Anti-lost CD Ejector
Grok Headline matches for Anti-lost CD Ejector
Secure Resolutions Upgrades Their
Anti-Virus Engine to Include
Anti-Spyware, Anti-Adware, Anti-Dialers,
Anti-Hoaxes, Anti-Jokes, and
Anti-Hacking Tools
Secure Resolutions Upgrades Their
Anti-Virus Engine to Include
Anti-Spyware, Anti-Adware, Anti-Dialers,
Anti-Hoaxes, Anti-Jokes, and
Anti-Hacking Tools
06/05/2005 11:14 PMSecure Resolutions desktop security (Resolution Antivirus™)
automatically detects and eliminates all types of viruses, worms,
Trojans Horses, dialers, hoaxes, jokes, and hacking tools within a
managed desktop security solution. [PRWEB Jun 2, 2005]
Ejector 0.5
Ejector 0.5
07/10/2004 07:12 PMA button for the menu bar to eject any disks.
Ejector 0.6
Ejector 0.6
09/14/2004 10:43 PMEject any disk from menu bar.
Ejector 0.8 (Default branch)
Ejector 0.8 (Default branch)
03/27/2005 03:27 AM
Ejector adds an "Eject" icon to the Mac OS X menu
bar. Using this button, you can eject any disks,
such as an iPod, a CD, a DVD, a USB key and even a
disk-image (dmg) or a hard disk (including
external drives).
Changes:
This version add an "Eject all" item, that will eject
all volumes (which can be useful for laptop users).
Fiction: LOST BOY LOST GIRL By Peter
Straub.
Fiction: LOST BOY LOST GIRL By Peter
Straub.
11/15/2003 07:49 PMSo in addition to the standard-issue frissons to be found here (and
one of the most startling involves only a light bulb), this book also
attempts a Google ...
Lost mail campaign gets lost in post
(Reuters)
Lost mail campaign gets lost in post
(Reuters)
06/27/2004 01:25 AMReuters - A postal campaign to highlight the
quantity of letters that go missing each year has been
given a stamp of authority after none of the letters
arrived at their intended destination.
Lost Revenue? Nope ... Just Lost
Opportunities
Lost Revenue? Nope ... Just Lost
Opportunities
04/15/2005 06:43 PMWhenever we hear about established industries whining about how much
money they're losing from alternative forms of media consumption, we
just shake our heads. If you do too, then brace your neck before
reading on. A new study by Accenture says that TV networks will
"lose" $27 billion in the coming
five years because of ad skipping by DVR users. Not being able to
read the full story on AdAge, we can only assume that Accenture thinks
advertisers will pull back from the networks to the tune of $5-plus
billion per year, simply because DVR watchers can skip ads. Not
likely. The connection is highly dubious and the figures are entirely
far-fetched. Yet even more troubling is the age-old "lost money"
methodology. Each ad skip does not proportionally diminish the
network's coffers -- no money is being subtracted from their bottom
line. Rather, any "losses" from ad skipping would come from the
network's inability to adapt to new trends and attract those dollars
elsewise. The networks are losing money to ad-skipping no more than
record companies are losing money to downloads. The quicker they see
these as lost opportunities, instead of lost dollars, the better for
them.
""Despite
the differences between them,
however, anti-Americanism in the Islamic
world and
anti-Americanism in Europe are
in fact linked, and both bear an uncanny
resemblance
to anti-Semitism.""
""Despite
the differences between them,
however, anti-Americanism in the Islamic
world and
anti-Americanism in Europe are
in fact linked, and both bear an uncanny
resemblance
to anti-Semitism.""
11/03/2003 09:33 PM"Despite the differences between
them, however, anti-Americanism in the
Islamic world and anti-Americanism in
Europe are in fact linked, and both bear
an uncanny resemblance to
anti-Semitism."
"Despite the differences between
them, however, anti-Americanism in the
Islamic world and anti-Americanism in
Europe are in fact linked, and both bear
an uncanny resemblance to
anti-Semitism."
11/03/2003 06:39 AMNatan Sharansky: On Hating the
Jews
commentarymagazine.com/sharansky.html
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Lost without Lost? You might be in the
Land Down Under
Lost without Lost? You might be in the
Land Down Under
04/05/2005 05:23 PMDelays in getting new episode of US shows in Australia have led many
to turn to BitTorrent. It may be time to rethink the broadcast model.


Olive Powers Hosting Services with
Anti-virus & Anti-spam
Olive Powers Hosting Services with
Anti-virus & Anti-spam
09/04/2004 03:04 AMOlive Web Hosting, a full-service division of Olive e-Business, offers
a state-of-the-art anti-virus cover, an anti-spam gateway, plus a
suite of other features one needs most for robust, secure and
hassle-free hosting. [PRWEB Sep 4, 2004]
Microsoft Offers Free Anti-Virus,
Anti-Spyware
Microsoft Offers Free Anti-Virus,
Anti-Spyware
01/06/2005 09:49 PMInformation Week Jan 7 2005 1:14AM GMT
Emanuele Ottolenghi: Anti-Zionism is
Anti-Semitism
Emanuele Ottolenghi: Anti-Zionism is
Anti-Semitism
12/02/2003 01:53 AMAn Italian professor at Oxford .. a wonderful, wonderful column .. a
very interesting piece .. yesterday ..
reports
guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1095694,00.html
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Analyzing AT&T's Anti-Anti-Spam
Patent
Analyzing AT&T's Anti-Anti-Spam
Patent
11/16/2003 02:34 AMAn anonymous reader writes "Dan Gillmor is reporting in his eJournal
taken, in turn, from Gregory Aharonian: AT&T has apparently been
awarded a patent for ...
Charlie Daniels' anti-anti-war rant
Charlie Daniels' anti-anti-war rant
03/15/2003 10:13 PMMusician Charlie Daniels is disgusted by Hollywood types who oppose
Bush's plan to invade Iraq.
You people are some of the most disgusting examples of a waste of
protoplasm I’ve ever had the displeasure to hear about.
Sean Penn, you’re a traitor to the United States of America. You
gave
aid and comfort to the enemy. How many American lives will your
little, ”fact finding trip“ to Iraq cost? You encouraged Saddam to
think that we didn’t have the stomach for war.
You people protect one of the most evil men on the face of this
earth
and won’t lift a finger to save the life of an unborn baby.
Freedom
of
choice you say?
Link
Discuss AT&T patents anti anti-spam technology
AT&T patents anti anti-spam technology
11/19/2003 03:54 AMDoubleClick Nov 19 2003 3:21AM ET
Anti-Semitic -- or anti-Sharon?
Anti-Semitic -- or anti-Sharon?
04/30/2004 07:58 AMWhen Western leaders met in Berlin this week to confront an ugly
upsurge in European anti-Semitism, they pointed fingers not just at
neo-Nazis and militant Muslims -- but also at the European left.
Guardian Unlimited | Guardian daily
comment | Anti-Zionism is anti-semitism
Guardian Unlimited | Guardian daily
comment | Anti-Zionism is anti-semitism
12/02/2003 12:28 AM"The Antiimperialistas are a group
of European anti-war and
anti-globalisation supporters."
"The Antiimperialistas are a group
of European anti-war and
anti-globalisation supporters."
11/18/2003 04:49 AMItalian group backs Iraq fighters .. Sez the Beeb ..
BBC
news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3277029.stm
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All was not lost
All was not lost
09/27/2004 03:10 AMUSA Today Sep 27 2004 6:14AM GMT
Just how lost PFF is
Just how lost PFF is
09/09/2004 11:12 AMI continue to be astonished at how far
PFF has moved from its roots. The group
has issued a
press
release demanding Supreme Court review of
Grokster,
buttressed with supporting blog entries by
Bill Adkinson and a "grid" by
Solveig Singleton with a six (yes, count them, six,
with some including italics) factor test that courts are to apply to
decide whether a technology is legal or not.
I can well understand New Dealers racing to craft multifactored tests
to regulate innovation. But I thought the whole point of the
conservative (economic) movement was to teach us how harmful such
regulation was to innovation and growth. Any test that cannot be
applied on summary judgment guarantees that federal judges will be
forced into a complex balancing to decide which innovation should be
allowed. And thus, any industry threatened with competition can then
use the courts to extort from these new competitors payment before
they are permitted to compete. That is precisely what Valenti says the
VCR case was about. He didn't want to stop the VCR, he tell us. He
wanted only to force VCR manufacturers to pay for the right to sell
consumers VCRs.
Courts, and lawyers, have ruled Silicon Valley long enough. The great
hope of the Grokster opinion was that it would return us to the time
when entrepreneurs could invent without seeking a permission slip from
a federal court (to borrow from the President) . It is simply bizarre
to see PFF now call for a return to the days of industrial policy
regulated by federal judges. Especially bizarre when you consider how
taxing this policy will be to many of the "
supporters" of
PFF. Many (e.g., Apple, Microsoft, Intel), but alas not all (EMI,
Vivendi, BMG). Thus the danger of putting principle up for bid.
lost at sea
lost at sea
12/19/2004 03:48 PMI am having a really hard time sleeping. For almost three weeks, I
try to go to sleep between ten and midnight. I fall asleep for about
ten or fifteen minutes, and then I wake with a start. My legs feel
antsy behind my knees, my brain won't shut up, and I end up tossing
and turning for about twenty minutes, until I get so angry that I get
out of bed and read until at least one in the morning. Last night, it
was two-fucking-forty before I was able to fall asleep. When I wake
up, I have a headache, my neck hurts, and I feel like I haven't slept
at all. This is really getting old.
I know it's not diet, but it could be lack of exercise. I was
pretty damn sick the last two weeks, and running when I have a cold is
the opposite of enjoyable. Darin says that I should exercise more, and
I agree. I miss running, and I discovered, to my horror, that I've put
on nearly ten pounds since August — a product of my Body By
Guinness and Linux fitness fatness program.
But it's more than just that. If I'm honest with myself, I actually
think my brain is kicking me out of bed every night because there's
stuff I have to deal with that I've been avoiding: things I need to
write, people I need to talk to, and issues I need to resolve. Anne
recently did what she calls "Emotional Housekeeping," and I think I'm
going to do it myself.
So today, I will catch up on e-mail (I got it down to 200-ish, but
it's swelled back up to > 500), and finish several interviews
(including Slashdot's Ask Wil Wheaton Anything). I will also take some
ideas that have been brewing in my brains and move them into my The Writer's
Notebook, to make room for new ones. A symptom of my insomnia (and
maybe it's wrapped up in the cause) is a lack of inspiration. I
haven't sat down to do any real creative writing in far too long, and
I'm starting to feel performance anxiety, you know? It's like standing
at the edge of a pool that you know is filled with cold water: the
longer you stand at the edge, the harder it becomes to get up the
courage to dive in.
I hope that getting all these unresolved e-mails and related issues
taken care of will encourage my brain to actually quiet down when I
want to go to sleep.
Weird . . . when I started writing this, I truly didn't know why
I've been so agitated, but I think I just got it — or at least
I've got it narrowed down. Who says blogging isn't therapeutic?
The Lost Art of the CD-ROM
The Lost Art of the CD-ROM
04/08/2005 12:27 AMI was reading today about how Wikipedia is going to release a CD or DVD of all its content. Very cool idea.
This got me reminicising about "The Golden Age of CD-ROMs."
Remember when CD-ROMs were the big thing? From, say, 1996 to 1999 or
2000. Remember when Encarta and
Cinemania amazed you with the
depth of their content?
I remember Encarta 95. Man, that was amazing. Pictures, video, a
little trivia game — I had a double-speed CD-ROM drive, and
could get lost in Encarta for hours. I remember too that it had an
update feature, where you could dial-up to the Internet and it would
download new versions of articles that needed to change. The first
one to update was the article on Yitzhak Rabin
after he got assassinated. I was blown away.
And Cinemania — that was a really great product too.
Thousands of reviews from Roger
Ebert and Leonard
Maltin, video clips, star biographies — I could blow an
afternoon just exploring. Cinemania was what got me hooked on Roger
Ebert. (I still read him religiously, and he's emailed me twice.
Once in response to this
post over on my personal blog.)
And "The Ultimate James Bond" CD-ROM was heroin for me at the time.
I reviewed
it nine years ago for Mr. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. It was
the first writing I did for that site. The review (and the CD-ROM
screenshots — first time I had ever screencapped anything) still
hold up today. That was a great, great product. Did anyone else have
this?
When I worked at Best Buy for eight months in 1998, DVD-ROM drives
were just coming out. I remember thinking that I had to have
one, because then I could browse Encarta without having to switch
CDs. I wanted a DVD-ROM drive for four or five years because of
this, but could never justify it. When I finally bought a machine
that had one...it was kind of anti-climactic, because I was already
hooked on Wikipedia.
But whatever happened to the CD-ROM? The Internet killed them.
You just don't see them anymore. Now we have the Internet Movie Database and Wikipedia,
so there's no need for Cinemania or Encarta.
If you get the urge to publish a CD-ROM, you may as well just put
it in a password protected Web site — you get continuing
membership fees, better tracking, and you can keep it updated.
The CD-ROM is truly a lost art. It's too bad because I firmly
believe that you get more involved with reading offline than online.
See this post — when you're online, more
content is just a click away. When you're offline — like when
you were browsing a CD-ROM — you have a tendency to get into the
reading more and with greater comprehension.
I miss CD-ROMs.
"Lost"
"Lost"
09/24/2004 03:00 AMfor want of a pen a kid was lost?
for want of a pen a kid was lost?
05/12/2004 09:59 PM
The pen is mightier than...? Remember Afghanistan?
Terry, former
Nitpicker,
is now a public affairs specialist in Kandahar. He's learned
that
the children of Afghanistan want nothing more than they want a pen.
Maybe we can help them out by sending some?
the Palestinians lost
the Palestinians lost
06/19/2004 04:40 AMCharles
Krauthammer
washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A50910-2004Jun17.html
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The Lost Boys
The Lost Boys
07/30/2004 05:18 AMOnline gaming all night: Cool. Hour after hour downloading MP3s and
porn: No problem. Thirty seconds so you can try to sell me something?
Outta here. How the 18-to-34-year-old male is reinventing advertising.
By Frank Rose from Wired magazine.
Lost in lust
Lost in lust
06/14/2004 08:25 AMWhy does he leave me to go rollerblading on the esplanade and surf
Match.com?
Lost Refs
Lost Refs
10/31/2003 12:48 PM An article in Science reports that "in more than 1000 articles
published between 2000 and 2003 in the New England Journal of
Medicine, The Journal of the American Medical Association, and
Science" Internet references accounted for 2.6% of all references
(672/25548) and in articles 27 months old, 13% of Internet references
were inactive. That's higher than I'd have expected for references
presumably to scientific journals, but lower than I'd expect for
references to the general-interest Net. (Thanks to Gary Unblinking
Stock for the link.)...
Lost your Job to Outsourcing?
Lost your Job to Outsourcing?
02/13/2004 07:47 PMI just received this message (below) from a news group...
If you have recently lost your I.T. job due to outsourcing,
you might be interested.
-Kevin
-------
I am IEEE-USA's Legislative Representative for Grassroots Activities.
My job is to help individual engineers contact and influence elected
officials.
IEEE-USA was just contact by a senior Democratic Senator. He was
looking for a few engineers from the DC area who have recently lost
their jobs
due to outsourcing....
With The Mac, Apple Has Lost Its Way
With The Mac, Apple Has Lost Its Way
01/02/2005 05:01 AMSteve Jobs learned the wrong lesson from the success of the iMac.
What he should have learned is that Apple could return to its roots as
a volume seller of simple, well-liked computers. But that's not what
Jobs learned. Jobs took the success of the iMac as proof of something
he had long believed: Despite no formal traiing and little evidence,
Jobs suddenly believed he was the harbinger of world-class design. By
Paul Thurrott, Internet Nexus
CEO Says EDS Has Lost Several Contracts
CEO Says EDS Has Lost Several Contracts
05/11/2004 09:00 PMCompanies rarely boast about cutting the shareholders' dividend, so it
was noteworthy this week when officials at Electronic Data Systems
Corp. alerted reporters to one paragraph in a 27-page filing in which
the company suggested it may do just that.
Lost in Translation
Lost in Translation
03/06/2004 01:55 AM
The movie Lost in
Translation finally arrived in Finland recently and without
exaggeration I must admit that it is one of 3 or 4 movies I have ever
seen and immediately wanted the DVD. Aside from the sparse dialogue
that is crisp, excellent performances from Bill Murry and Scarlett
Johansson, and cinematography that helps to tell the story instead of
trying to impress the viewers, there was an insight to the human
condition that is rarely ever explored with such frankness in film;
What happens when you lose your sense of place and belonging?
Expats are not so unlike the characters in the movie as we are
strangers in strange lands with varying degrees of isolation and
feelings of being lost. Often expats don't feel at home in their own
country and go in search of someplace that should feel like home but
don't always find it. The sense of dislocation in LiT is only
emphasized not created by the Tokyo landscape and Japanese language
barrier.
A lot of reviewers call this movie a love story of sorts, but I saw
two expats, one young and one much older, who are adrift in themselves
and in their lives without a place they can call home or people who
will listen and understand them. Maybe they are people who never made
friends very easily or haven't yet figured out what they want out of
life. What is often labeled as 'wanderlust' or 'nomadic' is likely a
desire to find the missing niche or some meaning in life. Some people,
like Bob, have been looking for a long time. The elevator scene in
which Bill Murry looms over the Japanese businessmen is a brilliant
dialogue-free moment that beautifully captures the sense of being
apart, of being different than everyone else, of feeling exposed, of
being alone.
Perhaps the most profound feature of the two lost souls in LiT is the
lack of intimacy with everyone around them. Charlotte calls a friend
at a low point who puts her on hold whereupon she clues in that this
is not someone with whom she can divulge her feelings of desolation.
Intimacy is becoming a rare experience in life, even Bob and Charlotte
possess it only briefly before moving on. You find yourself wondering
if Charlotte will still be as lost at Bob's age since it's clear he
has seen a bit of his own lost youth in hers.
I went West and now I'm lost
I went West and now I'm lost
02/05/2005 09:14 PML.A.'s got me all confused -- can I go home again?
End to lost receipts
End to lost receipts
04/18/2004 08:19 AMChicago Tribune Apr 18 2004 12:09PM GMT
To the Lost City.
To the Lost City.
03/19/2005 02:56 AM
To the Lost City.
Researchers at the University of Washington discovered an undersea
hydrothermal vent field that promises new information about the
origins of life. A
monthlong research trip in 2003, documented online,
yielded results that have just now been published in
Science (subscribers only, sorry). The UW's Lost City site has
much of interest, including an
online journal from the excursion; pictures and video are also
available
here and
here.
Lost luggage? No more
Lost luggage? No more
07/01/2004 07:10 AMBoston Globe Jul 1 2004 11:32AM GMT
Once they were lost, but now they're
found
Once they were lost, but now they're
found
07/23/2004 04:53 PMIt's just a lost pet Hyena
It's just a lost pet Hyena
07/21/2004 04:04 AM
I think the
"mystery creature" in Maryland is just a lost Nige
rian pet Hyena.
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Anti-lost CD Ejector