people dancing cartoon

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  • Cartoon+people+dancing+to+



  • jaigo
    Oct 11, 09:16 AM
    I really hope the Zune becomes a real competitor and threat to Ipod. I am sick of apple sitting on their ass and giving us minimal improvements to the ipod. I want a wide screen, good battery life, THIN and sleek and sturdy. I will not buy a zune but I hope this pushes apple to bring us the goddamn widescreen ipod. :mad:





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  • Cartoon+people+dancing+to+



  • LEStudios
    Oct 6, 10:14 PM
    Wait, you mean that grass on the other side isn't actually greener it's just painted green?!?!?! ;)

    Welcome to the real world! :D





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  • clip art people dancing,



  • Daiden
    Oct 6, 11:36 AM
    AT&T drops a ton of calls in my area, but it's no different than when I used Verizon.





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  • cartoon of people dancing



  • AHDuke99
    Apr 15, 12:29 PM
    It can't be all metal. Otherwise it will have some serious signal issues.





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  • and diverse people dancing



  • nli10@mac.com
    Jan 9, 04:44 PM
    Here: http://www.apple.com/quicktime/guide/appleevents/


    http://events.apple.com.edgesuite.net/j47d52oo/event/ has less spoiler - first post!





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  • Rap cartoon 4 - search ID



  • KnightWRX
    Apr 29, 07:26 PM
    I hate to say it, but Windows 7 with their translucent plastic is TEN TIMES more attractive than Mac OSX.

    I personally find that the "translucent plastic" in Windows 7 looks like it was ripped off from the 90s and a bad Linux window manager. Seriously, it screams "look at me, I'm trying too hard!".

    And it's a complete rip-off of KDE 4.x.





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  • Dancing, walking, ballet poses



  • irmatt
    Apr 25, 02:06 PM
    Is it just me or did Apple keep a tighter lid on this stuff in the past?

    i just don't think people cared as much





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  • dancing with the stars cartoon



  • ravenvii
    Apr 24, 01:11 PM
    I am looking forward to installing Windows 8 on my MBA via Parallels. From what I'm seeing, it's looking good, very good!

    Here's a few pictures of the Windows App Store.

    http://www.neowin.net/news/windows-8-app-store-images-surface-from-build-7955

    I am looking forward to the demise of the optical drive.





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  • people+dancing+in+the+rain



  • BRLawyer
    Sep 12, 06:06 AM
    Friends aren't post.

    So here we go again, teaching english to our fellow MR members:

    From the Oxford dictionary:

    Receive - (...) "greet or welcome formally"; "be visited by"; or also "accommodate".

    No, friends are not post...:rolleyes:





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  • Cartoon+people+dancing+to+



  • Nekbeth
    Apr 26, 08:08 PM
    Sure, good to have that clear.

    Then yes, they are indeed pointers to timers. The timers are created inside their methods, I use those pointers to reference them and use invalidate.

    Here is part of the code:

    .h (declaration of timers)
    @interface ATimerViewController : UIViewController {




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  • of people dancing, cartoon



  • dejo
    Apr 25, 04:20 PM
    Thanks for your advice dejo, but I'm not stepping away because of lack of fundamentals. Interaction with other developers is an additional learning source (the main is all kind of documentation), of course I need to learn more about fundamentals of objective C just like you did when you had 3 months programming, but that ain't stopping me from asking help in forums. Some people help you, some don't, you just have to deal with that.
    The reason I suggested what I suggested was that, without a good grasp of the fundamentals, you are not exactly speaking the same language as those you seek help from. This can cause continued confusion and frustration by all involved. Anyways, good luck with your issue.





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  • Andy Gray Cartoon people



  • AppliedVisual
    Oct 17, 02:33 PM
    Tape!?! :confused: who on earth uses tape anymore? This is.. 2006. And I was always under the impression that a medium with moving parts would be more prone to failure than one without. Certainly my VHS and cassette library have had their share of tapes being chewed up by the machine or worn out from use.

    Tape is still the most reliable, long-term archival media available. Newer tape systems can transfer over 150MB/sec. to and from the tape and store several hundred GB on a single tape. Cost-wise, tape is expensive to buy into, but if you have sufficeint archival needs, it pays for itself over time. Many tape solutions once they reach their ROI point afer a year or two, often are cheaper than HDD storage by half or more. Sounds weird, I know, but that's the way it still is.

    Most large data centers covering everything from web storage, insurance databases, financial institutions etc... Have mostly converted over to large-scale redundant servers and storage networks using RAID subsystems. This serves all their immediate storage and backup needs on site and is very reliable if managed properly. But nearly all of them still use an additional tape archival workflow for off-site data storage. There really is no other way right now... Wish there was. Hence the reason tape systems also keep evolving and pretty much match HDD capacity with tape capacity in most cases and transfer rates continue to improve. Comparing tape archival systems to VHS or miniDV tape is not a good comparison, data tapes (or at least the good ones) are very robust and actually very hard to damage. Short of placing them in a magnetic field for a period of time, they're mostly indestructable. They do have moving parts, but hardly any compared to a hard drive.

    Using hard drives as an archival solution is a bad idea... Hard drives are not designed for this and can corrupt data over time. Not to mention, the platter system and motors are not designed to sit stationary for years at a time for long-term storage. Optical media isn't too bad, but most photo-sensitive dyes and films used in optical media will decay over time. CD-R media was originally claimed to have a lifespan of 30 to 100 years. Now that it's been around for 30+ years, we're finding out that claim was somewhat exaggerated. Recordable DVD media and HD-DVD and BD are no different, just higher data density on the discs. And also not anywhere near practical for large-scale solutions. Just how do you archive and manage 300 petabytes per year to DVD-R???

    For small business type users and home users though, DVD-R media in addition to a good redundant RAID setup probably makes the most sense. Unless they're pushing lots of data doing HD video editing or something like that. In which case, it may still make sense to give tape a consideration as the long-term archive solution. Prosumer level tape archive systems exist and are not that expensive and much more reliable than shelved hard drives and much easier to manage than optical media. The VXA2 format can afford someone an external Firewire tape system w/2 tapes for < $1K. Tapes hold up to 160GB each and factoring in the cost of the drive plus enough tapes to back up about 3 terrabytes of data, the cost becomes cheaper than individual hard drives. So a few terrabytes down the road and you could be wishing you had considered tape if you're still using DVD-R. OTOH, DVD-R is just fine and dandy if a terrabyte or two is all you need. Because you can fit a lot of discs in a shoebox and sharpie pen to label them is pretty cheap too.

    External drives are *not* long term archiving solutions. They are useful for storing vast amounts of data that presumably you want to actually access and use (and possibly modify) on a regular basis; also, they are good for the kind of incremental backups you refer to, Time Machine, Retrospect, other 3rd party backup tools can be used for this. But if you have important files you know aren't going to change, while having them on HDD is useful for instant access, that's not where they should be permanently archived -- they should be burned to a permanent medium, preferably more than one copy, and stored in a safe place (or places). If your drive fails and you still need the data to be on that drive, you can then restore from the permanent medium.

    Um... I guess I got carried away and didn't mean to elaborate on what you already said. But, er... um.. Yep, I agree.





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  • Me dancing in Cartoon



  • Patdt13
    Apr 13, 05:40 PM
    http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/417Enp3t-4L._AA300_.jpg

    Surprisingly good.





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  • dancing cartoon carrot Vector



  • louis Fashion
    Mar 28, 03:56 PM
    I award the l. Fashion design award to the big grey box at the top of this thread. Would look nice on my desk.





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  • people dancing



  • AppleScruff1
    Apr 11, 06:00 PM
    I wouldn't bother arguing *LTD* about this. Many have tried and failed. He simply refuses to accept that Redmond has produced some quality products without ripping off Apple. Each versions of every Microsoft products have their +'s and -'s. Recently, with Windows 7, Office IE9, WP7; Microsoft have been churning out some quality, solid, software. Not to mention what a great success the Xbox has turned out to be. Yes, they are not always the first to have some features in their products, but neither are Apple at times. Fast user switching is one that springs to mind.

    Just because they licence their software to a range of hardware companies, *LTD* automatically thinks they are trash. And, yes, some of their products have been trash. But so have Apple's at times.



    No need to argue or try to change his mind. When someone is very close minded there is no reasoning.





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  • of people dancing, cartoon



  • macteo
    Apr 29, 04:30 PM
    I don't have AirDrop anymore!





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  • Top Cartoons About The Obama



  • Marx55
    Oct 28, 05:33 PM
    APPLE, DO NOT MAKE THE SAME MISTAKE AGAIN!!!

    Apple made a big mistake not licensing Mac OS 22 years ago allowing clones. Otherwise Mac OS X would be now the mainstream operating system.

    Now history repeats. Apple has now the oppotunity to take over and beat Windows. But for that it is absolutely essential to allow Mac OS X to run on ANY PC out there.

    Why does Apple make the same mistake?

    Even more, if Apple would open Mac OS X completely including Aqua and give it for free as Linux, then Windows would be history in a few months!!!

    Apple, are you listening?





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  • people dancing, cartoon



  • bartelby
    Nov 14, 03:02 AM
    I forgot one other thing, which is also driving me mad... the foot steps. For some reason, Treyarch decided to take basically all sound of footsteps out of the game. That makes "Ninja" a worthless perk now, as you don't need it to be silent. But, it also makes it much easier to get ridiculously stabbed in the back.

    I've heard that foot steps, along with the spawn issues, are a couple of the main things being fixed in the first patch/update. I really hope so. The fact that they made it into the final release like this is mind-boggling, so a fix is the least they can do.


    Yes, I'm fed up of being stabbed in the back too





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  • Cartoon+people+dancing+to+



  • Catonow
    Mar 17, 01:13 AM
    One possibility that came to mind is that the cashier guy let him get away with it because he intended to pocket the cash himself.





    gri
    Apr 17, 01:57 PM
    The radiation dosage from any properly maintained active scanner is still orders of magnitude less than what you get from a 4-hour flight at 10 km. Go ahead and opt out of your full-body scans... if you're doing it for the "health" reason you're tilting at a very small windmill.

    Just read this letters from 4 UCSF professors to Dr. Holdren (advisor to the president) regarding the as of yet not proven harmlessness of the X-ray backscatter devices (http://www.npr.org/assets/news/2010/05/17/concern.pdf). Just to name a few: low dose radiation with high dose administered to the skin. Real photon Flux is not known. And - who is controlling the scanners and how to you know they are properly maintained? I am a radiologist and nuclear medicine physician and we have to report every dose the patient receives (X-rays and nuclides) - here you don't know the deposited dose. The letter is a good read and should be made much more public. The link is through NPR thankfully...





    praterkeith
    Nov 16, 10:34 PM
    If this did happen, would it mean that we would have a sub-$700 apple portable?

    I'm down.





    mcorf
    Apr 10, 01:08 PM
    I went to pick up my ipad yesterday(which I reordered) and asked if they had any more for sale. They said they had a lot of the verizon 3G(which I didn't want anyway), but were not allowed to sell them. I asked why and they said because of what happened at some of there other stores, but wouldn't tell me what.





    charliex5
    Sep 28, 01:25 PM
    In an age where architect and design firms are just starting to apply to Apple's design principles to the building of homes, Steve Jobs has gone and designed the iPhone of houses.

    WTH? Whoever wrote this clearly doesn't have any idea about what has been going on in architecture in, oh, the past 150 years. I met Peter Bohlin last year and we got to talking about his design strategies. He's been doing similar work throughout his career, even before BCJ (then Bohlin Powell) was founded in 1965. Check out Japanese architecture from the past 1,500 years.

    As an architecture major and architectural history minor I find this comment to be Jobs-worship. Thinking that nobody else could come up with the concept of a simple and sophisticated design is just asinine.

    My rant aside, I love the floor plan and can't wait to see some elevations/perspectives. Go BCJ!

    Also, on a side note, BCJ is the firm that designed Bill Gates' house...





    skunk
    Apr 21, 11:38 AM
    The goal of post votes is to identify the comments that others most agree with or appreciate seeing.Do we need to know this? At least disable it for PRSI.

    It is against forum rules to simply reply "+1": what on earth is the difference between that and clicking a button to say "+1"?



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