This is the third and final article I wrote for linuxjournal documenting our quest for fast booting of our in-car CarBot computers.
Utility to make USB flash drives bootable.
My in-car entertainment computer company, Carbot, Inc. is featured in the New York Times "Circuits" section.
I've been looking for a product like ACT or Goldmine, but if you want multiple people using it collaboratively, you're suddenly an "enterprise" customer, which means thousands of dollars.
Also, they just got a couple million from DFJ, who's betting on the open source aspect - which has never been applied to CRM.
Way cool.
People think that XM Radio is somehow to blame for discontinuing their XM PCR, a PC-controllable Satellite radio reciever that could be used for MP3 harvesting.
People need to understand pressure they recieve from the source of their music (RIAA) is the only source of their policy actions. It's really beyond their control unless they just want to lose any access to content.
"The [3D] monitor can be thought of as a thin film transistor, or TFT, sandwich. It contains two TFT panels separated by a parallax barrier. The barrier causes the monitor to create two slightly different pixel images--one for each eye. This tricks the brain into thinking that any objects displayed are three dimensional."
Apple is rightfully concerned about Real's new Harmony product that acts as a translator between three major DRM formats: Fairplay, MS DRM and Real's Helix.
A topic dear to my heart: open source television
The keypad flips open to reveal a QWERTY keyboard. I wish I had thought of that.
Pretty cool link on how to shoot 3D (stereo) video.
