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EFI proofing, color tools revved to version 4.0







EFI proofing, color tools revved to
version 4.0

EFI proofing, color tools revved to
version 4.0
05/06/2004 10:06 AM

EFI has announced enhanced versions of EFI Designer Edition 4.0 and EFI Photo Edition 4.0, its proofing and color management software solutions...




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EFI proofing, color tools revved to version 4.0

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AE Monitor revved to version 1.6


AE Monitor revved to version 1.6 04/27/2004 10:08 AM
AE Monitor -- a product from Oxalyn Software that lets Mac OS X users capture, analyze, and recreate Apple Events -- has been updated to version 1.6...

SMART Ideas revved to version 4.1


SMART Ideas revved to version 4.1 04/23/2004 12:04 AM
SMART Technologies has released version 4.1 of its SMART Ideas concept-mapping software in English and French for Mac OS X (10.1.5 or later)...

EFI Designer Edition revved to version
4.0


EFI Designer Edition revved to version
4.0
05/17/2004 01:29 PM
EFI has released EFI Designer Edition 4.0 for HP, an upgraded version of EFI's proofing software and option for the new Hewlett Packard Designjet 30 and HP Designjet 130 series multi-format desktop inkjet printers...

OpenGL standard revved to version 2.0


OpenGL standard revved to version 2.0 08/10/2004 10:33 AM
The latest version of the OpenGL specification, incorporating support for the OpenGL Shading Language application programming interfaces (API), was announced today by Silicon Graphics and the OpenGL Architecture Review Board (ARB) at the Siggraph 2004 industry tradeshow...

SQLVue database tool revved to version 3


SQLVue database tool revved to version 3 06/14/2004 04:38 PM
LogicalVue Software has released SQLVue 3, a new version of the SQL database tool for Mac OS X (10.2 and higher) and Windows developers...

Tools for future-proofing MT


Tools for future-proofing MT 04/09/2004 04:05 PM

I've been thinking about future-proof ing URLs in Movable Type lately, and it seems like what is really missing is a migration tool.

Say all your MT archives are setup to use the default system, that relies on ID values, like:

http://example.com/archives/000184.html

And you want to move on to something like:

http://example.com/04/03/12/my_post_title

It'd be nice if there was a simple little perl script that could look at your MT post titles and figure out what your final urls would be, and then pull the post ID to create one giant text file listing where old pages were and what their new names are.

Basically, I want a script that can produce a .htaccess file on the fly. It can't be that hard if this plugin had access to MT IDs and titles. It's just a text file as output, which perl is perfect for. Is there already something out there like this that I've missed?

update: Brad Choate sent this as a possible fix:

<MTEntries lastn="10000">
Redirect 301 /archives/<$MTEntryID pad="1"$>.html /weblog/<$MTEntryDate format="%y/%m/%d"$>/<$MTEntryTitle dirify="1"$>
</MTEntries>

Thanks Brad! I could just make this a new template, then move my archives around and load it up as the .htaccess file. Nice.


ProofMaster Adesso: Utility Delivers
Easy, Accurate Color Proofing


ProofMaster Adesso: Utility Delivers
Easy, Accurate Color Proofing
09/10/2004 10:58 AM
For small design shops looking for precise in-house proofing, or photographers looking for more out of a printer than its native drivers can deliver, ProofMaster Adesso is a very good deal. By Bruce Fraser, Macworld (via MyAppleMenu)

Office 2003 Service Pack 1 for Proofing
Tools


Office 2003 Service Pack 1 for Proofing
Tools
08/18/2004 01:30 AM
Office 2003 Service Pack 1 (SP1) for Proofing Tools ensures that Office 2003 performs with complete functionality when you use Office 2003 Proofing Tools. You can get specific information about this update in the Microsoft Knowledge Base article (843188): Description of Office 2003 Service Pack 1 for Proofing Tools. Important For complete Office 2003 SP1 functionality if you are using Office 2003 Proofing Tools, you will need to install both this download and Office 2003 Service Pack 1.

The Plugin Site Released Version 2.0 of
its Color Correction Tool ColorWasher


The Plugin Site Released Version 2.0 of
its Color Correction Tool ColorWasher
06/07/2004 02:49 AM
The Plugin Site (www.thepluginsite.com) released Version 2.0 of ColorWasher, a Photoshop-compatible plugin for correcting the colors, contrast, exposure and saturation of 8bit and 16bit photos. ColorWasher takes photo correction to a new level of accuracy and speed. With its help even beginners are capable of doing photo corrections within seconds that only experts were able to produce in the past. [PRWEB Jun 7, 2004]

ATI Tray Tools Version 345


ATI Tray Tools Version 345 07/15/2004 12:15 PM

Visual Studio Tools for Office, Version
2003


Visual Studio Tools for Office, Version
2003
06/23/2004 11:53 PM
This sample demonstrates how to migrate an existing Word VBA solution to a Visual Studio Tools for Office solution.

Samples for Visual Studio Tools for
Office, Version 2005 Beta 1


Samples for Visual Studio Tools for
Office, Version 2005 Beta 1
07/01/2004 03:52 AM
This download contains code samples for Visual Studio Tools for Office, Version 2005 Beta 1.

Mobile-proofing your network


Mobile-proofing your network 04/04/2005 03:57 PM
Douglas Schweitzer of SearchSecurity.com writes: “A stolen laptop made public last week by the University of California, Berkeley contained unencrypted personal data on nearly 100,000 graduate students and applicants and is just the latest case to underscore the need for increased protection of personal information. “Since mobile devices are subject to all sorts of threats including both technological [viruses, worms, spam] and physical [lost or stolen], it is essential that organizations that allow the use…

Direct and Related Links for 'Mobile-proofing your network'


Spam-Proofing Your Website


Spam-Proofing Your Website 10/23/2002 06:02 AM
Spam-bots and email harvesters are crawling your site every day - here's a simple guide to making sure your email addresses are invisible to these nasty critters.

Future-Proofing Contact Information


Future-Proofing Contact Information 01/26/2004 12:36 PM

How do you future-proof contact information? It strikes me that, through the years, I migrate from one messaging platform to another, but I'm generally contacting the same people. My Mom is going to be my Mom no matter what email client I'm using. Probably true for my wife, too.

So, when I switch from Outlook to Outlook Express to Mozilla Mail to Thunderbird, I'm having to export and import all my contact information every time, hope I don't lose anything in translation, and hope that it stays constant even when subject to the quirks and vagaries of each platform.

Should there be a XML schema for archiving contact information, so that it's always the same? So I could just put people in this XML file, then import to various platforms as I switched (or, if they don't support the schema, do an XSL transform to something they do support)? So this XML file would be the one, true source for information about the people I know.

(Even taking out the XML angle, is it worthwhile to abstract your contact information away from a particular client? Regardless of what you store it in, is it just good practice to keep it in a vendor-neutral, highly-exportable format rather than a proprietary app?)

It concerns me that, as I wander through various software, I don't have a "home base" for all my contact information; a format that my mother's contact information can live in from here to eternity. Is this the point where the mother of invention requires that I invent the schema?

Click here to comment on this entry


Online Proofing on Mac & PC: cyan eProof
PDF Available for Free Again


Online Proofing on Mac & PC: cyan eProof
PDF Available for Free Again
10/29/2003 12:10 AM

As cyan soft ltd. still receives many requests for eProof PDF online proofing solution once offered limited time for free it makes this product available for free again within the next 30 days. Now end users may request eProof PDF free of charge with a nonrestrictive unlimited time use license.

Like Pixels? Check out MacDesign

UNDERSTANDING MEDIA: WEBLOGS ARE
EXCELLENT COMMUNICATIONS MEDIA, BUT
LOUSY COMMUNICATION TOOLS


UNDERSTANDING MEDIA: WEBLOGS ARE
EXCELLENT COMMUNICATIONS MEDIA, BUT
LOUSY COMMUNICATION TOOLS
06/04/2004 11:02 AM
Comm Dec Tree
Ton Zijlstra is on to something. He describes blogs as "personal presence portals", and then goes on to describe the "awkwardness" that we feel when we go from 'knowing' someone through their blog to meeting them in person. His solution to that is simple: acknowledge the awkwardness explicitly in the first face-to-face conversation, and then work through it. Jon Husband chimes in with the observation that on-line 'presence' is still foreign to us, and we need to learn how to use it, much as at one point in our lives we first learn to use the telephone. So why is it that learning to use the telephone is childsplay, while learning to use blogs, especially when 'enriched' with Skype VoIP telephony, IM, wikis and webcams is so awkward, so hard?

It all comes down to the subject of Ton's post: presence. Ton refers to this article that defines presence as a high-quality simulation of actual personal existence, high-quality implying socially rich, perceptually and socially realistic, transporting (in both senses of the word), immersing, and natural. Do blogs, with or without add-on multimedia tools, provide a high-quality simulation of the author's existence, do they have presence?

To understand why this question is meaningless, we need to turn to the guru of media, Marshall McLuhan. In his landmark book Understanding Media, almost half a century ago, he explained the difference between media and tools. Communications media are place holders for content, for the message ("the medium is the message"). Communication tools are technologies that deliver the content, the message . In today's electronic age, he said, the two have become blurred together. So my communication media decision tree from last year, reproduced above, while useful, is somewhat flawed, in that it mixes the two together.

But if we want to understand blogs, which are part media, part tools, we need to unblur these distinct characteristics. The best way to do this is to understand what, in McLuhan's terminology, the constituent parts of blogs are extensions of. The telephone, a communication tool, is an extension of the ear and the voice. Radio is a communication tool, likewise an extension of the ear and voice, but the radio program is a communications medium, an extension of the programmer's memory (and, if we tape it, an extension of our memory as well).

Blogs, like newspaper columns or news digests, are essentially communications media, extensions of our memories, place holders for our ideas and messages. They are not really extensions of our brains, because they capture, like a snapshot, our thinking at one point in time. Although we can try to make them conversational and describe our thought processes in a blog article, they do not, in their simplest form, allow the reader to truly engage our brains in real or close-to-real time.

Now, blogs also have two communication tools included: a publishing and subscription tool (RSS), which does transmit our messages (very well), and the rudimentary comments 'thread' functionality which, like a poor web forum, does allow some dialogue with the author and with other readers. The thread is a (lousy, and because it's asynchronous, jerky) extension of our brains. To some extent the Internet itself is a communication tool that disseminates our blog comment; it is the blog's 'printing press'. And by that analogy, RSS is like the delivery truck that takes the newspaper to the subscriber's house -- both are communication tools, though RSS is clearly the superior delivery vehicle.

So what? Well, there is a huge amount of discussion about how to make blogs better, how to use them in business, and what their future is, none of which makes the essential distinction between their role and value as communication media and their role and value as communication tools.

I would argue that the critical functionality of blogs, both in personal and business use, is as a personal communications medium i.e. a storage space for everything of consequence in our memories, and everything of consequence in that other extension of our memory, the filing cabinet (and its electronic analogue, the 'My Documents' folder). As I've said in my posts on the future of blogs and in my future state visions, I think blogs will eventually (and properly) morph into purer, simpler versions of this one critical functionality -- they will become the proxies, the substitutes for our memories, for use by friends and business contacts when we're busy or away from the high-presence communication tools, by vendors to ascertain our need for their offerings, and by ourselves as a place to organize, store and access our own thoughts and memories, thus freeing up more of our real memories for new ideas and perceptions. There have been some interesting articles lately by people who say that making and keeping huge numbers of dynamic lists and notes, instead of trying to keep all that in our memories, we can actually enrich our brain's power, our intellectual effectiveness and even our intelligence by 'freeing up memory and brain CPU'. Next-generation blogs could be perfect for that, not only freeing up our memories but also allowing others access to our ideas and learnings.

So to that limited extent, blogs have presence -- they can be excellent simulations, surrogates, proxies for our personal memories. But what if we need more context to be able to properly understand the message, or effectively use or build on the content of this virtual memory? Then we need high-quality, high-presence communication tools, not communication media. We are rapidly moving towards a convergence of several 'online' communication tools: telephony, e-mail, IM, and potentially voice-mail and videoconferencing. Right now, the content, the stored messages of these various tools are unintegrated, but voice recognition and transcription is quickly improving and we will soon be able to 'record' conversations in any of these media in one simple, intuitive way, and with Simple Virtual Presence we will also have a simple intuitive way to connect with people using any or all of these media. Then we'll need a 'bridge' to allow each of the participants in a conference to see anything in the blog/virtual memory of any of the participants.

Until that day arrives, blogs get high marks as a communication medium, but barely a passing grade as communication tools. If the technology developers understand the distinction, and start building tools that are properly engineered for simple, seamless connectivity, then one day the blurring won't matter, and the integration between media and tools will be complete.

Reducing Risk and Climate Proofing the
Future with the SimCLIM Open Framework
Software System


Reducing Risk and Climate Proofing the
Future with the SimCLIM Open Framework
Software System
06/24/2005 04:09 PM
The SimCLIM Open Framework Software System has just been released for global distribution. It is a powerful package developed over 15 years of scientific endeavor. Users can customize the package through the easy importation of local climate data. Models for examining the potential impacts of climate change on a wide range of sectoral interests ranging from infrastructure to the environment are already preloaded in the program or can be developed and attached. [PRWEB Jun 24, 2005]

Genoa Color Announces First U.S. Patent
For Multi-Primary Color TV Technology


Genoa Color Announces First U.S. Patent
For Multi-Primary Color TV Technology
03/28/2005 08:06 PM
Wide Screen Review Mar 28 2005 8:42PM GMT

A New Lyra Research Report Finds 'The
Year of the Color Laser' Has Finally
Arrived: Color Laser Printer Shipments
Increased a Dramatic 47 Percent Between
2003 and 2004


A New Lyra Research Report Finds 'The
Year of the Color Laser' Has Finally
Arrived: Color Laser Printer Shipments
Increased a Dramatic 47 Percent Between
2003 and 2004
04/06/2005 02:53 AM
The Hard Copy Observer Spotlight: 2004 Color Laser Printer Market is the first of Lyra’s three product-planning reports covering the printer market. The report includes information on how products and prices changed from January through December, current market trends, a review of the competitive landscape, and selected articles from The Hard Copy Observer. [PRWEB Apr 6, 2005]

New Look, New Version pdfMachine 9.6 Now
Available - Only US$49 per Licence, or
Free If You Have a Previous Version


New Look, New Version pdfMachine 9.6 Now
Available - Only US$49 per Licence, or
Free If You Have a Previous Version
06/01/2004 02:33 AM
pdfMachine 9.6 NEW FEATURES• Now pdfMachine viewer can be started in "stand alone" mode with no PDF loaded.• File open menu option - open and assemble any PDF file, not just those created by pdfMachine.• Opening of encrypted PDF's is supported; passwords are prompted for if required.• "Sticky note" style comments/annotations. [PRWEB Jun 1, 2004]

Rapid application development tools,
part 3: More RAD tools


Rapid application development tools,
part 3: More RAD tools
02/13/2004 09:19 AM
In parts 1 and 2 of this series I discussed database front end development tools and RAD environments for the BASIC language on Linux. I'll conclude by looking at tools for smaller programming languages (I won't talk about C++/KDevelop/Anjuta or Java/Eclipse) and little-known or independently developed languages.

Digidesign Ships Pro Tools TDM 6.4.1
Software for Pro Tools|24 MIX


Digidesign Ships Pro Tools TDM 6.4.1
Software for Pro Tools|24 MIX
09/02/2004 11:16 PM
Digidesign Pro Tools® TDM 6.4.1 software for Pro Tools|24 MIX ships today. Pro Tools TDM 6.4.1 offers new feature enhancements and is the final Pro Tools software release to support the Pro Tools|24 MIX product line.

Tucows 5 Stars Award Winner Software
4Diskclean Gold Updated to version
4.5!Freeware version of 4diskclean
released!


Tucows 5 Stars Award Winner Software
4Diskclean Gold Updated to version
4.5!Freeware version of 4diskclean
released!
07/10/2004 02:40 AM
Clean and optimize Your Windows System. Rss Systems http://4diskclean.com 4Diskclean Gold http://4diskclean.com/4df.htm FREEWARE [PRWEB Jul 10, 2004]

THINK
GLOBAL, ACT LOCAL: PETER SINGER'S
ONE
WORLD


THINK
GLOBAL, ACT LOCAL: PETER SINGER'S
ONE
WORLD
04/23/2004 09:24 AM
one worldIf you're a regular reader of this blog, you probably know that I'm opposed to unregulated 'free' trade, very worried about the extraterritoriality of the WTO, NAFTA, Davos and other corporatist captives, strongly opposed to domestic corporations 'offshoring' jobs, using influence with the Bush regime and other right-wing governments to circumvent social and environmental laws and responsibilities, and a great believer in taking the pledge to buy local, and in community self-sufficiency.

At the same time, I'm a strong supporter of the UN and other multi-lateral NGOs, and I believe that we each have a responsibility for the well-being of all the people and creatures of this world. Some readers have said this view is inconsistent, and I wasn't quite sure how to respond to such charges. Fortunately, Peter Singer, in his recent book on global ethics, One World: The Ethics of Globalization, has come to my rescue. Singer sees no inconsistency between strong local autonomy, community, and self-sufficient economies on the one hand, and global responsibility on the other. The book is based on the Dwight Terry lectures at Yale in 2000, but has been updated to incorporate reflection on the events of 9/11 and the appalling Bush social, environmental and economic record.

I'll have more to say next week about Bush's fraudulent and despicable Earth Day media blitz, and the major media's shameless lack of critical evaluation of the utter nonsense that his propaganda machine has been churning out this week on the environment -- newspeak of Orwellian proportions. The first part of Singer's book deals with environmental responsibility, and his prescription for increasing it -- immediate ratification of Kyoto by the US and other holdout countries, and introduction of an emissions trading mechanism to make the realization of Kyoto feasible (subject to the need for some oversight on the disposition of the proceeds of such trading when it involves autocratic governments).

The second part of the book deals with the global economy, and Singer adroitly tears apart the Economist's (and other neocons') naive assertion that economic globalization somehow benefits both rich and poor countries. He then goes on to prescribe a substantial reform of the WTO and the GATT, which could actually lead to more equitable distribution of wealth and more efficient production of economic goods, while safeguarding human rights, labour and the environment. Unfortunately, the multi-national corporations and corporatists who hold sway in the WTO would never tolerate Singer's prescription, since it would entirely divert the benefits of economic globalization from their pockets to those of the world's poor.

The third part of the book deals with international law, and Singer lashes out at Bush for his unconscionable refusal to ratify the International Court of Justice, and for the UN's continued hesitancy to accept a duty (not a right) to intervene in situations of genocide and other humanitarian crises, even within a single nation. Singer is sanguine about the limitations and dangers of 'global government', but supports strengthening the UN to enable it to act as a 'protector of last resort', and including in its mandate the responsibility to supervise elections in all member nations.

The fourth and final part goes back to ethical principles and proposes that countries must, in this world where national boundaries no longer have any logistic meaning, set aside national interest and embrace, once and for all, global interest, impartially. That does not mean cultural homogenization, but imposes a responsibility for the reduction of inequality, both of economic resources and personal rights and freedoms.

Always the pragmatist, Singer concludes by worrying out loud about how the responsibility for a global ethic could be managed:

It is widely believed that a world government would be, at best, an unchecked bureaucratic behemoth that would make the bureaucracy of the EU look lean and efficient. At worst, it would become a global tyranny, unchecked and unchallengeable. These thoughts have to be taken seriously. How to prevent global bodies becoming either dangerous tyrannies or self-aggrandizing bureaucracies, and instead make them effective and responsive to the people whose lives they affect? It is a challenge that should not be beyond the best minds in the fields of political science and public administration.

I'd like to believe that this was possible, because if it isn't, we're in serious trouble. We cannot expect national governments to set aside parochial interests, especially when this entails accepting a responsibility that would, for the richer nations, inevitably lead to a drastic redistribution of wealth to poorer nations and hence a sudden and sharp reduction in, at least, economic living standards (if not necessarily well-being). But as John Ralston Saul has so eloquently argued, larger organizations and institutions, whether public or private, are almost always, and inherently, less efficient, less agile, more resistant to change, more hierarchic, and less transparent than smaller organizations. So the challenge is to achieve the best of both worlds, having organizations of global scope and authority and responsibility, but broken up into sufficiently small, autonomous and dynamic units that they are sensitive, resilient, responsible and responsive to the people and communities they serve. We can only hope that "the best minds in the fields of political science and public administration", wherever they are, are up to the task.

Oakley Releases 512 MB Version of THUMP
Digital Music Eyewear: Storage Capacity
Doubled in New Version of OAKLEY THUMP


Oakley Releases 512 MB Version of THUMP
Digital Music Eyewear: Storage Capacity
Doubled in New Version of OAKLEY THUMP
06/06/2005 12:02 AM
Oakley, Inc. (NYSE:OO) today announced the addition of a 512MB version to its highly successful OAKLEY THUMP(tm) line of digital music eyewear and a new frame and lens color combination for the 256MB model. The upgraded OAKLEY THUMP(tm), which is available for immediate delivery beginning June 1, effectively doubles the amount of available memory ensuring ample storage for up to 120 songs (digital music only) or a combination of music and data. [PRWEB Jun 2, 2005]

Programming Tools: UML Tools


Programming Tools: UML Tools 06/05/2005 11:10 PM
The results of a simple standards-based test of some popular UML tools.

Get Color Sf


Get Color Sf 12/20/2003 06:24 AM
Release patch for 0.8.0.RC1 to Russian

color


color 10/15/2002 07:15 AM
These class converts colortypes. It supports the following colors formats and types: - CMYK - RGB - Pantone - HEX Codes for HTML

Red tape isn't my color


Red tape isn't my color 02/10/2004 02:42 AM
I'm learning that when dealing with a car accident you really should be trained at jumping through hoops. I'm on...

More on EV-DO and the color Hiptop


More on EV-DO and the color Hiptop 03/21/2003 12:13 AM

Rich Brome of PhoneScoop writes in with some comments about the color Hiptop and Verizon's new high-speed 1xEV-DO cellular network:

The color Hiptop will have a 65,000 TFT display. The Danger people told me at CTIA they have (had) various prototypes will all kinds of displays, but they have settled on the high-end TFT they were showing at CTIA, which I thought looked pretty good. Not the brightest, but very clear, colorful, and easy to read in most lighting.

The 1xEV-DO network set up at CTIA was a temporary one, and with so many temporary 3G networks of all types set up for demos for the show, the whole city was one big interference nightmare. There were just too many companies trying to put up extra temporary antennas on the roof, etc. - so that THEIR demo worked, other demos be damned. Everyone had cell phone problems the whole time (ironic, but it happens every time). There were many outages.

So I'm not at all surprised that the speed of the 1xEV-DO network didn't impress. In a real installation, the network would be optimized and interference issues would be worked out through months of testing and tweaking - something that was not possible just for CTIA. In Verizon's long-running tests in San Diego and Washington, the speed has been quite impressive.


Color Consultant Pro 1.1.1


Color Consultant Pro 1.1.1 02/10/2004 02:54 AM
Interactive color wheel that supports multiple color schemes and spaces.

color wrapper 1.0.3


color wrapper 1.0.3 08/17/2004 03:24 PM
A non-intrusive real-time ANSI color wrapper for Unix-based programs.

Color tweaks.


Color tweaks. 03/13/2003 10:17 AM
I'm turning down the vibrancy on dollarshort to give my eyes a break. If you're not noticing any changes, view...

COLOR IN MOTION


COLOR IN MOTION 06/30/2004 02:36 PM
www.mariaclaudiacortes.com/colors/Colors.html .. Colors in Motion

mariaclaudiacortes.com/colors/Colors.html
track this site | 6 links


Muro "The Color"


Muro "The Color" 03/22/2005 04:46 PM

muro.jpg
imagedapreview reports on the "The color" from Korean manufacturer "Muro." It obviously has a color screen and compact form factor, but this isn't the cool part. No, it's how the player is about as large as a Zippo, supports MP3, WMA, Ogg Vorbis, and MPEG-4 video playback. I don't know how enjoyable an MPEG-4 video would be a screen under 1" in size, but I guess if you're really hard up for entertainment, this could end up being a decent player to fiddle with.

Zippo-si zed Muro "the color" supports MPEG-4 playback [dapreview]


Color combinatorics


Color combinatorics 08/12/2004 04:36 AM
ColorCell: finding the most popular color combinations.

HP in Living Color


HP in Living Color 06/03/2004 12:22 PM
Ever wish you could afford one of those color laser printers to make your printed output look like a million? Ever wish you could actually AFFORD one? Yeah, me too.It seems that the days when the average color laser printer cost as much as the average family car are over. In today’s world of shrinking prices, HP has crossed the $500 barrier. Not by much, but crossed it none the less. Mere mortals will now be able to turn out those stunning pictures we see (and drool over) at the office super-stores.Read more…

Color Pickers


Color Pickers 01/07/2004 04:42 PM

Mad About Colors: Don Park has a post about color picker products and he links to two great ones: Color Wheel Pro and ColorImpact. I'm utterly brain dead when it comes to colors. I got the colors for this site off EasyRGB and even that was painful.

Click here to comment on this entry


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Ipod Porn on the
Rise

Brief Abstract of
Wikipedia's
Mesothelioma Cancer
page

Get first aid
instructions in your
cell phone

IE is crap
JSPWiki gains
podcasting support

IBM Targets
Microsoft BizTalk
With Integration
Server

Thieves Fall Out in
the Bush
Administration Over
American Torture in
Saddam's Torture
Chambers, But It
Happened at Gitmo
and in Afghanistan
Too. Don't Kid
Yourself. 5/6

On local TV news,
it's a Windows world

FCP Filter Bundle
1.0

Bloxter 1.0.1
Cinematic 3D
rendering in
realtime

NY Times Discovers
IRC, Freaks Out

Sasser boosts AV
share prices

CA 2003 results
delayed

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diminutive video
handset

BBC shortlists tech
division buyers

BT wins big airport
contract

UK go-ahead to more
waste burning

Death fears in
rundown classrooms

Cricket: Murali
equals record

Trinity Mirror backs
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More photos, without
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Build It: A
Web-Surfing PC for
$500

Preview: Google's
Gmail Beta

HP enters e-mail
archiving market

Microsoft retools
next-generation
security base

Microsoft bonds
against spammers

Microsoft shakes up
Longhorn security

Senate Blocks
Anti-Offshoring
Measures

Bionic running shoe
to hit the road

Yahoo, Lycos strike
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10 Blue Chips Worth
a Look

Timing Your Home
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MI5 terror website
grabs 3m hits

Tiny robot walker
made from DNA

Race attack pair
sent to prison

Football: No fear
for Robson

Pastor convicted of
sex attacks

US troops battle
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Quality of LinkedIn
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better?

AP reviews iTunes
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Three buys 3m 3G
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contract in Norway

LG Elec. to supply 3
mln. 3G handsets to

Yahoo, Lycos Europe
Strike Web Chat and
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(Reuters)

XML Editor
version 4.0

Jobless Claims Drop,
Labor Costs Advance
(Reuters)

Arabiya TV Airs
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'American Hostage'
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Widespread, Rights
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Aniston Among
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Productivity Grows,
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