…wozu so ein DVD Player im Auto gut ist; Spiegel berichtet:
“DVD-Spieler in Autos gelten hier zu Lande als Luxusaccessoire und finden sich immer häufiger – zu saftigen Aufpreisen – in den Sonderausstattungslisten. In den USA sind DVD-Systeme in Fahrzeugen weit verbreitet und werden jetzt zum Problem: weil einige Pkw-Lenker dort Pornofilme abspielen.”
tja. es ist soweit. ZDF zeigt Werbung im Film…. mal ehrlich: is das nich explizit verboten gewesen ?… von wegen Wettbewerb…. ich finde es schon ziemlich dreist.
es wurde von Microsoft nun bestätigt… XNA ist die neue Basis für die Xbox2:
“This is a software revolution. XNA will ultimately deliver thousands of integrated devices that give consumers choice. Sony is talking about a fixed world of hardware that requires everyone to buy everything Sony. Bill Gates even got in on the action, adding Software will be the single most important force in digital entertainment over the next decade. XNA underscores Microsoft’s commitment to the game industry and our desire to work with partners to take the industry to the next level. Microsoft also proudly added that over 20 developers and middleware companies have already recognised that XNA will drive advancements in the industry, including Argonaut, Criterion, Factor 5, Epic, Valve, Vicarious Visions, Visual Concepts, ATI and Nvidia.”
“Google Local integrates yellow pages-style information right into your search. Search for pizza 90210 or macaroni stanford, ca and up will pop a little compass with a couple results. Click the compass, and you’ll get a full listing of nearby results, with distance, maps, directions, related web pages, phone numbers, and more. You can narrow it down by category and distance, and look at a map of all the results.
Google’s really done a nice job of combining various sources of information for this service.”
“A giddy craze was sweeping across Europe at the turn of the 17th century. The wealthy and the well-connected were hoarding things—strange things—into obsessive personal collections. Starfish, forked carrots, monkey teeth, alligator skins, phosphorescent minerals, Indian canoes, and unicorn tails were acquired eagerly and indiscriminately. Associations among these objects, if they were made at all, often reflected a collector’s personal vision of an underlying natural “order”. Critical taxonomy was rarely in evidence.“”
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