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Bluebird of Luggage Happiness







Bluebird of Luggage Happiness

Bluebird of Luggage Happiness 07/09/2004 06:22 PM

A conceptual contest winner envisions Bluetooth luggage tags: The tags on your luggage and that you carry signal when your luggage is near. Conceivably, this concept could be expanded so that you would register your luggage and your tag: without both parts, you wouldn't be able to leave with the bags. [link via Gizmodo]...




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Bluebird of Luggage Happiness

Grok Headline matches for Bluebird of Luggage Happiness

Bluebird Bluetooth Luggage Tag Concept


Bluebird Bluetooth Luggage Tag Concept 07/09/2004 01:27 PM

bluebird2_sm.jpg imageThere are a variety of great gadget ideas in IDFuel's first "Bonfire" gadget contest, including the winner, the "Bluebird" Bluetooth luggage tag. Besides lighting up when the bag tag's owner presses the mated dongle, the Bluebird could also signal your cell phone when your luggage is nearby -- as in nearby on the airline conveyer belt. In addition, your contact information could be stored on the tag, so if your luggage were to be lost, airline Bluetooth readers could be used to get in touch with you. There are even more great ideas detailed for the Bluebird, as well as other runners-up in the competition.
Read - Your Travel Woes Solved [IDFuel]

Update: Maybe this idea isn't quite as original as I'd thought. (Thanks, Steven!)
Read - Better Luggage Through Bluetooth [Forbes]


Luggage Tech


Luggage Tech 04/12/2004 06:02 PM
Coming home from the Valley last week, I experienced a wardrobe malfunction; my knapsack (a tech-conference freebie) fell apart in the airport. So I hit the Wilsons Leather store in SFO, and discovered that business travel gear has really been getting better. I can’t find the product I bought on their website, but it’s a nice-looking black leather knapsack that doubles as a rollie, and is just way slick. It’s got a laptop sleeve that fits my 15-inch PowerBook, plus two more compartments; one for papers, one for electronics, lots of little pouches and pockets and sleeves, and an accessible-yet-secure place for the travel documents. Hmm, looking at Wilsons’ financials, they’re not doing that great, it might be a good time to snap something up now while they’ve got a clearance on. But I imagine that if they’ve got good stuff, so does the competition. Bottom-line, if you’re getting tired of whatever beat-up old thing you’re hauling around on road trips, it’s an attractive time to upgrade.

Lost luggage? No more


Lost luggage? No more 07/01/2004 07:10 AM
Boston Globe Jul 1 2004 11:32AM GMT

"Against Happiness"


"Against Happiness" 06/26/2004 08:34 PM

Happiness Is...


Happiness Is... 04/29/2004 12:22 AM
Recent acquisition: Which brings our household data capacity to a quarter of a terabyte. I've long claimed that 5 petabytes is all I'll ever need, for life. Which provokes bemused expressions on the faces of those around me. No one...

The how and why of happiness


The how and why of happiness 04/16/2004 01:06 PM
Long article about happiness from The Guardian. I was especially interested in the part that reported that people, on average, are least happy at age 42, because they realize they aren't going to be rich and famous like they thought when they were in their twenties. After 42, though, they stop worrying about it, and start enjoying life more.
'People start out in life pretty certain that they're going to end up like David Beckham or win the Nobel Prize,' says Oswald. 'Then, after a few years, they discover it's quite tough out there - not just in their careers, but in life. Unsurprisingly, their happiness drops.' The good news is that the downer doesn't last. According to Oswald, if you trace the trajectory of most peoples' happiness over time it resembles a J-curve. People typically record high satisfaction levels in their early twenties. These then fall steadily towards middle age, before troughing at around 42. Most of us then grow steadily happier as we get older, with those in their sixties expressing the highest satisfaction levels of all - as long, that is, as they stay healthy.
Link (Via LinkmachineGo)

Happiness is....


Happiness is.... 10/28/2003 11:08 PM

reliving my past. When I opened Rhapsody this morning, Cake by the Trash Can Sinatras was staring me in the face. Now that's how you start a day!

And if you're not a Rhapsody subscriber, you can listen to some free MP3 downloads from the TCS site (there are some videos, too). If I have a chance to install iTunes at work today, I'll see if the album available there, too (I imagine it is).

"...ever stopped to think and found out nothing was there?"


I beat my luggage to Toledo


I beat my luggage to Toledo 12/22/2003 09:02 PM
Yeah, thanks to a remarkably short connection in Chicago, my luggage is still [apparently] there. The flight that arrives at 10pm should have it on board. But these are airlines, so I'm not gonna bet on anything. Murphy never sleeps. In related news, there's no snow on the ground here and it's not as cold as I expected. I even timed things so that I missed the big quake in California....

BoomBag: Stereo Luggage


BoomBag: Stereo Luggage 02/01/2005 09:08 PM

boombag.jpg imageBoomBag luggage is designed for the traveling presenter who needs to be able to bust out the Powerpoint at the drop of a business card. Designed to work with projector, the system's speakers fits between the carrying handle, leaving plenty of room to pack your clothing, hairpiece, and vodka. There are two models to choose from, one with a removable tri-fold garment bag, for $275. Not for everybody, but if you could get a tiny projector and a laptop in there (or a Mac mini and Keynote) it's probably a salesman's dream.

Product Page [VIASF via GadgetryBlog]


A Wife, A Son, and A Mountain of Luggage


A Wife, A Son, and A Mountain of Luggage 07/21/2004 04:49 PM

On Sunday, my wife and son returned from Korea.  They also brought a mountain of luggage, two full carts worth.  Since my wife and I already had more than a decade of arguments over her seemingly unbreakable habit of moving mountains across oceans, all I could do was sigh and hug.

My wife and I are on the extreme opposites when it comes to luggage.  I despise luggage so I travel very light.For a month long trip to Europe, I would take two underwears, two pairs of socks, two T-shirts, one jean, one slack, one jacket, and a pair of running shoes.  Since I am going to be wearing one set of everything plus the jacket and the shoes, the spares could fit comfortably into a small carry-on.  If the jacket has big pockets, I could travel without any bags but I use the carry-on to avoid getting grilled by immigration officers.  And on my trips, I rarely buy anything I have to carry.  If it's something big, I ship it. 

My wife, on the other hand, carries everything.Her annual trips to Korea usually starts with increasing shopping activities a month or two before the trip.  In buying her gifts, she ignores logic completely.  I have seen her buying goods made in Korea as gifts to take back to Korea.  On this trip, she brought back goods she bought at Costco in Korea, goods made right here in California.  She said they were on sale over there and saving a few bucks on pots and pans made perfect sense to her.  Oy.

And much of the luggage was food.  For example, she brought back two boxes of ramyeon, dry noodle in a cup.  Of course, our local Korean markets sell them by boxes too but my wife said these are fresher.  Fresh instant noodle?  Arghhhh!

When I was growing up in Korea, I frequently saw a Korean women carrying heavy stuff while her husband walked ahead with hands behind his back.  Until I got married I didn't understand why Korean husbands weren't helping their wives.  Why?  It's because they already had their decade of fruitless arguments and all of them reached the same compromise.  As for me, I help out despite my frustrations but also try to avoid travelling with her to Korea.

Between Mars and Venus lies an impenetrable astroid field of luggage.


Man admits to grenade in luggage


Man admits to grenade in luggage 04/05/2005 07:05 AM
A man has admitted bringing a hand grenade to Gatwick airport with intent to endanger life.

The intolerable happiness of being


The intolerable happiness of being 05/14/2004 06:09 PM
Just had the perfect dinner with a beautiful woman in a fabulous restaurant.

Bliss.


Happiness Is the Best Medicine


Happiness Is the Best Medicine 04/19/2005 07:02 AM
Happiness and health are often linked, but are people healthy because they're happy or happy because they're healthy? Several new studies shed light on the connections between biological processes and the psyche. By Rowan Hooper.

The Keys To Happiness


The Keys To Happiness 09/15/2004 07:49 AM
Microsoft's wireless ergonomic keyboard gives those weary fingers a rest, while Logitech builds a better mouse using laser beams. By Peter Lewis, Fortune (via MyAppleMenu)

In Pursuit of Happiness


In Pursuit of Happiness 09/22/2004 12:27 PM
One Fool experiences more than two hours of lost pre-party productivity in a Barnes & Noble quest.

Money can't buy happiness


Money can't buy happiness 09/27/2004 08:53 AM
David Pescovitz: A new scientific study reveals that (shocker!) a nation's economic fortitude is not as tied to the well-being of its citizens as previous believed. The results of the study--prepared by researchers at the University of Illinois and University of Pennsylvania--appeared in the latest issue of Psychological Science in the Public Interest.
"It has been assumed that money increases well-being and, although money can be measured with exactitude, it is an inexact surrogate to the actual well-being of a nation. In a 1985 survey, respondents from the Forbes list of the 400 richest Americans and the Maasai of East Africa were almost equally satisfied and ranked relatively high in well-being. The Maasai are a traditional herding people who have no electricity or running water and live in huts made of dung. It follows, that economic development and personal income must not account for the happiness that they are so often linked to."
Instead, the authors propose that a population's "engagement, purpose and meaning, optimism and trust, and positive and negative emotions in specific areas such as work life and social relationships" should be considered when measuring the strength of a nation. Link

The Happiness Broker


The Happiness Broker 12/30/2004 04:43 AM
Before: Hey, we need to talk! Don't you remember me? From school? Well I sure remember you! Look, let me buy you a coffee. Surely you have a few minutes to chat. A lot has happened since those days.

Inexplicable happiness


Inexplicable happiness 01/07/2004 04:33 PM
Do I exist if I don't blog? I have been quiet for a couple of days, because there frankly has not been much to say. I'm using my final vacation days, and not really much of interest has happened - nothing that I would say out loud in public anyway :).

I did manage to see Helmiä ja Sikoja, a rather hilarious Finnish movie about a bunch of guys who owe someone a whole lot of money, and thus decide to make a singing star out of their 10-year little sister. I wasn't expecting much of it, but somehow the fresh performances of the cast, who obviously do have some comedic talent, made it a rather memorable experience. And the song the little girl sings is absolutely beautiful. Got a tear in my jaded eye :).

Though, I did have these flashbacks to some other movie, where also four handsome brothers land in some financial difficulties and use crime and deception to wiggle their way out of it... Oh well.

Grr. Work tomorrow. A catastrophy is waiting. I feel it in the water. I feel it in the earth. I smell it in the air.


40 Pieces of Fish Disappear From Luggage
(AP)


40 Pieces of Fish Disappear From Luggage
(AP)
07/06/2004 11:51 AM
AP - Something fishy happened to Ray Bolanos' luggage. Somewhere between Anchorage and Seattle, about 40 meticulously wrapped and packed one-pound pieces of fresh-caught halibut vanished from his checked bags.

Delta will use RFID to track luggage


Delta will use RFID to track luggage 07/01/2004 08:52 AM
Eventually, the airline may let customers track their own bags using the technology.

Plane 'to clear luggage backlog'


Plane 'to clear luggage backlog' 08/10/2004 07:20 AM
British Airways is to use a specially chartered Boeing 777 to clear a backlog of undelivered luggage.

Stow Luggage, Not Phones, While in
Flight


Stow Luggage, Not Phones, While in
Flight
04/13/2004 11:30 AM
Boston Globe Apr 13 2004 3:09PM GMT

Happiness is a warm puppy


Happiness is a warm puppy 04/19/2005 09:17 AM


Sleeping with Bo

Mizuka took this awhile ago. Just found it on my camera.

Comment - TrackBack

Traffic, obsession and happiness


Traffic, obsession and happiness 01/08/2004 07:58 PM

I disagree somewhat with Adina. I think that traffic is similar to attention. Attention is not the same as power or money, but it is sought after in the same way and in some ways is something that money can't buy and is actually more valuable and difficult to gain. Having said that, it's not about the traffic. Just like it's not about money, or attention. Money, attention and traffic do not, at the end of the day, make you happy. It is associated with privilege and power. I've met many people who have privilege and power (and money and attention and traffic) who are not happy. One of the problems with happiness through score cards is that it's like playing a video game. It's quite an empty happiness that is similar to the empty happiness of fulfilling a craving or an obsession. Most (not all) of the extremely wealthy people I know are obsessed with money and think about it all the time. If you're smart and you are obsessed with money, you can usually become wealthy. Most of the happy people I know are not obsessed with money. Most of them think about money just enough so that they don't have to worry about money. But money's nice to have, just like power is nice to have. But more than enough is often too much. Once you have too much money, power or attention you become obsessed and the fear of losing it alone can make you unhappy. Money, power and attention are addictive and dangerous.

I don't talk about these things very often because speaking from a position of privilege, it's not very convincing, but most of my power, attention, money and other "assets" are a result of my obsessions. These obsessions drive me to focus in excess. I am now exploring my obsessions. I wonder what this is going to do to me. Obsession is a demon which can help you gain many things, but has many corrosive side effects and in the end often leads you away from happiness. I wonder what I would be like without my obsessions?


Money can buy happiness (Reuters)


Money can buy happiness (Reuters) 01/09/2004 09:55 PM
Reuters - Money, it seems, can buy happiness after all -- but only if you've got shedloads of it.

Happiness is a Constricted Anus


Happiness is a Constricted Anus 03/08/2004 11:23 PM
The secret of a long, happy, cancer-free life, according to Hiroyuki Nishigaki, author of How to Good-Bye Depression: "Constrict anus 100 times in succession > 3-5 minutes. 100 times in total a day is OK if you are busy." (03-05)

Daedalus - How not to buy happiness -
The MIT Press


Daedalus - How not to buy happiness -
The MIT Press
08/07/2004 03:52 PM
How not to buy happiness

mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=6&tid=1440 3
track this site | 4 links


Dynamic Happiness: Flash and PHP


Dynamic Happiness: Flash and PHP 08/22/2002 08:22 AM

What price happiness? (Reuters)


What price happiness? (Reuters) 06/29/2004 04:07 AM
Reuters - You don't need millions to be happy. At The Happiness Institute in Australia, a couple of hundred dollars may do the trick.

Stow Luggage, Not Phones, While in
Flight (Reuters)


Stow Luggage, Not Phones, While in
Flight (Reuters)
04/13/2004 09:55 AM
Reuters - The next time a flight attendant asks you to switch off that handheld computer phone, keep smiling -- and pull out a copy of the latest plane safety guidelines.

Boy in Norway Rides Luggage Conveyor
Belt (AP)


Boy in Norway Rides Luggage Conveyor
Belt (AP)
07/27/2004 09:06 AM
AP - A four-year-old boy caused chaos at a Norwegian airport this week when he crawled on a luggage conveyor belt and road it like it was a merry-go-round.

Delta Air Invests $25 Million in RFID
for Luggage


Delta Air Invests $25 Million in RFID
for Luggage
07/02/2004 08:02 AM

Delta to use RFID tags to track luggage


Delta to use RFID tags to track luggage 07/01/2004 05:20 PM
Following a series of tests designed to see how well RFID tags work, Delta Air Lines said today it will use the new wireless technology throughout its U.S. network to track luggage.

Airport luggage inspectors policing
thoughtcrime


Airport luggage inspectors policing
thoughtcrime
03/15/2003 11:03 AM
A traveller flying to San Diego from Seattle found his luggage had been opened by the Federal Transport Security Authority, who had left behind a note telling him so, on which was scrawled "DONT APPRECIATE YOUR ANTI-AMERICAN ATTITUDE" -- a reference to the "No Iraq War" signs he'd picked up in a shop in Seattle.

So, the Feds are not only inspecting our bags -- and invading our privacy -- to ensure that they are bomb-free; they're now taking it upon themselves to chastise us for our political beliefs? What the hell does keeping bombs off airplanes have to do with winkling out protest signs?

Nothing like a little thoughtcrime policing to undermine the entire mission and credibility of the TSA. Of course, the TSA is maintaining that this wasn't the work of an inspector -- rather, someone at the airport cut the security-seal left behind by the inspector, defaced the "You have been inspected" card, and replaced the seal, all without being caught by the TSA itself (wow, that gives me a lot of confidence in the TSA's ability to secure the nation's airports!).

Nico Melendez, western regional spokesman for the TSA, said the note in Goldberg's luggage will be investigated, but he said there's no proof that a TSA employee wrote it. "It's a leap to say it was a TSA screener," Melendez said.

But Goldberg said, "It seems a little far-fetched to think people are running around the airport writing messages on TSA literature and slipping them into people's bags."

Link Discuss (via Interesting People)

RFID Luggage Tracking at Jacksonville
Airport


RFID Luggage Tracking at Jacksonville
Airport
04/18/2004 12:21 PM

Happiness is a Warm Mobile Suit


Happiness is a Warm Mobile Suit 12/19/2004 03:51 PM
My Zeta Gundam box set has come in.

happiness and cheer, families draw near


happiness and cheer, families draw near 12/19/2004 03:48 PM

According to The Man, I need to walk for about a week before I can start running again, so I've been dragging my lazy ass out of the house for the last few days, and reminding my muscles what it feels like to do more than move from the office to the living room and back. This hasn't been as difficult as I thought it would be, because I'm super motivated to get back into shape, and the weather in Los Angeles has been just amazing. Right now, it's 71 in my backyard, and it has been near 80 for almost a week. I have also taken the boredom out of walking by listening to America: The Audio Book by Jon Stewart and the writers from The Daily Show. It's awesome, and I highly reccommend it.

This morning, I added two miles to my walk, which took me past Nolan and Ryan's elementary school. The streets around the school were lined with cars, and I paused my iPod long enough to hear a chorous of children singing holiday tunes as I passed the auditorium. It reminded me of a blog entry I wrote a few years ago, which didn't make it into Just A Geek. The original is in the archives, but rather than cut-n-paste, I did a little . . . uh . . . cleaning up, because, well . . . uh . . . wow.

Hope new readers like it, and hope returning readers don't mind the reprint.

I am Jack's Holiday Program
Originally published on December 20, 2001, edited on December 15, 2004

I just got back from watching Nolan's holiday program at his school.

Nolan is in 5th grade this year, so it's the last elementary school holiday program I'll probably ever see, and when I realized that this morning, I felt immense regret for all the years I attended because I felt obligated to be there, rather than truly looking forward to the show.

For years, Anne and I would arrive at the school moments before the show began, and we'd end up standing in the back, with all of the other parents who overslept, or took too long for breakfast, or had to grab a quickie once the kids were at school. But this year, Anne got there nice and early, and grabbed us two seats with a great view of the stage.

Unfortunately, our great view was tainted a little bit by the horrible people who surrounded us. To my immediate right, I present the old woman who kept farting loudly throughout the entire show. I will not deny that there was more than a little amusement value in listening to them reverberate off the metal cafeteria chairs, but they weren't just the loud "hey, pull my finger" farts. They were the really horrible, lingering, "holy shit, man! Was that you?" ones. Behind us to the right, please enjoy the two little kids who did not stop talking the entire time, except when their mother told them that a good way to stay occupied would be to stand on the floor and bang on their chairs in time to the music. And finally, say hello to the kid immediately behind me, who had one of those little kid colds, and coughed and sneezed throughout the whole performance. I especially loved it when he sneezed all over the back of my neck.

Once the show got started, though, all the annoyances that surrounded us insignificantly faded into the background, as we focused our attention on the stage. All of the classes were great, and the kids were just adorable. The theme this year was Peace and Diversity, which is very funny, considering that I live in the most reactionary, demagogic Republican area in the freakin' world. (All of my neighbors had those offensive "Protect Marriage" signs last year, when the homophobes were trying to make it certain that marriage should only be between men and women. Because those marriages always succeed. And we have to keep the gays from soiling that sacred, unspoiled institution, right?) Sorry. mini-rant. I'm back now.

Nolan's class performed the Christmas carol "O, Tannenbaum," which meant that I spent the last five weeks helping Nolan learn three verses in German, so I could sing along. It was easy to pick out the other 5th grade parents, because they were singing too. Nolan was so adorable in his red sweater and Santa Claus hat, and he held his head high as he belted out, "O Tannenbaum, o Tannenbaum, wie treu sind deine Blätter!" He did all the same things on the stage that he did when we were learning the song: when he sang "Du grünst nicht nur zur Sommerzeit" he clenched his hands into tiny fists and looked at the ceiling. When he sang "Nein auch im Winter, wenn es schneit" he punctuated the three syllables in wenn es schneit with little punches in front of his chest.

I am certain that I, like all the other parents, was able to pick out and isolate my child's voice from the chorus, and I am equally certain, as were the other parents, that my child had the sweetest voice, and turned in the most adorable and memorable performance that has ever graced the cafetorium's stage. Or any cafetorium's stage, for that matter.

My absolute favorite moment was watching Nolan's subdued Joe Cocker as he sang,of course . . . but coming in a close second was when these kids read poems about winter. There were 4 kids up on the stage, all in their holiday finest, who each read a different winter-related poem. The first kid read "The Snowman" by Shel Silverstein, and I'm embarrassed to report that I can't recall what the middle two kids did. But the last kid, who looked an awful lot like Dewey from "Malcolm in the Middle", who wore a checkered shirt and non-matching clip-on tie (it was so damn cute, I couldn't stand it) recited, from memory, a poem by elementary school staple Jack Prelutsky, which was quite an impressive achievement, especially for a third grader. This kid did a great job, and when he was done, he proudly scanned the audience, clearly looking for his parents. When he found them, shrugged his shoulders as if to say, "Well, that's about as good as it gets", and picked his nose and ate it.

Nolan starts Middle School next year, and I realized this morning how much I'm going to miss not just these performances, but all the things that are part of elementary school: the macaroni art work, the turkey on Thanksgiving that's made from a little handprint on brown paper, the mobiles at Christmas that are made from sixteen inches of yarn, green construction paper cutouts that look like trees if you squint, and fifty pounds of glue.

I know that they'll both be in high school before I know it, and then they'll be off to college . . . but wherever my stepkids are, I'll always have these memories to keep me company each holiday season.

Happy Holidays, everyone. I hope you get to spend some time this season with people you love.


One Recipe for Happiness? Run 262 Miles
(Reuters)


One Recipe for Happiness? Run 262 Miles
(Reuters)
03/24/2005 11:47 AM
Reuters - Pondering life on his 30th birthday and finding something lacking, Dean Karnazes staggered home from a night out drinking with friends, put on his gardening shoes and went for a run. A 30-mile run. All night.

Ruby the Elephant Monitored for
Happiness (AP)


Ruby the Elephant Monitored for
Happiness (AP)
04/30/2004 07:50 AM
AP - A judge gave a Tennessee zoo six months to report back on the social life of an African elephant named Ruby.
Grok Description matches for Bluebird of Luggage Happiness
GrokA matches for Bluebird of Luggage Happiness

Delta to Invest in Radio Tags for
Luggage at Airports


Delta to Invest in Radio Tags for
Luggage at Airports
07/01/2004 12:34 AM
Delta Air Lines plans to use disposable radio tags to track all luggage it handles at domestic airports.

Rare pythons found in hand luggage
(Reuters)


Rare pythons found in hand luggage
(Reuters)
01/23/2004 02:22 PM
Reuters - Bulgarian police have arrested a Cypriot man who tried to smuggle out three tiger python snakes -- endangered species banned for trade.

Police Find Rare Pythons in Hand Luggage
(Reuters)


Police Find Rare Pythons in Hand Luggage
(Reuters)
01/26/2004 10:19 AM
Reuters - Bulgarian police on Friday arrested a Cypriot man who tried to smuggle out three tiger python snakes -- endangered species banned for trade.

Computer glitch grounds Comair flights;
US Airways loses track of luggage


Computer glitch grounds Comair flights;
US Airways loses track of luggage
12/25/2004 11:40 PM
940 News Dec 26 2004 4:21AM GMT

Computer glitch cancels Comair flights;
US Airways loses track of piles of
luggage


Computer glitch cancels Comair flights;
US Airways loses track of piles of
luggage
12/25/2004 11:41 PM
AP via San Francisco Chronicle Dec 26 2004 1:05AM GMT

Radio tags dress up RFID concept store


Radio tags dress up RFID concept store 07/14/2004 02:58 PM
In India, Wipro sets up clothing store to demonstrate latest fashion in inventory control.

Radio tags dress up India's 1st RFID
concept store


Radio tags dress up India's 1st RFID
concept store
07/14/2004 03:21 PM
CNET Jul 14 2004 7:08PM GMT

TEN Technology naviPlay(TM) Bluetooth(R)
Stereo Adapter for iPod to be Bundled
with Hewlett-Packard Bluetooth


TEN Technology naviPlay(TM) Bluetooth(R)
Stereo Adapter for iPod to be Bundled
with Hewlett-Packard Bluetooth
01/06/2005 07:20 AM
Investors Business Daily Jan 6 2005 11:40AM GMT

Bluetooth iPod Adapter to be Bundled
with Bluetooth Stereo Headphones


Bluetooth iPod Adapter to be Bundled
with Bluetooth Stereo Headphones
01/06/2005 05:31 PM
Mac Observer Jan 6 2005 9:30PM GMT

Time magazine reporter Weiskopff loses
right hand in Iraq grenade blast, saving
others


Time magazine reporter Weiskopff loses
right hand in Iraq grenade blast, saving
others
12/13/2003 06:01 AM
2 American Journalists Wounded in Baghdad .. Michael Weisskopf .. Post's account .. ACTION

washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A58156-2003Dec11.html
track this site | 6 links


RFID tags not ready to Spy on You!


RFID tags not ready to Spy on You! 05/09/2004 05:09 PM
Seems Walmart is having problems reading some pallets of merchandise and the RFID tags contained within or on. They have...

RFID tags: The people say no


RFID tags: The people say no 09/07/2004 06:38 AM
The issue has united readers of all stripes, from the religious to privacy advocates, CNET News.com's Michael Kanellos writes.

Bluebird of Luggage Happiness

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How to uninstall
hidden devices,
drivers, and
services

DCF probe includes
look at Regier's
computer

Mozilla Patches
Vulnerability

dRSSReader
Manual Express
Downloads are now
live

Terrarium 1.2
Released

Parenting
too much coffee man
Senator Ditka?
Bubbles
Where is
Robot-Valley?

CNN.com - California
education chief
calls preschooler
'stupid dirty girl'
- Jul 9, 2004

That Wired magazine
has some more about
it

Alien in 30 seconds,
with bunnies

"Jerky jokester
Whoopi in dirty diss
at Dubya."

Brief: Sprint signs
5-year, $400M
outsourcing deal
with IBM

what is grok?