boot menu that let’s you choose. Downside is you have to reboot to move to the other O.S.

The other way is virtual machine. VMWare and Parallels are the best for this. Leo uses Parallels. And as long as you aren’t doing gaming, today’s computers are powerful enough to run both OSs virtually. The negative is that you need a LOT of RAM, at least 2 GB, but 4GB is preferred. And you’ll need to use FAT32 if you want both OS read the files.

That’s it for this week!

May 26, 2008, at 01:19 AM by James -
May 26, 2008, at 01:19 AM by James -
Changed lines 133-135 from:

Q Max from

to:

Q Max from Palos Verdes, CA - His 3rd Generation iPod was geared for PC. Can’t synch it with his new mac without wiping his iPod completely.

There are programs out there that can read the iPod, copy the stuff off. SciFi HiFi makes one called PodWorks. Best for copying your iPod’s data off before you reinitialize it for the Mac.

May 26, 2008, at 01:15 AM by James -
Changed lines 123-126 from:

Good luck, Steve Jobs is way too good at plugging leaks in Cupertino. Going even so far as to fire whole groups of people that he’s fed disinformation to and then waited to see if anyone spills the beans. And if one does, they all go. So anything coming out is pure speculation.

Look for Steve to announce the iPhone vs. 2.0 at the Worldwide Developers Conference in June. Rumor is that AT&T may subsidize the iPhone price down $200. And the memo to employees taking no vacations is for June 9–18th. So that’s a clue.

to:

Good luck, Steve Jobs is way too good at plugging leaks coming out of Cupertino. Going even so far as to fire whole groups of people that he’s fed disinformation to and then waited to see if anyone spills the beans. And if one does, they all go. So anything coming out is pure speculation.

Look for Steve to announce the iPhone vs. 2.0 at the Worldwide Developers Conference in June. Rumor is that AT&T may subsidize the iPhone price down $200. And the memo to employees taking no vacations is for June 9–18th. So that’s a clue.

Changed lines 129-131 from:

Q

to:

Q Mindy in Tustin, CA - Computer’s CD player is hanging up through Windows Media Player.

The CD doesn’t even show up in My Computer. Burned CD. Plays in the car. It’s possible that your PC’s disc drive is aligned slightly differently. Chances are it’s broken or, more likely, the cable isn’t properly “seated” or fallen from the drive or motherboard. The good news is, it’s an easy fix. Turn off the PC and unplug it. Open the computer and check the connections. If they’re fine, replace the CD drive. Take it back to the maker of the computer and ask for a replacement drive. But you can do it yourself. Drives are cheap.

Q Max from

Changed lines 158-159 from:

There’s a company called BLUE which makes very fancy professional microphones. But they also got into the affordable USB microphone’s early on. Blue’s Snowball is about $120, but Leo isn’t too thrilled with it.

to:

There’s a company called BLUE which makes very fancy professional microphones. But they also got into the affordable USB microphone’s early on. Blue’s Snowball is about $120, but Leo isn’t too thrilled with it. Doesn’t have “alot of headroom.” Breaks up alot.

Changed lines 166-169 from:

Q [fill this in later] - wants to create a teleprompter using a monitor.

Computers don’t output to the hardware. Best bet is an ATI All in Wonder card. It has both VGA and RCA so you can output to both computer and TV set. There are probably VGA to RCA converters, but they’re not cheap - about $100. They will allow you to split the output.

to:

Q Danny from Raleigh, NC - wants to create a teleprompter using a monitor.

Computers don’t output to the hardware. Best bet is an ATI All in Wonder card. It has both VGA and RCA so you can output to both computer and TV set. There are probably VGA to RCA converters, but they’re not cheap - about $100. They will allow you to split the output.

Deleted lines 171-173:

James recommends [[ISBN:B000UUBP0O | Adobe’s
Visual Communicator 3]]. It has a software driven teleprompter and virtual sets that work in one seamless interface. And it handles mutiple camera input, gives quality news style graphics as well.

Changed lines 182-183 from:
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That’s it for this week!

May 26, 2008, at 12:57 AM by James -
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Tips for improving your photograpy …

to:

Tips for improving your photography …

Changed lines 79-80 from:

Two more of Chris’ workshops are in Portland, Mn (Studio Shooting), and in Nashville, TN, Chris will be teaching about Concert Photography. Check out at [[http://www.Discoverthetopfloor.com | Discoverthetopfloor.com] for more information and how to register for these classes.

to:

Two more of Chris’ workshops are in Portland, Mn (Studio Shooting), and in Nashville, TN, Chris will be teaching about Concert Photography. Check out at Discoverthetopfloor.com for more information and how to register for these classes.

Changed lines 160-161 from:

M-Audio makes a good one for about $150.

to:

M-Audio makes a good one for about $150.

Changed line 168 from:

James recommends [[http://www.adobe.com/products/visualcommunicator/ | Adobe’s

to:

James recommends [[ISBN:B000UUBP0O | Adobe’s

Added lines 170-182:

Q Ryan from Malibu - General Electric is coming out with a holographic DVD recorder that will fit 100 movies on a single disc!

Leo thinks this is very interesting, but he’s skeptical. G.E. has a habit of announcing things for the press coverage. Even though holographic discs would be 3D discs and the capacity potential is amazing, it’ll also be VERY expensive. The technology is in it’s infancy. So the chances are that this won’t happen for a long time, if at all.

Q Dave in Los Angeles - lookin’ to get a MAC Book and wants to know about how to have both OSs run.

There are two ways. Use a “dual boot,” which is built into Apple’s Leopard OS that let’s you install both OS’s and you get a boot menu that let’s you choose. Downside is you have to reboot to move to the other O.S.

The other way is virtual machine. VMWare and Parallels are the best for this. Leo uses Parallels. And as long as you aren’t doing gaming, today’s computers are powerful enough to run both OSs virtually. The negative is that you need a LOT of RAM, at least 2 GB, but 4GB is preferred. And you’ll need to use FAT32 if you want both OS read the files.

May 26, 2008, at 12:47 AM by James -
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  • Beware of backlighting. If you place your subject with their back to the light, then fill the front with equal light in order to balance it. Other wise the backlight will cause overexposure. You can also use reflected light to take make some beautiful lighting effects.
  • Don’t use the red-eye reduction flash. It will give your subject warning of a photo and you end up with “photo face,” which isn’t too natural.

Two more of Chris’ workshops are in Portland, Mn (Studio Shooting), and in Nashville, TN, Chris will be teaching about Concert Photography. Check out at [[http://www.Discoverthetopfloor.com | Discoverthetopfloor.com] for more information and how to register for these classes.

May 26, 2008, at 12:41 AM by James -
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Chris Marquart, Tips from the Top Floor Podcast, talking Photography tips.

Tips for improving your photograpy …

  • Read the camera manual. You’ll learn all your camera is capable of.
  • Get CLOSER. Try to walk a few steps close and pick out a detail to focus on. You’ll remove unwanted clutter from the picture. Experiment by taking 10 pictures, each one closer, and you’ll see the difference.
  • Pay attention to the foreground. Joining things up may not be a good idea. Branches growing into someone’s ear, a horizontal line coming into the head, etc. Look for things that stand out and take away from the photo.
  • Learn exposure compensation. Your camera is easily fooled by ambient light. Using exposure compensation will help save a picture by adding a few “f stops” to brighten a picture up when the automatic settings want to stop it up too much because of strong ambient light.
  • Use a lens hood. It will prevent light from bouncing around the lens and take away a picture’s contrast. It also protects the lens elements in inclement weather.
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RODE makes a great mic called the Podcaster.

Don’t forget the Blue Snowflake. Very cute with a pro-like mesh screen that can either sit on a stand of hang from the laptop. Cost is $60.

to:

But Leo really likes their Blue Snowflake. Very cute with a pro-like mesh screen that can either sit on a stand of hang from the laptop. Cost is $60.

Another option is from [http://www.rodemic.com/ | RODE]], they make a great mic called the Podcaster.

May 26, 2008, at 12:31 AM by James -
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Q Sandy, in the Chat Room - wants an affordable podcasting microphone. Sub $100.

There’s a company called BLUE which makes very fancy professional microphones. But they also got into the affordable USB microphone’s early on. Blue’s Snowball is about $120, but Leo isn’t too thrilled with it.

RODE makes a great mic called the Podcaster.

Don’t forget the Blue Snowflake. Very cute with a pro-like mesh screen that can either sit on a stand of hang from the laptop. Cost is $60.

M-Audio makes a good one for about $150.

Q [fill this in later] - wants to create a teleprompter using a monitor.

Computers don’t output to the hardware. Best bet is an ATI All in Wonder card. It has both VGA and RCA so you can output to both computer and TV set. There are probably VGA to RCA converters, but they’re not cheap - about $100. They will allow you to split the output.

His website is called SKYLINE TIMES. He’s doing news programming on the net. This is the future of broadcasting.

James recommends [[http://www.adobe.com/products/visualcommunicator/ | Adobe’s
Visual Communicator 3]]. It has a software driven teleprompter and virtual sets that work in one seamless interface. And it handles mutiple camera input, gives quality news style graphics as well.

May 26, 2008, at 12:20 AM by James -
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Q Dillon in the Chat Room is wondering if $239 is a good price for a 22″ Widescreen monitor. YOU BET! Dell offers one for around there as well. It’s a good size. Take a good look, verify the quality and go for it!

to:

Q Dillon in the Chat Room is wondering if $239 is a good price for a 22″ Widescreen monitor.

YOU BET! Dell offers one for around there as well. It’s a good size. Take a good look, verify the quality and go for it!

May 26, 2008, at 12:18 AM by James -
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Go to support.microsoft.com and look for tech note #308421. Follow the steps, and you will reown your files again.

to:

Go to support.microsoft.com and look for tech note #308421. Follow the steps, and you will re-own your files again.

May 26, 2008, at 12:16 AM by James -
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Q Dan from Chesapeake, VA - His secondary HP PC is running XP. He had to use the recovery disks. His second drive can’t be accessed!

You don’t have the rights since you restored the PC. You need to “Take Ownership> of the files on your secondary drive.

Go to support.microsoft.com and look for tech note #308421. Follow the steps, and you will reown your files again.

May 26, 2008, at 12:13 AM by James -
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Q Dillon in the Chat Room is wondering if $239 is a good price for a 22″ Widescreen monitor. YOU BET! Dell offers one for around there as well. It’s a good size. Take a good look, verify the quality and go for it!

Q David from Venice, CA - Wants to know about burning a DVD-RW in Adobe Premiere Pro, but the image is really poor.

Wow. David’s going high end with Premiere Pro. He’s tried using AVI, MPEG and so far not happy with it. Using NERO to burn. Just like the days of CD, you can burn either a “data” disc or a real DVD, which works with a specific format that stores information in VOB (video object) files. So make sure you’re not burning a Data disk. Encode your video files in MPEG2 at the proper frame rate and aspect ratio. Your best results is to encode in MPEG2 through Premiere. Then Nero will just accept it and burn it, bypassing it’s own encoding utility. In fact, Premiere will burn the DVD and that may be the best way to go.

Also, make sure it’s deinterlaced. Interlacing really screws up in a progressive scan DVD. It was invented in the 60s when color was just coming out but we had small bandwidth available for broadcast.

May 26, 2008, at 12:02 AM by James -
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You’ll need a Netflix account for it, however.
Fantastic quality. No stuttering, no buffering. Almost like onDemand.

to:

You’ll need a Netflix account for it, however. Fantastic quality. No stuttering, no buffering. Almost like onDemand.

Changed lines 65-66 from:
  • Best Noise Canceling Bluetooth Headsets the NEW Jawbone Skin MSRP $130.00
to:
  • Best Noise Cancelling Bluetooth Headsets the NEW Jawbone Skin MSRP $130.00
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Q

May 26, 2008, at 12:00 AM by James -
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You’ll need a Netflix account for it, however.
Fantastic quality. No stuttering, no buffering. Almost like onDemand.

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  • Verizon’s Blackberry Curve #8330 with EVDO High Speed Broadband. Online Price w/2 Year Contract $199.00 plus $50.00 mail in Rebate.
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  • Verizon’s Blackberry Curve #8330 with EVDO High Speed Broadband. Online Price w/2 Year Contract $199.00 plus $50.00 mail in Rebate
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Leo thinks it’s a great idea for a kid to have a website. They learn alot about typing, writing, and it’ll be surprising at the skills they acquire.. Give them a venue and let them go. Try a hosted journal from Live Journal or [[http://www.blogger.com/ | Blogger].

to:

Leo thinks it’s a great idea for a kid to have a website. They learn alot about typing, writing, and it’ll be surprising at the skills they acquire.. Give them a venue and let them go. Try a hosted journal from Live Journal or Blogger.

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May 25, 2008, at 11:48 PM by James -
May 25, 2008, at 11:48 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Leo thinks it’s a great idea for a kid to have a website. They learn alot about typing, writing, and it’ll be surprising at the skills they acquire.. Give them a venue and let them go. Try a hosted journal from Live Journal or http://www.blogger.com/[[http://www.livejournal.com/Blogger.

to:

Leo thinks it’s a great idea for a kid to have a website. They learn alot about typing, writing, and it’ll be surprising at the skills they acquire.. Give them a venue and let them go. Try a hosted journal from Live Journal or [[http://www.blogger.com/ | Blogger].

May 25, 2008, at 11:47 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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That’s just about right for a 42″ set. Key is where you’re going to put it. In a darkened room or an all purpose room? If Dark, an LCD is best because it’s brighter and gives good display. [http=http://www.vizio.com/ | Vizio]] is very good, as is Olevia. Both are lower cost but high performance HDTVs. Worth taking a look at.

to:

That’s just about right for a 42″ set. Key is where you’re going to put it. In a darkened room or an all purpose room? If Dark, an LCD is best because it’s brighter and gives good display. Vizio is very good, as is Olevia. Both are lower cost but high performance HDTVs. Worth taking a look at.

Changed lines 110-111 from:
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Look for Steve to announce the iPhone vs. 2.0 at the Worldwide Developers Conference in June. Rumor is that AT&T may subsidize the iPhone price down $200. And the memo to employees taking no vacations is for June 9–18th. So that’s a clue.

But the big news is that in addition to a newer high speed data network, there may be a MacTablet (this rumor never dies). A few weeks and we’ll know.

May 25, 2008, at 11:43 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Today is TOWEL DAY!

to:

Today is TOWEL DAY!

Changed lines 104-107 from:

That’s just about right for a 42″ set. Key is where you’re going to put it. In a darkened room or an all purpose room? If Dark, an LCD is best because it’s brighter and gives good display. [http=http://www.vizio.com/ | Vizio]] is very good, as is Olevia. Both are lower cost but high performance HDTVs. Worth taking a look at.

to:

That’s just about right for a 42″ set. Key is where you’re going to put it. In a darkened room or an all purpose room? If Dark, an LCD is best because it’s brighter and gives good display. [http=http://www.vizio.com/ | Vizio]] is very good, as is Olevia. Both are lower cost but high performance HDTVs. Worth taking a look at.

Q Jason in the Chat Room wants to hear of the latest iPhone release rumors.

Good luck, Steve Jobs is way too good at plugging leaks in Cupertino. Going even so far as to fire whole groups of people that he’s fed disinformation to and then waited to see if anyone spills the beans. And if one does, they all go. So anything coming out is pure speculation.

May 25, 2008, at 11:33 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Q Chuck in Mobile, AL - in the market for a 42″ HD TV. Budget $1100

That’s just about right for a 42″ set. Key is where you’re going to put it. In a darkened room or an all purpose room? If Dark, an LCD is best because it’s brighter and gives good display. [http=http://www.vizio.com/ | Vizio]] is very good, as is Olevia. Both are lower cost but high performance HDTVs. Worth taking a look at.

May 25, 2008, at 11:29 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Get an AB Receiver. [[http://www.usa.denon.com/ | Denon makes a great mid-priced receiver. Look for one with Dolby, DTSs and even THX. That way you can hook your TV audio inputs into the AV receiver for decoding the 5.1 surround audio and send it to the proper speakers.

to:

Chances are, the current configuration is beyond what it was designed for and as such, he’s only getting the front end.Get an AV Receiver. Denon makes a great mid-priced receiver. Look for one with Dolby, DTSs and even THX. That way you can hook your TV audio inputs into the AV receiver for decoding the 5.1 surround audio and send it to the proper speakers. Onkyo is another good brand. But regardless, you’re looking at dropping a good grand on a proper system to handle it.

Check out Ultimate AV Mag and its buyer’s guide for more ideas.

May 25, 2008, at 11:27 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Q Carol from Los Angeles - her nephew wants to build a website, but he’s too young for MySpace. What to do?

to:

Q Carol from Los Angeles - her nephew wants to build a website, but he’s too young for MySpace.

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Q Nate from

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Q Nate from Minneapolis, MN, on Skype - His stereo system connects to speakers wired all over the house. But the cheap surround sound system isn’t wired for the bottom room. Suggestions?

Get an AB Receiver. [[http://www.usa.denon.com/ | Denon makes a great mid-priced receiver. Look for one with Dolby, DTSs and even THX. That way you can hook your TV audio inputs into the AV receiver for decoding the 5.1 surround audio and send it to the proper speakers.

May 25, 2008, at 11:22 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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In honor of the great [http://www.douglasadams.com/ | Douglas Adams]], author of the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Towel Day was created to honor the most useful item to take while you travel!

to:

In honor of the great Douglas Adams, author of the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Towel Day was created to honor the most useful item to take while you travel!

May 25, 2008, at 11:22 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Today is TOWEL DAY!

In honor of the great [http://www.douglasadams.com/ | Douglas Adams]], author of the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Towel Day was created to honor the most useful item to take while you travel!

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Q Nate from

May 25, 2008, at 11:12 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Try TruCrypt which will encrypt your drive every time you log off so no one can get to the data.

to:

Try TruCrypt which will encrypt your drive every time you log off so no one can get to the data. Great for USB keys as well.

Another option is The Iron Key which will lock up your data by pulling the USB flash drive out.

May 25, 2008, at 11:10 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Chances are, the Sansa’s driver is crashing the system. Reboot into “safe mode” (usually by pressing F8 when starting the computer). It’ll go into a boot menu. Choose Safe Mode and it will load the minimum set of drivers just to get the OS started. Once up, uninstall the Sansa stuff and reboot normally. Then download the latest software and drivers from the Sansa Site.

to:

Chances are, the Sansa’s driver is crashing the system. Reboot into “safe mode” (usually by pressing F8 when starting the computer). It’ll go into a boot menu. Choose Safe Mode and it will load the minimum set of drivers just to get the OS started. Once up, uninstall the Sansa stuff and reboot normally. Then download the latest software and drivers from the Sansa website.

If you can’t get into safe mode, it’s just coincidental and you may have a worse problem like a failing hard drive.

Q Ron from Milpitas, CA - Put a password in the BIOS. Is that safe?

No. Most PCs have back doors in the BIOS. It’s as easy as googling the computer’s manufacturer plus backdoor and find out how to hack it. The BIOS password only protects against the casual hacker, not the serious ones.

There is a hard drive password which can be more secure. But a BIOS password is far from secure. Newer laptops like Lenovo are being sold with better hard drive encryption.

Try TruCrypt which will encrypt your drive every time you log off so no one can get to the data.

May 25, 2008, at 11:05 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Q Gary in Gary, IN - Got the dreaded “blue screen of death” after unplugging his wife’s MP3 player.

to:

Q Gary in Gary, IN - Got the dreaded “blue screen of death” after unplugging his wife’s Sansa MP3 player.

Chances are, the Sansa’s driver is crashing the system. Reboot into “safe mode” (usually by pressing F8 when starting the computer). It’ll go into a boot menu. Choose Safe Mode and it will load the minimum set of drivers just to get the OS started. Once up, uninstall the Sansa stuff and reboot normally. Then download the latest software and drivers from the Sansa Site.

May 25, 2008, at 11:01 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Q Gary in Gary, IN - His wife has a Sandisk MP3 player and after unplugging it, the computer encountered the dreaded “blue screen of death.”

to:

Q Gary in Gary, IN - Got the dreaded “blue screen of death” after unplugging his wife’s MP3 player.

May 25, 2008, at 11:00 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Dick Debartolo, The Giz Wiz will talk about tech aboard the Queen Mary 2

to:

Dick Debartolo, The Giz Wiz

Dick is aboard the Queen Mary 2

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Ron Rossberg - Early Adopters

to:

Ron Rossberg - Early Adopters

May 25, 2008, at 10:58 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Leo remembers crossing the Atlantic on the original Queen Mary, as well as the USS United States (which is rusting away in Philadelphia).

to:

Leo remembers crossing the Atlantic on the original Queen Mary, as well as the USS United States (which is rusting away in Philadelphia).

May 25, 2008, at 10:56 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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The one problem though is limited outlets, so if you bring a lot of gadgets to charge, you need something like Outlets to Go or the Belkin Freedom Plug to make sure all your tech gets the juice.

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Leo remembers crossing the Atlantic on the original Queen Mary, as well as the USS United States (which is rusting away in Philadelphia).

May 25, 2008, at 10:44 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Dick Debartolo, The Giz Wiz will talk about tech aboard the Queen Mary 2

to:

Dick Debartolo, The Giz Wiz will talk about tech aboard the Queen Mary 2

  • The most high tech ship afloat, the Queen Mary 2 is 23 stories high and 1300 feet long. It’s stacked with WiFi, Satellite Internet Access (which is rather slow for things like Skype, Twittr, etc). Cost is about .50 a minute, but packages are available to make that cost a lot cheaper.

The Queen also comes with an acoustic canon, which is used to warn off any ship that comes too close. It’s an acoustic weapon that targets any ship and scares them off by barraging it with non lethal, but targeted sound waves.

Changed lines 66-69 from:

Another idea is VOX. Easy to upload pictures and movies, blog, you name it. Give him a [[http://www.theflip.com/ |Flip camera to make his own videos, he’ll love it. And the comments section of VOX is rigorously controlled and limited only to Vox members, and there’s privacy controls (which means he can limit to friends and/or family). Easy to use and the best part is, it’s FREE!

Q

to:

Another idea is VOX. Easy to upload pictures and movies, blog, you name it. Give him a Flip camera to make his own videos, he’ll love it. And the comments section of VOX is rigorously controlled and limited only to Vox members, and there’s privacy controls (which means he can limit to friends and/or family). Easy to use and the best part is, it’s FREE!

Q Gary in Gary, IN - His wife has a Sandisk MP3 player and after unplugging it, the computer encountered the dreaded “blue screen of death.”

May 25, 2008, at 10:36 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Leo thinks it’s a great idea for a kid to have a website. They learn alot about typing, writing, and it’ll be surprising at the skills they acquire.. Give them a venue and let them go. Try a hosted journal from Live Journal or Blogger.

to:

Leo thinks it’s a great idea for a kid to have a website. They learn alot about typing, writing, and it’ll be surprising at the skills they acquire.. Give them a venue and let them go. Try a hosted journal from Live Journal or http://www.blogger.com/[[http://www.livejournal.com/Blogger.

Another idea is VOX. Easy to upload pictures and movies, blog, you name it. Give him a [[http://www.theflip.com/ |Flip camera to make his own videos, he’ll love it. And the comments section of VOX is rigorously controlled and limited only to Vox members, and there’s privacy controls (which means he can limit to friends and/or family). Easy to use and the best part is, it’s FREE!

Q

May 25, 2008, at 10:32 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Leo thinks it’s a great idea for a kid to have a website. They learn alot.

to:

Leo thinks it’s a great idea for a kid to have a website. They learn alot about typing, writing, and it’ll be surprising at the skills they acquire.. Give them a venue and let them go. Try a hosted journal from Live Journal or Blogger.

May 25, 2008, at 10:30 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Q Carol from Los Angeles - her nephew wants to build a website, but he’s too young for MySpace. What to do?

Leo thinks it’s a great idea for a kid to have a website. They learn alot.

May 25, 2008, at 10:28 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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NASAs Phoenix Probe to land on Mars

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Roz Savage begins a solo journey across the Pacific in a rowboat.

May 25, 2008, at 10:26 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Although space is wide open, there’s still adventure here on earth. Leo’s friend Roz Savage began her quest to row across the Pacific, which left underneath the Golden Gate Bridge last night at midnight. This is her second trip, and it’s not an easy go of it. The hardest part is actually rowing away from the Golden Gate Bridge!

Added lines 28-29:

Although space is wide open, there’s still adventure here on earth. Leo’s friend Roz Savage began her quest to row across the Pacific, which left underneath the Golden Gate Bridge last night at midnight. This is her second trip, and it’s not an easy go of it. The hardest part is actually rowing away from the Golden Gate Bridge!

May 25, 2008, at 10:26 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.:toc*:

to:

Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.

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May 25, 2008, at 10:25 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.

to:

Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.:toc*:

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May 25, 2008, at 10:23 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Although space is wide open, there’s still adventure here on earth. Leo’s friend Roz Savage began her quest to row across the Pacific, which left underneath the Golden Gate Bridge last night at midnight. This is her second trip, and it’s not an easy go of it. The hardest part is actually rowing away from the Golden

Follow her on Twittr at @RozSavage. We’ll be checking in with her from time to time, as this is a tech story since she’ll be Twittring while she rows her high tech row boat, which is manned with a satellite phone, two mac computers, and a pair of cameras which she will use to update everyone on her journey.

to:

Although space is wide open, there’s still adventure here on earth. Leo’s friend Roz Savage began her quest to row across the Pacific, which left underneath the Golden Gate Bridge last night at midnight. This is her second trip, and it’s not an easy go of it. The hardest part is actually rowing away from the Golden Gate Bridge!

Follow her on Twittr at @RozSavage. We’ll be checking in with her from time to time, as this is a tech story since she’ll be Twittring while she rows her high tech row boat, which is manned with a satellite phone, two mac computers, GPS navigation & tracker, five iPods (with 300 book mp3 courtesy of Leo) and three video cameras which she will use to update everyone on her journey. And all powered by solar panels on her boat. Her trip will take her to the Hawaiian Islands, then to Fiji, then to Australia. If she succeeds, she’ll be the first female rower to cross the pacific with no support craft.

May 25, 2008, at 10:10 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Although space is wide open, there’s still adventure here on earth.

to:

Although space is wide open, there’s still adventure here on earth. Leo’s friend Roz Savage began her quest to row across the Pacific, which left underneath the Golden Gate Bridge last night at midnight. This is her second trip, and it’s not an easy go of it. The hardest part is actually rowing away from the Golden

Follow her on Twittr at @RozSavage. We’ll be checking in with her from time to time, as this is a tech story since she’ll be Twittring while she rows her high tech row boat, which is manned with a satellite phone, two mac computers, and a pair of cameras which she will use to update everyone on her journey.

May 25, 2008, at 10:06 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
Changed lines 24-25 from:

Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.

to:

Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.

Although space is wide open, there’s still adventure here on earth.

May 25, 2008, at 10:03 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
Changed lines 24-25 from:

Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.

to:

Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.

May 25, 2008, at 10:01 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Tonight, at 8:39pm ET, the NASA Mars Probe Phoenix will attempt a soft landing at the Martian Poles. There’s alot of concern about the highly choreographed landing which will take the Phoenix from a Max speed of 12,000 miles an hour to a gentle 5 mph soft landing. The first in three decades, since the 1976 Viking landings. They Phoenix will be looking for ice and water as it’s six foot robotic arm digs for any evidence of life on Mars.

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Dick Debartolo, The Giz Wiz will talk about tech aboard the Queen Mary 2

May 25, 2008, at 03:54 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Scott Wilkinson

Scott visits the Denon line show and mentions the new BluRay Interactivity. Biddle


Ron Rossberg - Early Adopters

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Ron Rossberg - Early Adopters

May 25, 2008, at 03:54 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Guests

Scott Wilkinson

Scott visits the Denon line show and mentions the new BluRay Interactivity. Biddle

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Hour 1

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Hour 1


May 25, 2008, at 03:45 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Ron Rossberg - Early Adopters

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Ron Rossberg - Early Adopters

May 25, 2008, at 03:42 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Want movies streamed to your television in minutes try the Roku Netflix Player

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  • Want movies streamed to your television in minutes try the Roku Netflix Player. Price $99.95
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Price $99.95

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  • Here’s a great review of the Roku Netflix Player
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Here’s a great review of the Roku Netflix Player

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  • Don’t Overpay for Audio/Video (HDMI) Cables Check Out MonoPrice
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Don’t Overpay for Audio/Video (HDMI) Cables Check Out MonoPrice

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  • Verizon’s Blackberry Curve #8330 with EVDO High Speed Broadband. Online Price w/2 Year Contract $199.00 plus $50.00 mail in Rebate
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Verizon’s Blackberry Curve #8330 with EVDO High Speed Broadband

Online Price w/2 Year Contract $199.00 plus $50.00 mail in Rebate

Best Noise Canceling Bluetooth Headsets the NEW Jawbone Skin

MSRP $130.00

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  • Best Noise Canceling Bluetooth Headsets the NEW Jawbone Skin MSRP $130.00
 ***
May 25, 2008, at 03:40 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Ron Rossberg - Early Adopters

May 25, 2008, at 03:40 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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[[http://gizmodo.com/389698/first-netflix-streaming-box-review-100-and-unlimited-downloads|
Here’s a great review of the Roku Netflix Player]]

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Here’s a great review of the Roku Netflix Player

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May 25, 2008, at 03:38 PM by 76.170.10.135 -
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Want movies streamed to your television in minutes try the Roku Netflix Player

Price $99.95

[[http://gizmodo.com/389698/first-netflix-streaming-box-review-100-and-unlimited-downloads|
Here’s a great review of the Roku Netflix Player]]

Don’t Overpay for Audio/Video (HDMI) Cables Check Out MonoPrice

Verizon’s Blackberry Curve #8330 with EVDO High Speed Broadband

Online Price w/2 Year Contract $199.00 plus $50.00 mail in Rebate

Best Noise Canceling Bluetooth Headsets the NEW Jawbone Skin

MSRP $130.00

May 24, 2008, at 07:26 PM by Leo -
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Sunday 25 May 2008

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(:*toc On today's show...:)

Show Audio

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Edited Audio
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Posted one week after broadcast…
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Tech News


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«Previous Show
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