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I thought the same thing. The slavery line is definitely inapproproiate.
Actually, I have owned a Sony shower radio for a few years now and still use it every day. I have two sets of rechargeable batteries that I swap when one set runs out. The kids also love and use it when showering.

If it broke today, I'd buy another one in a hearbeat.
Those headphones look like something I had to use from the school AV room when I was 5 years old.
I would very much enjoy this awesome swag. Let me know when I have won the big contest!!
Norton has really cleaned up its act with NAV 2009. Small installer....light on resources...and it seems to be rated very well in independent tests of AV suites. I used Norton many years ago, but stopped when it became so friggin' bloated a few years ago. I tried it on my laptop and am very impressed.
The big question: Will AT&T see fit to charge $9.95 a month (above and beyond the unlimited data plan) to use the Garmin Navigation? That's what they charge to use their fairly crappy AT&T Navigator powered by TeleNav. Since it is a quality Nav, maybe AT&T will try to get $24.95 or even $39.95 per month to access the navigation feature in this phone. Garmin Nuviphone on AT&T = FAIL.
I'm crusing along on the BETA channel and am loving the speed compared to IE. I will probably switch over fulltime to Chrome once bookmark syncing is fully implemented.
Yummy for my tummy...and ears.
From what I've heard, this shiny new ribbon-infused version of Outlook 2010 will still use WORD to render an HTML email. Which if you don't know....can look really horrible with some HTML messages due to the severe lack of standards support. Why don't they use the IE engine to display HTML messages?

It makes no sense...
GMail still has the interface of a webmail program designed in 2002. Blah. I'm still sticking with Yahoo's email.
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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