Macs don't come with something on to extract sit and hqx files? For some reason it feels kind of sudden that I can't get in.
Hmm. They used to come with stuffit expander, too.
I've lost track because I have a copy of Stuffit which I earned as a perk at a former employer.
Random question: in the past....few days? week? Firefox (on my Mac) has been freezing up and making me forcequit a lot. At least once or twice a day. It never used to do that.
Suggestions for basic maintenance tasks that might assist? Or comments that this is common at hte moment, or somesuch?
Maybe upgrade to firefox3, beta 4...
I wouldn't recommend that. Beta 4 crashes on me 4-5 times a day. I use it anyway, but it's definitely not ready for prime time.
Huh. I have not had one crash with beta 4.
I wonder if you have some conflicting add-ons installed?
Only add-on I've got is Adblock Plus.
I think you should reinstall Firefox.
Answer to the following questions will be used in a Gristmill column. Anyone who answers will be credited or not as they wish.
If someone was going to create a low end, really cheap
dedicated e-reader, stripping out all the features that were not need, what would you insist on retaining in order for you to want it? Assume screen resolution comparable to print, and a decent screen refresh rate. What else would it have to have? What is the maximum size you would tolerate? Would it be OK if it unfolded to a larger size? What would the maximum weight be? What formats would it have to be able to read?
Do you insist on an e-reader being able to do something else? Be incorporated into a laptop, or have at least the computer capability of high end cells phones (camera, music, limited email and browsing?) Or do you carry books around often enough that a dedicated e-reader that only reads books can fit into your life - if the price was low enough, and e-reader performance were sufficient?
Having fallen in love with my Kindle to the point where it's basically changed the way I read, I can say without doubt that the screen would need to be eInk. No LCD display, no matter the resolution, can have the same level of readability for extended periods of time, and I can't see investing in something as limited as an eReader unless I'm spending hours with it. If I only want to read small documents, I'll use my Treo.
I like that the Kindle can buy books over the internet, but it's not a requirement. I was strongly considering one of the Sony readers before it came out, and would have bitten if they had been a bit cheaper. On the other hand, having experienced that convenience, I'm not sure I'd go back.
As far as formats: some method of converting formatted HTML and Word files are a must, PDFs that are in text form would be nice but not a deal-breaker. One of the formats available at Manybooks.net for sure, but that's pretty much anything so not a problem. Otherwise, must have a format with a significant (and growing) commercial selection, which for now pretty much means Kindle or DRMed Mobi, from what I can tell.
In terms of size: I'm using it as a replacement for a trade paperbacks and it should be comparable in size. It needs to fit in my oversized coat pocket to work. If it unfolds, that's okay (nice for large documents like newspapers), but I'd want to be able to read in the folded form as well - so either two displays or some way of viewing books on only part of it.
Of course, as somebody already on the eReader wagon, this article may have no relationship with me.