Archive for the 'Hardware' Category

Free 1GB Secure Digital Card

Tuesday, December 19th, 2006

Free Kingston 1GB card

Buy.com is offering 1GB Secure Digital cards from Kingston at $50, which is not a great price, until you take into account a $30 rebate, which drops it to $20. Google is offering a $20 instant rebate if you use Google Checkout for Buy.com orders $50 or over, which means you can get the card for $0. If you choose slow shipping, the card is yours for the cost of remembering to fill in the rebate form and mail it. The rebate allows for two rebates per household, which must be sent in in the same envelope.

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Apple’s Black Friday Sale

Friday, November 24th, 2006


Apple Store

Apple has dropped the prices on some Macintoshes, iPods and accessories today only, Friday November 24th. You can get a brand new MacBook or iMac for $101 off, an iPod nano for $21 off or a regular iPod for $31 off. They also have deals on car chargers, earphones, speakers, Office 2004 Standard Edition, .Mac, Parallels, the Airport Express base station and more.

Shipping should be free on most orders.

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MacBook Glossy Screen Report

Thursday, November 16th, 2006

I recently picked up one of the new model Core 2 Duo MacBook Pro’s, and decided to try the new glossy screen. I was hesitant; I was worried about glare and whether it might make it more difficult to read the screen in bright light.

To the contrary, the glossy screen is fantastic. I find the display more readable than ever. I do see reflections in it at times, but my focus on the things on the display just tunes them out. The only downside is that it seems to pick up fingerprints more easily.

Apple’s Shiny New Airline Magsafe Adapter - Free at Last!

Wednesday, November 8th, 2006

Apple Magsafe Airline Adapter

One of the dirty little secrets of Apple’s MacBook Pro was that there was no airplane power adapter available for it. In fact, since it draws 85 watts of power and most seats can only deliver 75 watts of power, so it was pretty much doomed from the start.
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Apple Announcements

Monday, August 7th, 2006

Apple’s Developer’s conference (WWDC) starts today, and as always there’s been a great deal of anticipation of the keynote speech where Steve Jobs was expected to announce new hardware, features of the next version of MacOS X, and other goodies.

This keynote was a little different… as we’re most of the way through Apple’s transition to Intel processors, there were a lot of certainties about the announcements - that Apple would announce a PowerMac successor, that it would be named “Mac Pro”… just the details were uncertain.
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Apple’s Free iPod Educational Deal

Saturday, July 8th, 2006




Apple Online Store


Apple Store

Apple is offering several deals which can help save some dollars when you buy a Mac. Note that you need to buy everything together on the same invoice from the same store; the deals vary on where you can buy stuff from and still qualify for the rebate. And they are rebates - you’ll need to be fussy and clip UPC codes, save invoices, fill out forms and mail it all back to Apple.

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Adding Memory to Your New Intel Mac

Saturday, July 8th, 2006

If you buy your new Intel Macintosh from Apple and you get it with additional RAM pre-installed, you’ll be paying through the nose for the memory. If you’re comfortable adding memory to your Mac (and it’s really not difficult to; it’s the most common hardware operation that end-users perform, and Apple has made it pretty easy to deal with) then you can definitely save a decent amount of money on the RAM.

Increasing the total memory in your Macintosh is likely the cheapest way to improve its performance. MacOS X really wants at least 512MB to start with, and if you’re doing anything memory intensive, say Photoshop, you’ll be very very happy to max out your RAM. Also, if you’re on an Intel Mac and you’re running older, non-Intel applications that are built for a PowerPC, you’ll be using “Rosetta” without knowing it, and you’ll definitely need some extra RAM.
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Palm Flying Resources

Sunday, May 28th, 2006

Many airlines provide flight schedules that you can load onto your Palm Pilot. Some, like American and United, even provide conduits so that the flight schedules are automatically updated when you hotsync. You still don’t get your travel details loaded into your PDA, but if you travel a lot, this can be very handy.

I ran across a helpful web site at http://www.palmflying.com/altools.html. They have a table of various airlines and conduits and downloads that they provide to support Palm Pilots and Pocket PC’s. If you don’t see what you want there, you might take a look at your airline’s web site; they may have what you need there.

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Amazon $100 MacBook Rebate (and other Amazon Macintosh rebates)

Sunday, May 21st, 2006

Amazon continues to have the best retail prices for Macintoshes.

They’re offering a $100 rebate on the new MacBook. They also offer a $150 rebate on the MacBook Pro, a $100 rebate on the iMac and a $25 rebate on the Mac Mini.

The rebates are also very easy to claim… good going, Amazon! You can submit the rebate online without having to mail anything to them.

Checking the Temperature on Intel Macintoshes

Wednesday, May 17th, 2006

Picture 5

Checking the temperature of your computer CPU is one of those things that a lot of people seem to like to do, like be able to control iTunes from the status bar of their mail reader, or plugin an add-on to every other application in the world so that it can tell them what the weather is in its own distinctive way.

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