countries in europe

countries in europe. The countries of Europe
  • The countries of Europe



  • dalvin200
    Sep 12, 07:42 AM
    They'll release iTunes 7.0 with "iTunes Store" in it's place and it will all come back online after the event.

    which is what I figured.. hehe





    countries in europe. Countries which currently
  • Countries which currently



  • eric_n_dfw
    Oct 28, 06:16 PM
    Apple doesn't sell operating systems for profit, they sell HARDWARE.

    Yep. And you can tell when Apple is selling software for profit like any of the Final Cut Suite app's. Not only do they require a HUGE key to be entered at install/first run, it also locks it with unique info to the machine where it was installed. (Just try migrating a Final Cut Pro installation from one machine to another.)





    countries in europe. Map of Europe
  • Map of Europe



  • Xeem
    Jan 5, 10:09 PM
    Thank you arn! I've also always hated knowing the keynote's outcome before I watch it; this is exactly what I wanted!





    countries in europe. Tags: europe map countries
  • Tags: europe map countries



  • robbieduncan
    Sep 25, 11:24 AM
    You are kidding right? There's a whole guide on "next Tuesday" right here on MR.

    The whole post is meant to be a joke. All of those things are true. It's poking fun all the "no new MacBooks, this is a joke, you suck" crowd.





    countries in europe. European countries with
  • European countries with



  • *LTD*
    Mar 28, 09:49 PM
    1) Do you want to make things that are "insanely great".

    or

    2) Do you want to make the most amount of money?



    One follows the other. The two aren't mutually exclusive. Apple's current products *are* insanely great. Just ask the people standing in line.

    Game developers. World of Warcraft. Adobe. Microsoft. All of these developers not only do not distribute on the App Store but can not due to the App Store's TOS. I like the App Store but the control/terms keep a lot of great programs (like World of Warcraft, which one the Apple Design Award multiple times I think) out.

    It'll be their loss, especially since competitors like MS will follow suit and introduce a similar distribution model. Eventually everyone will be in the game, for the the simple reason that they'd like to duplicate Apple's success.





    countries in europe. europe+countries
  • europe+countries



  • nagromme
    Oct 4, 09:17 PM
    In fact, OS X is behind on being a full 64 bit OS as well.
    Meanwhile Vista will be behind Leopard in 64-bit support :) An optional install no less! :confused:





    countries in europe. Blank Europe Political Map
  • Blank Europe Political Map



  • !� V �!
    Apr 29, 05:37 PM
    You didn't have to click-drag. Just click your option, exactly as before. (Same as iOS, you don't have to drag the slider, you can press on your option.)

    Although, the design of the buttons made it look like you had to do this, which is probably why they changed it.

    Considering the Finder, where a slider had 3+ options to select, the user would eventually get frustrated. They could have kept it and added the same blue colour to the text or option being selected.





    countries in europe. Countries of Europe Royalty
  • Countries of Europe Royalty



  • LightSpeed1
    Apr 29, 04:10 PM
    Let's hope this isn't the last change...
    I disliked a few changes in the shortcuts in the track pad gestures...
    Glad to know I'm not the only one.





    countries in europe. Maps of countries in Europe
  • Maps of countries in Europe



  • AHDuke99
    Apr 15, 12:29 PM
    It can't be all metal. Otherwise it will have some serious signal issues.





    countries in europe. Number of countries: 43
  • Number of countries: 43



  • eawmp1
    May 4, 02:58 PM
    170 accidental death in U.S. in 2007 (http://webappa.cdc.gov/cgi-bin/broker.exe?_service=v8prod&_server=app-v-ehip-wisq.cdc.gov&_port=5081&_sessionid=wGruFi37M52&_program=wisqars.percents10.sas&age1=1&age2=21&agetext=1-21&category=UNI&_debug=0) and I can't ask about firearms in the home to assess if there is a trigger lock or if the gun is locked away?

    Genius.





    countries in europe. Enter some of the countries
  • Enter some of the countries



  • nsjoker
    Aug 7, 03:17 PM
    Sweet. $500 for the 20" with the edu discount??

    $649 w/ edu my friend





    countries in europe. four countries in Europe:
  • four countries in Europe:



  • nebulos
    May 4, 03:09 AM
    Seriously, you think Drs and CEOs need pressure sensitive styluses? You are the one being ridiculous.

    The thing about all those lines, they are all true. You latch on to a single feature and try to use it to disqualify 1000s of unrelated use cases.

    - most people, even professionals do not require any stylus to effectively use an iPad.
    - there are dozens of good styluses for the iPad already. Some even do a decent job of approximating pressure sensitive. These syluses cover 95%+ of what the people who want styluses are looking for. The other 5% or trying to replace a specialized drawing device with an iPad.

    So 5% of .01% care about pressure sensitive styluses. (I am being very generous here, the number is actually quite a bit smaller then that).

    I do use a stylus on my iPad, every single day. I take notes with it and sign contracts....


    i'm very surprised that you can defend the ipad's handwriting capabilities.

    pressure sensitivity is not the issue.

    when writing on ipad with a stylus you can not let any part of your hand rest on the screen, either that, or you can wear a crazy glove; this makes writing incredibly awkward.

    but what's worse is the accuracy with which the stylus registers. the ipad was simply not built for this. lines come out jagged and disfigured. you can probably scribble something awful but readable. try drawing the simplest thing.

    tell me i'm wrong.


    as for your percentages:

    what do people want to do with styluses? mostly write. some want to draw, artists, but also people that want to be able to sketch figures and ideas.

    can the ipad do this effectively now? can a student take notes in class on an ipad? do you really think a student can take readable notes, fast enough, while writing with a 'hovering' hand?

    tell me you do.

    even if we said 100% of people simply want to be able to write, as on a regular pad, as i see it, all 100% will find the ipad dreadfully unsuitable.


    yes, you can do a lot without a stylus. yes, i was unfair in my statements. yes, the ipad can still be useful.

    is it MORE useful than a regular laptop? No. how could it be?

    ... if it had accurate stylus input.

    yes, that would make it more expensive. in fact, what we're essentially talking about here is nothing more than a 'slate' tablet PC, which has been around forever. they're making a comeback thanks to the ipad, and i hope they will become the standard, for the higher end tablets anyways. they are more expensive than ipads, but they're actual computers that run full operating systems. they have touch and they have pen input.

    that's a direction Apple should have gone in a long time ago. i hope, hope, hope they will go there in the future.





    countries in europe. Countries of Europe
  • Countries of Europe



  • FreeState
    Apr 15, 08:52 PM
    "How do you start a gay computer?"

    Um if it wasn't for a gay man you might not be speaking English and the computer as we know it would likely not exist.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Turing

    Alan Mathison Turing, OBE, FRS ( /ˈtjʊərɪŋ/ TEWR-ing; 23 June 1912*� 7 June 1954), was an English mathematician, logician, cryptanalyst and computer scientist. He was highly influential in the development of computer science, providing a formalization of the concepts of "algorithm" and "computation" with the Turing machine, which played a significant role in the creation of the modern computer.[1]

    During the Second World War, Turing worked for the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park, Britain's codebreaking centre. For a time he was head of Hut 8, the section responsible for German naval cryptanalysis. He devised a number of techniques for breaking German ciphers, including the method of the bombe, an electromechanical machine that could find settings for the Enigma machine. After the war he worked at the National Physical Laboratory, where he created one of the first designs for a stored-program computer, the ACE.

    Towards the end of his life Turing became interested in mathematical biology. He wrote a paper on the chemical basis of morphogenesis,[2] and he predicted oscillating chemical reactions such as the Belousov�Zhabotinsky reaction, which were first observed in the 1960s.

    Turing's homosexuality resulted in a criminal prosecution in 1952 because homosexual acts were illegal in the United Kingdom at that time, and he accepted treatment with female hormones (chemical castration) as an alternative to prison. He died in 1954, several weeks before his 42nd birthday, from cyanide poisoning. An inquest determined it was suicide; his mother and some others believed his death was accidental. On 10*September following an Internet campaign, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown made an official public apology on behalf of the British government for the way in which Turing was treated after the war.[3]





    countries in europe. Europe on LegJoints Wiki
  • Europe on LegJoints Wiki



  • tveric
    Oct 5, 05:51 AM
    Actually what many consumers want is DRM transparent downloads. They don't want to constantly be reminded of their restrictions and they don't want the restrictions to get in the way or have to know any of the technical details.

    Fairplay does a fairly good job at that, which is why it has been successful.
    B

    Whom are you kidding? Nobody cares that Fairplay's DRM is better than other DRM. Do you think it being "successful" (and that word ONLY applies comparing it to other pay services, not overall downloads) has anything to do with the fact that 70% of all mp3 players are ipods, and only work with the itms? Gee, I wonder.

    And even if there's a causal relationship here (which is ridiculous), extend that out to all downloads. 5% of all music on ipods is from the itms. Sounds like the "successful" formats are the non-DRM ones, whether they be so-called illegal downloads or music obtained from CDs, or just copied from a friend's library of DRM-free music.

    Your average ipod owner could not possibly give a flying %^@$ about how Fairplay's DRM compares to other mp3 players' DRM. Talking about "DRM transparent" like its something that Joe Consumer has any clue about is delusional at best.





    countries in europe. Countries, Europe Centered
  • Countries, Europe Centered



  • aswitcher
    Sep 12, 07:25 AM
    Ok iTunes Aus is same.





    countries in europe. Countries of Europe
  • Countries of Europe



  • Garvo
    Oct 3, 07:18 PM
    IDG World Expo announced on Tuesday that Apple CEO Steve Jobs would deliver the opening keynote address (http://www.macworld.com/news/2006/10/03/jobs/index.php) at Macworld Expo San Francisco.


    And this just in.....

    Mickey Mouse will be leading the Parade at Disney World!:p





    countries in europe. Europe Maps Countries,
  • Europe Maps Countries,



  • Dr Kevorkian94
    Dec 13, 02:07 PM
    Y would they make a verizon iPhone before July when they come out with a new one anyway. It's stupid I'm shure that they will come out with one when they always come out with them in JULY. They will make more money (maybe) if they do what they always do, unless apple is becoming like the driods and make a new one every month. Whatever the case may be this verizon rumor is getting pushed back and back





    countries in europe. All Countries in Europe
  • All Countries in Europe



  • MagicBoy
    Mar 24, 08:08 PM
    Windows has been downhill since DOS.

    Pardon? Want to try that again?





    countries in europe. countries in europe. blank map
  • countries in europe. blank map



  • donlphi
    Sep 25, 02:27 PM
    According to the new features list for Aperture 1.5

    "Run Aperture on any Intel-based Mac. Any desktop, including Mac mini, iMac, and Mac Pro. Or any notebook, including MacBook and MacBook Pro.
    "

    Technically my POWERMAC G4 can run iMovie, Keynote, and other mac software. RUNNING and FUNCTIONING (at a reasonable speed) are two totally different things. iPhoto takes a day to get going. I can't imagine aperture.

    Anyway... I don't want to ruin anybody's happy day, but the reality is, if you don't have the latest and greatest Apple Machine, the current software runs pretty slow.

    Go to the Apple store (yes, this means some of you will have to leave your apartment) and try running this software on a mac mini. Don't get depressed when it takes your entire lunch break to start the software. Forget about moving stacks of photos around and editing. As I mentioned... I had problems with the G5 QUAD and the original aperture at my Apple Store in Seattle. THEN AGAIN... they haven't updated half the things in the store. SLOPPY SLOPPY SLOPPY.

    Just a thought.





    wakerider017
    Oct 10, 07:37 PM
    Just my opinion...

    This iPod will be 400+ when/if it comes out...


    For that kinda money I would much rather invest in a macbook!!!

    With student discount Macbook is only about 500 more...


    Yea they are apples and oranges... but a liitle macbook would make a nice portable video device.





    Proud Liberal
    Sep 12, 07:26 AM
    I'm in Washington D.C. (8:24am EST) and just tried going into iTMS and there's a black page, with white text, announcing "It's Showtime. The iTunes Store is being updated." Here come the movies!





    Rodimus Prime
    Oct 6, 05:47 PM
    My original iPhone was not subsidized and I had to buy it at full price. I chose the device with no qualms about what network I was required to use.

    While the iPhone is now subsidized, so are many other phones on many other networks. If only certain networks were doing this to add value to choosing their contracts, I could understand your point of choosing the network before the device. Maybe I'm missing something but I don't understand how this changes my argument that the service is just a commodity while the device is the consumer's primary choice.

    I think the biggest problem is when Apple had the chance to change the game by not doing subizided cost they instead give in and just make it worse by forcing a much larger than average subsudize on there phone ($400 vs $250).

    Unlock phones puts the network and the phone separete. But as long as it is lock in together it should be choose network first

    i get what your sayin, but nah, they can still complain all they want... i dont think it says in the contract be expected to have 30% dropped calls.

    people complain not only to relieve themselves, but to eventually get whats right. (complaining on macrumors isnt exactly the best way of going about it, ill give you that)

    Well the people who choose the iPhone knowing service are spotty put the label on them as not smart.
    Smart people look things over and choose what works best for them. For me I know service is the first thing I look at and that is how I got to ATT (Cingular at the time )for my phone and dump Verizon. Verizon service was crap where I was 6 months out of the year. Sprint and Cingular/ATT were king in that area. I used Sprint for a while and it was great. Switch to ATT because most of my friends and family were on it so M2M.

    Either way I choose the service first then pick out the phones from there.





    Neodym
    Oct 3, 05:01 PM
    This will be the first time ever, regular people will stop waiting for their computer to work, even when using multiple applications.


    Umm - sorry to destroy your illusion here, but Amiga made that possible already in 1985! This was thanks to true preemptive multitasking (while Classic MacOS sported cooperative multitasking only, up to OS9). No matter how big the workload and with several applications open at the same time an Amiga would react instantly to any user action!

    Even today a 50MHz Amiga with 128Mb of Ram often feels a lot more responsive than a 2.000+MHz beast with 1GB of Ram in a "modern" computer. Granted - todays GUIs are more complex as well, but still...

    So with the new era of multi-core machines the "rest of the (home)computerworld" will finally have come on par with what Amiga could offer more than 20 years ago already!

    Regards
    Neodym





    sarper
    Apr 26, 07:34 AM
    Before posting it's always a good idea to read the article and a little bit of the thread, not just the headline. Had you done any research, something I expect of developers, you would know that the general consensus is that it will be a larger screen with the same resolution. Also, Apple is giving you quite an amazing product and App Store to sling your wares instead of complaining you should maybe just put a little more effort into your applications and thank Apple for the opportunity they're giving you and others.


    How come people still keep picking up on this point, it surprises me, especially from a developer. A larger screen doesn't necessarily mean problems for apps, a change in resolution does. That, coupled with the previous rumors of a bigger screen with the same resolution mean that if this is true, it doesn't make any difference to developers because there will be the same number of pixels in the screen. All it means is that everything will be very slightly bigger.


    It's exactly like you say, if you assumed a certain resolution when coding your app, only a change in resolution affects you. Screen size means nothing, it's all about the pixels. 960x640 is the same whether it is on a 3.5" screen or a 4" screen for a developer.



    Oh please don't be so smart. What you say means to lose the pixel density of Retina Display. Would you want that?



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