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CouponHeaven.com Helps Consumers Save Money on Mother's Day Gifts with Free Coupon Codes

CouponHeaven.com, which provides free coupon codes and discounts for online shoppers, has partnered with a variety of merchants to help consumers save money on Mother's Day gifts and flowers. (PRWeb May 1, 2007) Post Comment:Trackback URL: http://www.prweb.com/pingpr.php/TWFnbi1TcXVhLUhvcnItUHJvZi1NYWduLVplcm8=



Listline e-Newsletter

Listline e-Newsletter Find any supplier you need - agencies, CRM, fulfillment, lists, e-commerce, paper, printers, telemarketing, and more. (Read on Source)


The CEO of EveryZing

A 9-minute video interview, conducted at Digital Hollywood in June 2007, with Thomas Wilde, the CEO of EveryZing, formerly Podzinger. The company turns videos and podcasts into text-based transcripts that can be indexed by search engines, and it lets users go right to the part of a video or podcast that they're interested in. (Read on Source)


UK 'must have human space role'

UK 'must have human space role' The UK must play an active and central role in future human space missions to the Moon and Mars, a report concludes. Such participation in this and in future unmanned missions was vital for both UK science and the economy, the UK Space Exploration Working Group said. (Read on Source)


$30 White River challenge

$30 White River challenge Randy and Adam write in... - My brother and I built a canoe for under $30 using mostly materials rescued from dumpsters. We called the project our "$30 White River Challenge." On Labor Day we attempted to paddle the junkboat from Muncie to Noblesville, Indiana, a 50-mile trip. We didn't make it nearly that far, but there's always next year. And ... (Read on Source)


10 Proven Online Marketing Ideas To Make Your Online Profits a Juggernaut Posted By : Timothy McGaff

Dramatically increase your online income and become a wealthy marketer by practicing these proven marketing methods.


Google's Android parts ways with Java industry group

Heads up, programmers: Google opted to create its own Java standards and technology for its Android mobile phone, not piggyback on the existing Java Community Process.


Real-Life Rails: Develop with NetBeans, Deploy on Linux

DevX: "The Ruby language's conciseness makes it great for development--fewer lines of code means reduced development time and maintenance costs..."


It's My Binky pacifiers recalled

WASHINGTON, July 25 (UPI) -- The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission announced a voluntary recall of It's My Binky pacifiers because of a choking hazard.


MLB, umpires approve implementation of replay

MLB, umpires approve implementation of replay Read full story for latest details. (Read on Source)


Photos: Cracking open the famous Simon

TechRepublic looks at the innards of the classic Milton Bradley game, the life of many '80s get-togethers.


Various Previews Of The Indy USGP

The MotoGP World Championship heads to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the first time in its history this weekend, fittingly with the equal most successful rider of all-time leading the groundbreaking pilgrimage to one of motorsport's most iconic venues. Fiat Yamaha rider Valentino Rossi leveled Giacomo Agostini's record of premier-class wins ... (Read on Source)


My thoughts about Wall Street Recovery today

Today the market improved to make up for most of the losses yesterday. But one point hasn’t really been said. I believe, and I am not alone, the financial markets are so weakened, by the sub prime mortgage meltdown and a lack of liquidity, the markets can not function without massive governent and international assistance. (Read on Source)


Advocating for Eco-Socialism in China

Advocating for Eco-Socialism in China WorldChanging Team: This article was written by Mara Hvistendahl in November 2007. We're republishing it here as part of our month-long editorial retrospective. Pan Yue represents a... (Read on Source)


A Sure Way To Get Lower Worker Productivity

There is a lot of talk these days about the "shoot the moon" costs associated with college and university expenses. Average annual raises of 7 to 10 percent are common. In four years the fees will be 1/3 more than they are right now. Big deal! What does that have to do with the workers, employees or associates of any company or corporation? Four years at a state institution will run from fifty to sixty thousand. Private schools are in the hundred to hundred and fifty thousand bracket and more.

Most parents, those paying the bills, will deplete their 401k's, sell real property, cash in life insurance policies, empty savings accounts, borrow, borrow, borrow, and what may be worse than any of that:start moonlighting without telling anyone. When a person decides to work somewhere else, for someone else, regardless of the circumstances, things start to happen. They may be late for their primary job. At first, not much, but then they're late once or twice a week. A habit is setting in. Working the extra hours means that their decision making processes are not quite as sharp. Mistakes are made. Profits are lost. What started out as hundreds and thousands of families are in the same boat, turns out to be one person's job in jeopardy.
This scenario occurs year after year. Those directly affected say, "Yes, I know my work has slipped a little, but it will get better." Maybe it will, but more likely it won't. The employee is given an ultimatum and eventually let go. Another person is hired and trained with a good chance of the process repeating itself. And, few managers make the "college connection."

But, for the sake of argument, let's say the next person doesn't do any of those things to finance a child through college. She just takes out loans and gripes about how little she gets paid for doing a stellar job. This person becomes an attitude problem-again affecting productivity. Not only hers, but those around her.

Then, there is another person. He started early savings plans for each of his three children. He will be in great financial shape when his students are college bound. He feels "sorry" for his co-workers who weren't as diligent as he was, and he lets everyone know it. Another attitude problem starts to manifest itself.

Every state has a 529 plan in effect. Universities have developed unique savings plans. But, the same force that kept people from developing early savings plans keeps people from participating in any savings plan. That force is procrastination. There is always tomorrow because tomorrow never comes: until the day of reckoning. What can be done?

A relentless program of educating employees is a great idea! Find out what government and private savings programs are available in each state and then hammer home the results of failing to follow through with an adequate plan. What will be the ramifications of lost opportunities for them? Encourage heads of families to discuss college with their children. Explain the benefits of working closely with their children's schools to achieve the desired ends of having well-rounded students with better than average GPA's. Businesses can keep families from disintegrating at the mere mention of "the college financial crunch." Corporations are the strength and energy that keeps its workforce intact!

©2005 The Scholarship Doctor, Dale Clifton - All Rights Reserved - Dale is an educational consultant and expert at helping companies, corporations, and businesses aid their employees’ families in learning more about college scholarship planning and the ability to win college scholarships, visit http://www.ScholarshipDoctor.com


New SSL VPN gateway - Connectra NGX R66

... New SSL VPN gateway - Connectra NGX R66 Check Point ... Connectra NGX R66 leverages an enterprises existing virtual private network (VPN) infrastructure allowing employees to connect from ...


Real-Life Linux: The ASUS Eee PC 1000

What do you get someone to whom even turning on a computer is a challenge? You get them a Linux-powered mini-laptop.
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Raleigh Web Design and Hosting

... important. That way, you can interact with your web site vendor to discuss your web design and web hosting needs. For example, in Raleigh, North Carolina Internet Marketing Advantage is ...


Top 4 Reasons You Need 'World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King'

Top 4 Reasons You Need 'World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King' From a wicked new player class to massive new landmasses, World of Warcraft just got dramatically bigger ? and better. (Read on Source)


HP Gets Touchy with New TouchSmart tx2

... on the notebook screen. The tx2 weighs around 5 lbs. and comes loaded with Windows Vista, a rechargeable digital ink pen, 12.1-inch diagonal Brightview LED, and a handy remote control ...


Teenager Pleads Guilty to Botnet, 'swatting' Charges

A 16-year-old Massachusetts boy has pleaded guilty to running a botnet and "swatting" victims with hoax emergency telephone calls.
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Is it snoopy to alter China Internet cafe software?

... Internet cafes to remove unlicensed software and replace it with legitimate copies of either Microsoft Windows or 's homegrown Red Flag Linux operating system. The goal is to cut down ...


Gallery: 40 Years of Mighty Mice

: Photo: Courtesy SRI International

The computer mouse made its worldwide debut 40 years ago in a presentation by Stanford Research Institute engineer Douglas Engelbart. Later called "the mother of all demos," it was a groundbreaking demonstration of how computers could help ordinary people work together, think better and — hopefully — make solving the world's problems that much easier.

But it was the mouse that people really latched onto. Billions of mice later, it still rules the desktop, second only to the keyboard as the most ubiquitous input device of all time.

But mice — and related input devices — come in all shapes and sizes. In this gallery, Wired.com takes a look at some of the more awe-inspiring (and guffaw-inspiring) inventions aimed at helping you get your thoughts out of your brain and into the Matrix.

Left: Engelbart's first mouse was carved out of a block of wood and had just one button, just like Apple's. Underneath were two wheels connected to potentiometers: One recorded the mouse's movement along the x axis, the other one tracked the y axis.

: Photo: Courtesy Bootstrap Institute

Before settling on the hand-controlled mouse, Engelbart's lab investigated other possibilities, including the "knee mouse" shown here. Engelbart later said in an interview that the knee controller "was based on my observation that the human foot was a pretty sensitive controller of the gas pedal in cars. With a little work, we discovered that the knee offered even better control at slight movements in all directions. In tests, it outperformed the mouse by a small margin." However, its slight performance advantage was no doubt outweighed by the fact that it was really, really goofy.

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Mice may have been used here and there in research labs like Xerox PARC, but they didn't hit the big time until Apple released its revolutionary Macintosh in 1984. It was the first consumer computer to use a truly rich graphical user interface — and a one-button mouse was a standard part of the package. The mouse was so much a part of the Mac's unique identity that Apple didn't even include arrow keys on the computer's keyboard.

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Apple has since relented, but for years the company drove its customers up the wall by refusing to put more than a single button on its mice. That meant you had to buy mice from Logitech, Macally or — gasp — Microsoft if you wanted to take advantage of many applications' right-click capabilities. But Apple's worst mouse misstep? Making a translucent and perfectly circular one-button mouse for the G3 iMacs. With the shape of a hockey puck, the mouse made it much too easy for eyes-on-the-screen users to wind up grasping the mouse at a slant, sending their cursors zooming northeast when they meant to go southeast. Arrgh!

: Photo: Courtesy Royal Canadian Navy

The world's first trackball actually predates Engelbart's mouse by more than a decade, and it was invented by Canadians, no less. Tom Cranston, Fred Longstaff and Kenyon Taylor developed this elaborate gizmo for a Canadian Navy project in 1952. For the rotating part, it used a standard bowling ball from Canada's unique five-pin game. There's no word on whether it was ever used for aiming Canadian anti-missile defense systems, Missile Command-style.

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Some videogame players suffer an inconvenient and disabling malady: Just as the action gets hot and heavy, their ability to shoot straight is thrown off by a physiological malfunction. Yes, we're talking about sweaty palms. Nyko's AirFlo comes to the rescue, with a built-in fan that blows cooling air onto your mouse hand, helping its grip remain firm and sweat-free.

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Graphics tablets that let you draw electronic images by tracing lines on a flat surface go as far back as 1888, or as far as 1957 in the modern computer age. But they didn't hit the consumer market until Koala Technologies introduced its KoalaPad for the Apple II in 1984. It also later supported the TRS-80, Atari, Commodore 64 and IBM PC. With its bundled drawing software, the KoalaPad was a hit among artists and school kids.

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Who wouldn't want to have a big, chunky, silver metal knob on their desk? Reminiscent of the volume knob on an old stereo, the PowerMate is a USB peripheral that can be configured to control your computer's volume, "scrub" back and forth in video-editing software or scroll through text documents. Best of all, its functions are app-specific, so you can make it do different things depending on which program you're using. It's even got ground effects: A blue LED light glows brighter or dimmer depending on the level you're dialing in.

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Also known as a touchpad, this flat sensor replicates the effect of a mouse by letting you drag your fingers across its surface to control a pointer on the screen. The trackpad made its first appearance in a laptop with the Apple PowerBook 500 in 1994, and has since become nearly ubiquitous on notebook computers and netbooks. Recent tweaks to the technology have included multitouch support (so you can use more than one finger at a time) and even limited display capabilities using the pad's embedded status lights.

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Perhaps the most reviled pointing device ever, the TrackPoint was invented by IBM for use in its line of ThinkPad notebooks. It had the advantage of being compact, requiring far less space than a touchpad. With a little practice, it was also a reasonably efficient and ergonomic controller. On the downside, many people found it difficult to use, it was useless for anything that required finesse (like drawing applications), and it just plain felt weird. As a result, the TrackPoint collected a wide range of nicknames, of which we'll list just a few of the more printable ones: cat's tongue, nub, nubby mouse, pointing stick, stick mouse, stupid little red pointer, nipple mouse.

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Everyone who has had to rely on a mouse, trackball or digitizer tablet fantasizes at some point about a device that would let you control the cursor without having to take your hands off the keyboard. Like, for instance, a foot mouse! Bili's Foot Mouse/Slipper Mouse fits the bill, and it's even programmable, so you can assign different functions to each of the buttons. However, at $199, it's a little pricey for most of us.

: Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

The Falcon Novint looks like a menacing alien orb held delicately by a three-fingered metal claw, with a pistol grip on the end. But grab the grip and dive into your favorite first-person shooter and it becomes an awesome 3-D controller, complete with realistic force feedback — so you can actually feel the recoil when you pull the trigger. Game on!

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Brainwave-reading devices like the Emotiv EPOC and NeuroSky promise to take human-computer interfaces to the next level by letting you control an application (or better yet, a game) simply through the power of thought. While there's still a lot of work to be done, these technologies hold the greatest promise of helping us truly jack in to cyberspace.


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Sega Bringing DS RPG Sands of Destruction to US; Helmed by Famed RPG Veteran Team

Publisher Sega has confirmed that it will bring the imageepoch-helmed DS role-playing game Sands of Destruction to the North American market next fall.

Already available in Japan as World Destruction: Michibikareshi Ishi, the game follows the World Annihilation Front, a group that thinks the only way to free humanity from the tyranny of the Ferals is to destroy the world. Along the way, players will discover the "key to global destruction" and unravel "the mystery of the creation of the world."

Developed by Lumonious Arc series creator imagepoch, Sands of Destruction saw contributions from a number of veterans from beloved RPGs, including members of Square's Xe...


Instant Boot Server 1.0

... 14th 2008 18:41 UTC About: Instant Boot Server allows you to set up a Debian GNU/Linux chroot environment and install a TFTP boot server onto it. Three "boot methods" ...


Obama's green team

Obama's green team The current Energy secretary, Samuel W. Bodman, is a former chemical-company CEO and financial-services executive. The next one is likely to be a Nobel Prize-winning physicist who runs a national laboratory dedicated to renewable energy, next-generation biofuels and other technological solutions to global warming. If there's a clearer signal of ... (Read on Source)


Billy Mays wants to sell you some ESPN360

Billy Mays wants to sell you some ESPN360 Arnold today launches a pleasingly goofy campaign for ESPN360.com starring Billy Mays, the bearded infomercial guy usually seen shilling for OxiClean. See all four ads here. This genre's been parodied to death, but the ESPN spots score by being even dumber than we've come to expect. They're almost parodies of parodies, so ... (Read on Source)


Ford's Automated Parallel Parking System

Fordparkassist

Like Stockton to Malone, Ford wants to give its buyers an assist ? at least those who purchase a 2010 Lincoln MKT or MKS. In mid-2009, both vehicles will come equipped with Ford?s new Active Park Assist system, which parallel parks the vehicle automatically. The MKT is an all-new crossover that will debut at the Detroit auto show next month.

The system strongly resembles the one on the Lexus LS 460 (check out our own Joe Wiesenfelder putting it to the test). Rather than cameras, though, the system utilizes Ford?s ultrasonic-based sensing system.

Ford claims key advantages over Lexus? version of the technology: Ford?s system can be used in downhill parking situations, and the American automaker also claims it has vastly improved on reliability and speed in parking situations.

While this certainly may be true (we won?t know until we get our hands on a ?10 MKT or MKS), we have yet to meet anyone who truly craves this technology. If you have a different opinion, feel free to let us know in the comments.

Update: Video by Ford is below. Beware, it is kind of dry, but shows the system in action.


Is the Yellowstone Supervolcano About To Blow?

Is the Yellowstone Supervolcano About To Blow? An anonymous reader writes "Apparently, Yellowstone National Park has been having a very unusual number of earthquakes. Many of the most recent tremors have been deeper underground, an ominous sign. Combine that with a rapid rise in elevation over the past three years, and the possibility that earthquake activity from surrounding areas could ... (Read on Source)