| iPod | Price | Rating |
Apple iPod nano 16 GB Blue (5th Generation) NEWEST MODEL![]() |
$ 159.96 | (764) |
Apple iPod nano 8 GB Green (5th Generation) NEWEST MODEL![]() |
$ 120.00 | (764) |
Apple iPod touch 16 GB (2nd Generation) [Previous Model]![]() |
$ 250.00 | (1387) |
Apple iPod Nano 5th Generation (with Camera) Transparent Clear Snap On Crystal Plastic Hard Cover Case![]() |
$ 0.01 | (86) |
Apple iPod nano 16 GB Purple (5th Generation) NEWEST MODEL![]() |
$ 154.00 | (764) |
Apple iPod nano 16 GB Pink (5th Generation) NEWEST MODEL![]() |
$ 159.94 | (764) |
Apple Ipod Comparison
May 7th, 2010Best HP Laptops
May 7th, 2010HP G71-340US 17.3-Inch Black/Silver Laptop – Up to 4 Hours of Battery Life (Windows 7 Home Premium)
- 2.2GHz Intel Core2 Duo T6600 Processor (2MB LS Cache, 800 MHz FSB)
- 4 GB DDR2 RAM (2 Dimm), Max supported 8 GB
- 320GB (5400RPM) SATA Hard Drive, LightScribe SuperMulti 8X DVD±R/RW with Double Layer Support
- 17.3 Diagonal HD+ High-Definition HP LED BrightView Widescreen Display
- Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit, *Up to 4 Hours of Battery Life
- Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 4500MHD (shared) with up to 1.7 GB total available graphics memory
Rating:
(out of 40 reviews)
List Price: $ 779.99
Price: $ 647.79
HP Pavilion DV7-3160US 17.3-Inch Laptop (Black)
- AMD Turion? II Ultra Dual-Core Mobile Processor M620 (2.5 GHz, 2 MB L2 Cache)
- 4GB DDR2 System Memory (2 DIMM) (expandable to 8 GB)
- 500GB (7200RPM) Hard Drive (SATA), LightScribe SuperMulti 8X DVD±R/RW with Double Layer Support
- Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit, * Up to 3.25 Hours of Battery Life
- 17.3? Diagonal HD+ LED HP BrightView Widescreen Display (1600 x 900), ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4530 Graphics with up to 2302MB
Rating:
(out of 10 reviews)
List Price: $ 1,100.00
Price: $ 749.99
HP Pavilion DM3-1130US 13.3-Inch Laptop (Silver)
- AMD Athlon Neo X2 Dual-Core Processor L335 (1.6 GHz, 512 KB L2 Cache)
- 4GB DDR2 System Memory (2 DIMM) (expandable to 8 GB)
- 320GB (7200RPM) Hard Drive (SATA)
- Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit, * Up to 5.5 Hours of Battery Life
- 13.3¿ Diagonal High-Definition LED HP BrightView Widescreen Display (1366 x 768), ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3200 Graphics with 128MB Display Cache Memory with up to 2046MB total graphics memory
Rating:
(out of 15 reviews)
List Price: $ 849.00
Price: $ 609.99
HP G60-530US 15.6-Inch Black/Silver Laptop – Up to 3.75 Hours of Battery Life (Windows 7 Home Premium)
- 2.1GHz Intel Pentium T4300 Processor (1 MB L2 Cache, 800 MHz FSB)
- 3 GB DDR2 RAM (2 Dimm), Max supported 4 GB
- 320GB (5400RPM) SATA Hard Drive, LightScribe SuperMulti 8X DVD±R/RW with Double Layer Support
- 15.6″ Diagonal High Definition HP BrightView Display (1366×768)
- Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit, *Up to 3.75 Hours of Battery Life
Rating:
(out of 28 reviews)
List Price: $ 629.99
Price: $ 549.99
Cool dog Images
May 7th, 2010Everyone is looking over at Sarah’s mom, who is chasing down a runaway dog. Apparently, misbehaving dogs are so funny it hurts…

Image by colorblindPICASO
There are so many dogs living like this. How can I save them all?/Hay tantos perros que viven como esto. ¿Cómo los puedo guardar yo todo?

Image by AmazonCARES
Molly: A Dog With A Lot On Her Mind

Image by miscpix
Happy Holidays from me and this dog

Image by Zach Klein
A dog rising out of the water??

Image by Snap®
Wild Horses, Tame Dog

Image by Thruhike98
Best HP Laptops
May 7th, 2010HP Pavilion DV4-2161NR 14.1-Inch Laptop (Digital Plaid)
- Intel Core i3-330M Processor (2.13 GHz, 3 MB L3 Cache)
- 4 GB DDR3 System Memory (2 DIMM) (expandable to 8 GB)
- 500GB (7200RPM) Hard Drive (SATA), LightScribe SuperMulti 8X DVD±R/RW with Double Layer Support
- Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit, * Up to 4.25 Hours of Battery Life
- 14.1″ Diagonal WXGA HD HP BrightView Widescreen Display (1280 x 800), Intel HD Graphics with up to 1696MB Total Available Graphics Memory
Rating:
(out of 16 reviews)
List Price: $ 970.00
Price: $ 679.99
HP G60-630US 15.6-Inch Laptop (Black)
- Intel Pentium Dual Core Processor T4400 (2.2 GHz, 1 MB L2 Cache, 800 MHz FSB)
- 3GB DDR2 System Memory (2 DIMM) (expandable to 4 GB)
- 320GB (5400RPM) Hard Drive (SATA), LightScribe SuperMulti 8X DVD±R/RW with Double Layer Support
- Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit, * Up to 3.75 Hours of Battery Life
- 15.6″ Diagonal High-Definition HP BrightView Widescreen Display (1366×768),
- Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 4500M (shared) with up to 1309MB total available graphics memory
Rating:
(out of 29 reviews)
List Price: $ 836.00
Price: $ 509.98
HP Pavilion DV6-2162NR 15.6-Inch Black Laptop–Up to 4.25 Hours of Battery Life
- Intel Core i3-350M processor (2.26 GHz, 3MB L3 Cache)
- 4GB DDR3 System Memory (2 DIMM) (expandable to 8 GB)
- 500GB (7200RPM) Hard Drive (SATA), SuperMulti 8X DVD±R/RW with Double Layer Support
- Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit, * Up to 4.25 Hours of Battery Life
- 15.6″ Diagonal High-Definition LED HP BrightView Display (1366×768), Intel HD Graphics with up to 1696MB Total Available Graphics Memory
Rating:
(out of 26 reviews)
List Price: $ 1,007.00
Price: $ 699.99
HP Pavilion DV6-2150US 15.6-Inch Laptop (Black)
- Intel Core i3-330M Processor (2.13 GHz, 3 MB L3 Cache)
- 4GB DDR3 System Memory (2 DIMM) (expandable to 8 GB)
- 320GB (7200RPM) Hard Drive (SATA), LightScribe SuperMulti 8X DVD±R/RW with Double Layer Support
- Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit, * Up to 4.25 Hours of Battery Life
- 15.6″ Diagonal High-Definition LED HP BrightView Display (1366×768), Intel HD Graphics with up to 1696MB Total Available Graphics Memory
Rating:
(out of 14 reviews)
List Price: $ 1,007.00
Price: $ 649.00
What are the best vacation spots in Michigan?
May 7th, 2010Question by Jodi: What are the best vacation spots in Michigan?
Lets have a vote here…
Just give me a list of all the best vacation spots in Michigan
I have to write an article about the best Vacation spots in Michigan and having never been there I am really quite clueless.
Thanks in advance to everyone who answers
Best answers to this question:
Answer by Lins
Mackinaw Island, Traverse City, Frankenmuth, Ann Arbor
I have lived in Michigan since I was born, 22 years. Mackinaw Island has always been a favorite of mine, from the fudge shops to the Mackinaw bridge. It’s truly beautiful there.
Frankenmuth is amazing. It’s a German themed city. It has a famous restaurant, Zehnders, made famous by their chicken dinners. There are also carriage rides and the biggest Christmas store in the world, Bronners.
Try www.Michigan.org
Below I did a search on the featured destinations.
http://www.michigan.org/Partners/Default.aspx?link=nav
Answer by Kacey H
Baldwin, Bear lake and Greenbush.
Answer by ►BobB◄
Mackinaw Island, Frankenmuth, Holland, Warren Dunes.
The COLDEST June I have ever spent was on Mackinaw Island!!!
I like Holland in the spring when the tulips bloom. Warren Dunes in the early summer, and since I made the mistake of going to Mackinaw Island in June, I would suggest AUGUST!
Another favorite for me is Dundee MI – they have a Cabela’s store… I always leave too much money there whenever I visit.
Answer by ms bell
Mackinac Island, Holland, Grand Rapids, Muskegon, Traverse Ctiy, and Detroit.
Answer by 1001 Vacation Ideas
Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore is 35 miles of beaches, dune formations, and forests along Lake Michigan’s eastern coast. The Pierce Stocking Scenic Drive is a popular 7.4 mile long self-guided auto tour. Both the drive and the Dune Climb provide the visitor with spectacular overlooks of Glen Lake, the Sleeping Bear Dunes and Lake Michigan.
What do you think? Answer below!
Canon PowerShot SD1200IS 10 MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Image Stabilized Zoom and 2.5-inch LCD (Blue) Reviews
May 7th, 2010Canon PowerShot SD1200IS 10 MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Image Stabilized Zoom and 2.5-inch LCD (Blue)
- 10.0-megapixel resolution captures enough detail for prints up to 13 x 19 inches
- 3x optical zoom; 2.5-inch PureColor LCD II screen
- DIGIC 4 Image Processor with evolved Face Detection Technology; Face Detection Self-timer
- Smart AUTO intelligently selects the proper settings
- Compatible with SD/SDHC, MMC/MMC Plus/HC MMC Plus (not included)
Rating:
(out of 548 reviews)
Latest Canon Digital Cameras Reviews
Review by Omar Siddique for Canon PowerShot SD1200IS 10 MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Image Stabilized Zoom and 2.5-inch LCD (Blue)
Rating: 
The SD1200 has some big changes over its predecessor SD1100, and is the smallest, best designed Elph I’ve used thus far.
I’ve owned many models of Elph, this is my 6th or 7th, so my review is aimed especially at other serial Canon owners. I mostly compare the SD1200 to the SD1100.
* The big changes: Digic4 and a larger CCD sensor. The slight increase in CCD size (1/2.3″ vs 1/2.5″) should make for “cleaner” photos. And Digic4 promises faster/cleaner shots also.
* You get 10MP vs 8MP on the SD1100, and “medium” (M1) size is now 6MP. JPG quality is down to 2 setting: Fine or Normal.
* SD1200 is only slightly smaller than the SD1100, but feels notably smaller by virtue of curved edges and the LCD being flush with the body (no bump-out).
* The 1200 now feels as small as this design can shrink. Good news: my average-sized male hands can still comfortably hold it, barely not covering lens, flash, or resting on the LCD. But the round power-button is now almost too small to press if you had big fingers and no fingernails.
* 1200’s new battery is a higher capacity 1000mAh (vs ~760mAh for SD1100). There’s also a new charger (not compatible with the old batteries), a glossy white-colored model to blend into your wall.
* The buttons and menus are streamlined. There’s now a button for review mode, pressing it a 2nd time takes you back to the previous state. Handy. The slider has dedicated AUTO and Manual settings, no longer need to use menus for that switch.
* Continuous mode and ISO now are in the Function Menu (on the SD1100, they had dedicated buttons).
* A SD card is no longer included. This makes sense to me, a 32MB card is barely useful, and with the downward pressure on electronics prices, I can’t imagine Canon wanting to bundle a more expensive/bigger card. Some people will find this lack annoying.
* The A/V output is gone, and the USB connector now serves both purposes (both kinds of included cables now have a USB-end)
* A new version of Canon software is required for this model, Zoombrowser 6.3. Canon typically requires a new release for each new family/season of cameras. Unfortunately, the CameraWindow software has been intentionally dumbed-down in the 6.x software and no longer offers the options to delete your photos (have to go through the OS), nor to chose custom naming for the downloads. I say intentionally, since I asked Canon customer-support about it and they stated the changes were not bugs. The last Canon software to still have that functionality was 5.x, corresponding to the SD1000 and other cameras released that season.
* In casual indoor tests, the 1200 seemed more ready to go to ISO400 (often too “noisy” to be useful) when the SD1100 would have chosen ISO200.
* The SD1200 and SD1100 have identical specs on their optics. However, I noticed a more pronounced barrel-distortion on the 1200 at extreme wide-angle. (still only noticable in close-up shots of straight-edged items at wide-angle)
* In a casual speed test, the SD1200 took/stored photos notably faster the SD1100 (same scene, continuous-mode, same brand SD card), despite the 1200’s image size being larger.
* Canon’s paper manuals have been shrinking steadily. With this model, the only manual included is a quick-start guide, the rest is on CD-ROM.
* The packaging is even more efficient than before, about half the size of the SD1100’s box.
* Sadly, there is no HD video mode, although all of the other Elphs released this spring had HD. SD1200 owners are stuck with 640×480 video.
Canon has several sub-series within the compact Elph line, varying mostly by asthetics and optics. The SD1200 is successor to the series that included the SD1100, SD1000, and SD600. These all favor a classic, slim design. If you’re unfamiliar with Canon’s Powershot cameras, there’s lots of good material out there on camera sites such as dpreview.
In general, the small sensors and optics in all ultra-compact digital cameras lead to some optical quirks (such as barrelling), chromatic aberrations, over/under-exposure in bright sunlight/shade, and underpowered flashes. That’s intrinsic to the size of camera, and vendors try to correct these effects in their on-board processing. My opinion is that Canon does a good job of correcting for these issues and the Elphs including the SD1200 take very good photos for their size.
It’s questionable that a SD1100 owner would specifically find this a compelling upgrade other than the Digic4, but this is an excellent compact camera in all ways. Apart from the noteworthy quirks: the lack of HD and the limited features in the download software, this camera is Highly Recommended.
Review by Sophster for Canon PowerShot SD1200IS 10 MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Image Stabilized Zoom and 2.5-inch LCD (Blue)
Rating: 
I don’t typically bother reviewing products because I usually only buy things that already have a lot of reviews. I decided to throw in my 2 cents on this one in hopes someone can benefit from my experience. I primarily use my camera for family shots, mostly of my young children. I loved my old Canon A610 more that I can say and it has served me well for 4 years. Recently one of my children got a hold of it and bent up the little dealies that close over the lens cap to the point where I had to pull them off with tweezers just to use the camera. That’s when I decided it was time to see what Canon now has to offer. I am by no means a photography expert. I just want a point and shoot that I can use to snap high quality family photos for prints, digital scrapbooks, etc.
The sale price on this camera seemed excellent for the features and a free memory card offer sucked me in so I took the plunge. I assumed it would be a major upgrade from my 5MP A610. Once I had the battery charged up I started taking photos of my kids in auto mode. I was *shocked* at the poor quality of the photos. Every photo I reviewed was terrible. Many were blurry, and the ones that weren’t couldn’t be cropped to the slightest degree without losing all detail. I couldn’t believe it! Auto mode on my old Canon had never failed me before and I could crop all the way to the eyeballs without loss of detail. Determined not to give up, I did some research. Several people recommended “kids and pets” mode. I tried this and the blurry issue was solved. However, the cropping issue still remained. I dug deeper and started messing with ISO settings and a bunch of other stuff I don’t really understand. I just couldn’t solve the problem. I even got out my old Canon and took identical shots with both cameras and the old one won out every single time. I must point out that these were all indoor shots with relatively low light. I realize these are not ideal conditions, but if a camera can’t handle those conditions then it isn’t for me.
I had pretty much resolved to return this camera and was already shopping on Amazon for another one when I decided to give it one more try. I simply couldn’t understand how this camera could perform so poorly. I fired it back up in “kids and pets” mode and started looking around at all the settings it would let me modify. That’s when I noticed an “S” in the bottom left corner of the screen. Hmmm…what could this be? The other options for this setting are L M1 M2 M3 S and W. It turns out that this setting determines the number of megapixels that the camera uses. L is the highest resolution setting which uses all 10MP and 3648×2736 resolution. S (which is what the camera was automatically set to) has a resolution of only 640×480 and appears to use .3MP. Soooo, I bumped it from S up to L and now my camera takes awesome photos. Once again I can crop to the eyeballs and now side by side the same photos look even better on the new camera than they did on my old one. Also, with my 4GB memory card it says I can take approximately 1450 photos at this higher resolution. So now all is right with the world, I don’t have to deal with the hassle of a return, and I can take awesome family photos this Christmas.
Even though the camera is performing admirably now, I had to give it 4 stars because it should not have been such a pain in the rear to straighten this out. Not to mention that the included paper manual does not even address this issue at all. I assume the online manual covers it, but should I really have to go that far to get one croppable indoor shot? This is a point and shoot!! Most of the bad reviews were for the same problem I was having. The majority of purchasers don’t want to have to switch a bunch of settings; they just want the camera to take great photos without a lot of effort.
Review by S. Craig for Canon PowerShot SD1200IS 10 MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Image Stabilized Zoom and 2.5-inch LCD (Blue)
Rating: 
I’m a professional photographer. I got tired of dragging my D3,D200 or other large cameras around, and worrying about it getting damaged. I decided to buy a camera just for fun that could fit in my purse and I wouldn’t have a heart attack if it broke. Well I didn’t hold that high of expectations of the camera, but after getting it, I’ve had a lot of fun with it. Not the most amazing pictures come from it (I am used to very high quality pictures), but they are good enough shots of my family. It’s easy to use, really easy to set, FAST, and good low light. You don’t always need the flash. It’s very small, and can fit easily in my purse (that are all quiet small purses actually). This is a perfect camera if you just want some fun shots that are clear, and you want an easy to use fast camera. This is NOT good for “professional” type shots (why do people write reviews of these cameras and get all down on them for not being professional grade cameras? They never claim to be!).
List Price: $ 179.00
Price: Too low to display
Create Professional Wordpress Themes With New Book
May 7th, 2010How-to EBook On Building Websites Using WordPress Fast, Easy And Cheap.
Building Websites With WordPress.
The Wordpress Classroom.
A Series Of Over 50 Video Tutorials On How To Set Up A Blog Using Wordpress. There Are Tutorials Ranging From Basic Setup All The Way Through Getting Traffic To Your Blog And Making A Large Passive Income With It. Huge Value For The Price!
The Wordpress Classroom.
Create Professional Wordpress Themes With New Book
WordPress is an open-source blog engine released under the GNU general public license. It allows users to easily create dynamic blogs with great content and many outstanding features. It is an ideal tool for developing blogs and though it is chiefly used for blogging, it can also be used as a complete CMS with very little effort. Its versatility and ease of use has attracted a large, enthusiastic, and helpful community of users.
This book walks through clear, step-by-step instructions to build a custom theme for the WordPress open-source blog engine. The author provides design tips and suggestions and covers setting up the WordPress sandbox, and reviews the best practices from setting up the theme’s template structure, through coding markup, testing, and debugging, to taking it live. The last three chapters cover additional tips, tricks, and various cookbook recipes for adding popular site enhancements to WordPress theme designs using 3rd-party plugins as well as creating API hooks to add custom plugins.
Whether users are working with a pre-existing theme or creating a new one from the ground up, WordPress Theme Design will give them the know-how to effectively understand how themes work within the WordPress blog system enabling them to have full control over their site’s design and branding. Users only need to be comfortable with the basics of web development and this book will take care of the rest.
What you will learn from this book
Set up a basic workflow and development environment for WordPress theme design
Create detailed designs and code them up
Enhance your sites by choosing the right color schemes and graphics
Debug and validate your theme using W3C’s XHTML and CSS validation tools
Customize and tweak your theme’s layout
Set up dynamic drop-down menus, AJAX/dynamic and interactive forms
Download and install useful plug-ins and widgetize your theme
Improve post and page content using jQuery and ThickBox
Add interactivity to your themes using Flash
Includes a reference guide to WordPress 2.0’s template hierarchy, markup, styles and template tags, as well as include and loop functions
Chapter 1 introduces you to the WordPress blog system and lets you know what you need to be aware of regarding the WordPress theme project you’re ready to embark on. The chapter also covers the development tools that are recommended and web skills that you’ll need to begin developing a WordPress theme.
Chapter 2 looks at the essential elements you need to consider when planning your WordPress theme design. It discusses the best tools and processes for making your theme design a reality. The author explains her own ‘Rapid Design Comping’ technique and gives some tips and tricks for developing color schemes and graphic styles for your WordPress theme. By the end of the chapter, you’ll have a working XHTML and CSS based ‘comp’ or mockup of your theme design, ready to be coded up and assembled into a fully functional WordPress theme.
Chapter 3 uses the final XHTML and CSS mockup from Chapter 2 and shows you how to add WordPress PHP template tag code to it and break it down into the template pages a theme requires. Along the way, this chapter covers the essentials of what makes a WordPress theme work. At the end of the chapter, you’ll have a basic, working WordPress theme.
Chapter 4 discusses the basic techniques of debugging and validation that you should employ throughout your theme’s development. It covers the W3C’s XHTML and CSS validation services and how to use the FireFox browser and some of its extensions as a development tool, not just another browser. This chapter also covers troubleshooting some of the most common reasons ‘good code goes bad’, especially in IE, and best practices for fixing those problems, giving you a great-looking theme across all browsers and platforms.
Chapter 5 discuss how to properly set up your WordPress theme’s CSS style sheet so that it loads into WordPress installations correctly. It also discuss compressing your theme files into the ZIP file format and running some test installations of your theme package in WordPress’s administration panel so you can share your WordPress theme with the world.
Chapter 6 covers key information under easy-to-look-up headers that will help you with your WordPress theme development, from the two CSS class styles that WordPress itself outputs, to WordPress’s PHP template tag code, to a breakdown of “The Loop” along with WordPress functions and features you can take advantage of in your theme development. Information in this chapter is listed along with key links to bookmark to make your theme development as easy as possible.
Chapter 7 dives into taking your working, debugged, validated, and properly packaged WordPress theme from the earlier chapters, and enhancing it with dynamic menus using the SuckerFish CSS-based method and Adobe Flash media.
Chapter 8 continues showing you how to enhance your WordPress theme by looking at the most popular methods for leveraging AJAX techniques in WordPress using plugins and widgets. It also gives you a complete background on AJAX and when it’s best to use those techniques or skip them. The chapter also reviews some cool JavaScript toolkits, libraries, and scripts you can use to simply make your WordPress theme appear ‘Ajaxy’.
Chapter 9 reviews the main tips from the previous chapters and covers some key tips for easily implementing today’s coolest CSS tricks into your theme as well as a few final SEO tips that you’ll probably run into once you really start putting content into your WordPress site.
For more details on the book please visit http://www.packtpub.com/wordpress-theme-design/book.
Cool dog Images
May 7th, 2010the curious dog

Image by onkel_wart
Riley, playing at Dog Park

Image by etgeek (Eric)
homeless and dog, sleeping

Image by wvs
Like Cats and Dogs

Image by Qole Pejorian
Captain Will Newman sitting on the dock with dog and cat: Palatka, Florida

Image by State Library and Archives of Florida
A Couple Walking their Dog past Balloons

Image by Aeioux














