I have a cheapie radio alarm that has a M-F setting.
I know, I know. But Chumby looks cool, doesn't he? I wonder if he does WPA2 encryption. Huh. Looks like he does. Really not helping. Maybe for my Christmas present to me.
Wash ,'Bushwhacked'
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I have a cheapie radio alarm that has a M-F setting.
I know, I know. But Chumby looks cool, doesn't he? I wonder if he does WPA2 encryption. Huh. Looks like he does. Really not helping. Maybe for my Christmas present to me.
My christmas present to me happened a little early this year. I have an Xbox 360 pro with 120 gb hard drive and hdmi output sitting at home right now. Just came today.
Just about $200 from Geeks.com, though it took a couple of tries. The first couple of attempts wound up not going through. They sell out their console deals quickly.
I needed a new wireless mouse for the mini so I splurged on the Apple Magic Mouse. But I must be dense because I can't figure out how to make it do anything other than what a normal mouse does. How does the scrolling/swiping work? I thought it was simply a matter of dragging my finger(s) across the top of it. No?
Nebbermind. I think it's a software issue. I'm updating to 10.6.2 as I write this.
Yep. That did the trick.
Yep, the software update makes it all work. I'm really enjoying my Magic Mouse. In face I have purchased an additional one for use around the office.
Has anyone used Carbonite (odd choice of name, or perhaps a good one for preserving indefinitely) or similar online backups? Any recommendations?
I used Carbonite for a PC about 4 years ago and it was okay, but I've heard complaints that some of the files are corrupted. There is one infamous screed about this out there.
Are you looking at whole computer backup or just a set of folders? I like Spideroak, but I've heard some complaints about how slow it is for large files. People seem to like Mozy (but I hated it when I tried it).
I LOVE Dropbox. But I only backup about 3 GB on the service, but Dropbox is the absolute bomb.
I liked Jungle Disk when I used it, but I found Amazon's pricing system (3 years ago) difficult to understand, this may have changed. Jungle Disk uses Amazon's S3 system.
Check this out: [link]
Last week we asked you to share your favorite online backup tools and then we rounded up the five most popular options for a vote. With nearly half the vote at 42%, Dropbox takes home the trophy for favorite online backup tool. It doesn't offer the volume of storage or computer-wide backup that Mozy (21%) and Carbonite (11%) offer but the ease-of-use factor is high and readers loved the simple file syncing.
For more information on the winner and runners up, check out the full Hive Five.