Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Apple to broadcast special media event today via Apple TV, Safari browsers
“Apple will webcast today’s special event at 10am PDT / 1pm EDT today from the Yerba Buena Vista Center for the Arts in San Francisco, California via Apple TV.
Expected at today’s special event: new iPad, new iPad mini, bother featuring Touch ID, an 64-bit Apple A7X chips, along with info about Mac Pro and OS X Mavericks releases or release dates, an updated iPod touch, and possibly more.
Apple will also webcast to Safari users on OS X and iOS here. Live Streaming video requires Safari 4 or later on OS X v10.6 or later; Safari on iOS 4.2 or later. Streaming via Apple TV requires second- or third-generation Apple TV with software 5.0.2 or later.
Saturday, November 3, 2012
BRAVEN SIX Series:The World's Most Talented Speakers
BRING STUNNING AUDIO TO LIFE
Wherever you go, whatever you do BRAVEN gives you the
freedom to amplify your mobile life.
- Stunning HD Audio
- Durable and stylish aluminum construction looks great
and goes anywhere - Up to 20 hours of wireless play time
- Charge your mobile devices on the go
SOCIALIZE YOUR MEDIA
SHARE WHAT MOVES YOU WITH THE WORLD. FROM MUSIC TO MOVIES,
& games to FaceTime, BRAVEN allows you to connect with the world around you.
- High-fidelity room filling sound
- Wirelessly stream music, movies, games, calls and chats like Skype & FaceTime
- Daisy-chain multiple speakers together for even bigger sound
- Make any speaker a Bluetooth speaker
RECHARGE YOUR DEVICE AND PLAY LONGER
Ever find yourself running low on battery & start scrambling
for the nearest outlet? Use your BRAVEN speaker to resuscitate your mobile life.
Anywhere. No outlet required.
- Never run out of power
- Stream wirelessly and charge your mobile device
- Charge an iPhone (or equivalent) from dead to full
http://www.braven.com
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Friday, December 30, 2011
Apple Keyboard with Numeric Keypad Problems
If you are unable to type letters, numbers, or symbols, you may have Mouse Keys enabled on a keyboard that has no numeric keypad or Num Lock key.
It happen to me this week, I was entering a password which had numerical numbers and I was using the numerical pad on the right side of my keyboard and I kept getting the wrong password message. I used the numbers above the letters on the keyboard and they worked.
So I thought I had a bad keyboard, until I did a simple search and there it was at Apple support, "Unable to type while Mouse Keys is enabled in Mac OS X" posted December 05, 2011.
Seams like I wasn't the only one having this problem.
Quick fix:
Note: If you are logged on to a user where Mouse Keys is already disabled, but your keyboard is not responding properly, toggle the radio buttons for Mouse Keys "On" then "Off" to restore normal functionality.
It happen to me this week, I was entering a password which had numerical numbers and I was using the numerical pad on the right side of my keyboard and I kept getting the wrong password message. I used the numbers above the letters on the keyboard and they worked.
So I thought I had a bad keyboard, until I did a simple search and there it was at Apple support, "Unable to type while Mouse Keys is enabled in Mac OS X" posted December 05, 2011.
Seams like I wasn't the only one having this problem.
Quick fix:
- Choose System Preferences from the Apple menu.
- Choose Universal Access from the View menu.
- Click the Mouse tab or in Lion Click Mouse & Trackpad
- Click Off, next to Mouse Keys. If you have already logged in as a different user where Mouse Keys is disabled, click On and then click Off next to Mouse Keys, to return the keyboard to normal operation.
Note: You may also check/uncheck the box for "Press Option key five times to turn Mouse Keys on or off".
Note: If you are logged on to a user where Mouse Keys is already disabled, but your keyboard is not responding properly, toggle the radio buttons for Mouse Keys "On" then "Off" to restore normal functionality.
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Friday, August 19, 2011
Save Your Battery - On your Laptop
FlashFrozen maybe the answer to your short battery life. If you use Google Chrome, Firefox 4, and in Safari on 64-bit Macs, the Flash plug-in is pushed onto its own process. FlashFrozen lives as a tiny menu app, monitoring this process and will warn you (by turning red) if Flash is using a relatively significant amount of processor cycles. You can then go to FlashFrozen's menu to kill the Flash plug-in.
Any running Flash content is replaced with the broken plugin icon. Want to get Flash working again? Simply reload the page, or go to a new one. The next time Flash is needed, it'll come back to life. Flash ads or other Flash-related junk forces our processors to run hot and leech our precious battery fluids.
Flash animations and videos are among the top processor hogs on Mac OS X. A single poorly-designed Flash banner - even in an inactive window or tab - can suck up an entire processor core with its shady mortgage offers.
Your 5-hour battery life gets cut in half, your laptop runs hotter, and your legs cook to medium-rare.
That's where FlashFrozen comes into play.
FlashFrozen lets you stop the Flash plug-in dead in its tracks, letting your new-fangled Mac cool down, use less power, and give you more time to do whatever it is you do. Probably blog or tweet or something.
And the new AutoKill mode actively stops Flash at all times. Turn this on and off at will to save even more battery life.
Any running Flash content is replaced with the broken plugin icon. Want to get Flash working again? Simply reload the page, or go to a new one. The next time Flash is needed, it'll come back to life. Flash ads or other Flash-related junk forces our processors to run hot and leech our precious battery fluids.
Flash animations and videos are among the top processor hogs on Mac OS X. A single poorly-designed Flash banner - even in an inactive window or tab - can suck up an entire processor core with its shady mortgage offers.
Your 5-hour battery life gets cut in half, your laptop runs hotter, and your legs cook to medium-rare.
That's where FlashFrozen comes into play.
FlashFrozen lets you stop the Flash plug-in dead in its tracks, letting your new-fangled Mac cool down, use less power, and give you more time to do whatever it is you do. Probably blog or tweet or something.
And the new AutoKill mode actively stops Flash at all times. Turn this on and off at will to save even more battery life.
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