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when one quarter of a percentage point is important

MacCentral has an article on the rapidly growing popularity of the Mac OS-based browser, Safari; download it now and help raise those numbers above 0.25 percent.

mr dj?

Got a ton of electronica or dance mp3 files and no one to spin them properly? Ask The DJ might be what you've been looking for: the program will analyze the various tracks and seamlessly blend them on the crossfade. "Like a real DJ, it matches beats and adapts tempos whenever needed so the music always flows, even when cross-fading between tracks with different bpms.

those pending tasks got you down?

Mac OS X-equiped laptop computer systems (and most desktop ones) could benefit from this piece of software.

G4 cube is alive and well, thank you very much

Apple's award winning G4 Cube, has a steady following two years after being discontinued. There are plenty of options for irrepairable Cubes, including the ever-popular use in Bonsai Kitty creation.

orbiting...

Maybe your thing is watching for Iridium flares, but your satellite tracking software is obsolete and doesn't have NORAD SGP4/SDP4 prediction models, or only tracks 500 satelites - might be time to upgrade to Orbitron 2.40.

can't we all just get a GPL?

Intellectual Property attorneys are having a grand time sorting through the back-and-forth bickering between SCO and IBM.

simon: then and now...

Long term memory a problem? Luma Code has a Mac OS-based testing program for the children of the 70s, updated for grownups of the new century. Beware: Simon Extreme may bring on flashbacks.

are you a criminal for sharing?

The Electronic Frontier Foundation has posted information regarding the lawsuits filed by the RIAA against a number of accused file sharers. They also link to a site dedicated to the defense of the named individuals.

sharing is a virtue

Ever feel the need to network with your neighbor down the street? How about splitting the cost of a DSL connection with your blockmate? Better than a Pringles can, you'll find some use for a Cantenna in the scheme of things.

how secure do you want to be today?

Exploits based on the latest embarrassing security flaw in Windows are starting to appear. Wired has an article about the release of a program by Chinese hackers developed to take advantage of this critical flaw. All the more reason to regularly update your Windows software. This flaw, discovered by a security company in Poland, affects nearly every version of Windows, except Windows Me.
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