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  • Member Since Jun 20th, 2007
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This is another example of how Obama is reaching out to all Americans--this time, to handgun owners in 'Red' America.

And, he's a left-handed draw, too!
Wearing a phone holster is a brilliant political move--look how Obama is reaching out to gun owners in 'Red' America.

And he's a left-handed draw, too!
We could see this 'accident' again as AT&T's tethering terms for iPhones appear.
None of the Jack or BART transactions are on the cell phone bill. The phone has a Jack prepaid card and BART EZ-Rider card securely stored in a smart card chip in the phone. Charges are reflected on those accounts, not your Sprint bill.
I've seen the phone up close. It looks like a Samsung a920 and has a dedicated button on the keypad to launch the wallet software.
For the first time since the introduction of the format, DVD sales are down. The studios need to resell their libraries (again!) and high definition DVDs is their revenue bridge until downloading becomes mainstream. Consolidating on one format simplifies the retail message and removes consumers' hesitation to re-buy their favorite titles.

For the electronics manufacturers, one format assures higher volume sales per model (vs. splitting between two units supporting separate formats) giving them the marketing courage to push new units. We could easily see 15 different Blu-Ray players by Holiday 2008 that have to compete on price and features. In the end, choice is not about format but how many boxes to choose from on the retailer shelf.
If these college kids are sticky an RFID tag to their phones, it is an example of a closed-loop contactless payment scheme, not Near Field Communication (NFC) which involves the integration of RFID into the phone's guts.
I'm a Dell X1 ultra portable user and have been without an optical drive for my last two laptops (IBM X40). For a pure road warrior, ditching an optical drive is weight happily surrendered.

The Dell X1's biggest problem is their slightly cramped keyboard key size. Hopefully, this slightly wider unit will move back to a standard key size.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I'm looking for a solid state drive, around 32 to 64GB, for use in my web server. The drive will contain my web sites and the operating system, either Windows Server 2008 R2 or Ubuntu. Large storage is handled by a separate RAID array, so capacity is not an issue. Rather, I am looking for the fastest, longest-lasting, and most reliable drive under $150 that is suitable to my application. Any thoughts? Thanks!"

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