Pokemon deconstructed to its most basic graphic elements.
via One shot: Pokemon, pixel by pixel | Offworld.
This is awesome. Hit up the image for a HUGE version.
You know you want to. 😉
Pokemon deconstructed to its most basic graphic elements.
via One shot: Pokemon, pixel by pixel | Offworld.
This is awesome. Hit up the image for a HUGE version.
You know you want to. 😉
Reader rykennedyan’s desktop combines a beautiful wallpaper with a full set of launchers and tools integrated into a taskbar at the bottom of the screen.
via The Starlight Desktop | Lifehacker Australia.
Oooohhh. Preeeettty.
I like.
Shame there’s no Mac OSX version. 🙁
‘Cos that’s how I roll. 🙂
This Word resume template has been downloaded almost 200,000 times — so if you’re one of the people using it, you should switch to something else as a matter of urgency.
via A Resume Template You Shouldn’t Use | Lifehacker Australia.
If you’re after the original template (for curiosity’s sake, alright?), then download it here.
Netbooks remind me of Monarch Burger’s apple pie. Just as Monarch Burger tried to take the standard apple pie form and attempt to fit it into a fast food menu, the netbook approach tries to take the standard laptop form and attempt to fit it into mobile computing. The end result, to my mind, is a device that occupies an uncomfortable, middle ground between laptops and smartphones that tries to please everyone and pleases no one. Consider the factors:
- Size: A bit too large to go into your pocket; a bit too small for regular day-to-day work.
- Power: Slightly more capable than a smartphone; slightly less capable than a laptop.
- Price: Slightly higher than a higher-end smartphone but lacking a phone’s capability and portability; slightly lower than a lower-end notebook but lacking a notebook’s speed and storage.
To summarize: Slightly bigger and pricier than a phone, but can’t phone. Slightly smaller and cheaper than a laptop, but not that much smaller or cheaper. To adapt a phrase I used in an article I wrote yesterday, netbooks are like laptops, but lamer.
via Fast Food Apple Pies and Why Netbooks Suck — The Adventures of Accordion Guy in the 21st Century.
I don’t really get the fast food reference – but hey, whatever floats your boat, eh?
T-Mobile.nl has posted some technical specs about the iPhone 3G S revealing that the newest iPhone carries a 600 MHz processor and 256MB of RAM. A nice bump in processor power from the iPhone 3G.
The iPhone 3G had a 412mhz processor while the iPod Touch had a 532mhz processor, until now, the 2nd generation iPod Touch was the fastest device by a good margin on the lineup but the iPhone 3G S has changed that. […] The processor/ram information seems to confirm many details that were first revealed in a Chinese forum post.
The new iPhone is also believed to use the new PowerVR SGX graphics processing unit which provides support for OpenGL ES 2.0. This notably improved performance may require developers to support these multiple device capabilities within their apps.
via iPhone 3G S Specs Revealed | iPhone-Hacks.com.
The new iPhone 3GS – Fast. Faster. Faster. So fast. 🙂
via YouTube – Apple’s WWDC 2009 Keynote in 3 Minutes.
Rather than bore you with lots of text, iphilvideos on YouTube cut the WWDC 2009 Keynote down to 3 minutes.
Originally seen on Gizmodo. Original video credit Mike Byhoff.
Favourite quote? Faster. Faster. Faster. So fast. 🙂