UMG has a claim on this vid cuz i own nothing of any of this :3
hey i still have few clips so this was outa a few i had hope yea all like it...
have u noticed ty took out teh catigorie " Games and Gagets"
Duration : 0:3:24
http://www.twitter.com/chrispirillo - If you have a photo and text both, how do you put text into the photo? You want it to be a photo still, and look like one... just with text. I mean - the text would look like the picture that it started from. Oh never mind. I can't explain it right. Download and check out The Textorizer! http://geeks.pirillo.com - http://live.pirillo.com
Duration : 0:3:2
New Mini Sports DVR Video Camera from http://www.iSpy-Gadgets.co.uk
Duration : 0:3:29
Not all pixies come with dust - These Plasma Pixies are equipped with the latest information on the everything you are looking for. Plug In.
Duration : 0:0:30
http://www.mjelectronics.com/wholesale.html
we offer mp4,gps tracking,iphone,sim recovery,pen recorders. Over 600 products in stock.
Duration : 0:1:15
This first video tutorial by CompTuts is about how to Speed Up Your Internet Connection with OpenDNS if you have a wireless or wired router. Watch Chris Pirillo's Video About Open DNS : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qJuJKwbyVSI
If You Need Help With This tutorial Or Info Visit This Forum Thread Where You Can Post Your Questions : http://comptuts.co.cc/blog/?page_id=22/opendns/
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Email Me At mail@comptuts.co.cc
Visit My Website At : http://comptuts.co.cc
Duration : 0:5:57
Liam Casey runs PCH, a supply chain management company in Shenzhen, China. We visited him recently to understand how China's manufacturing capabilities are changing and also how consumer electronics are made, marketed, and delivered to your home from PCH's factories in China.
http://www.fastcompany.com/video/a-look-into-how-china-is-changing-how-your-gadgets-are-made-marketed-and-delivered
Duration : 0:16:31
Gadgets were a must-have in Windows Vista... and not in a good way; you had gadgets in your sidebar and unless you went to the effort of getting rid of them, you were stuck with them. A Internet video series by butterscotch.com.
Duration : 0:6:8
Get It for free here: http://tiny.cc/AppleIPAD900
Not today, or tomorrow, but a price drop a week--or even a day--before it goes on sale might give the iPad an incredible boost. I will also describe what other businesses can learn from Apple's troubles.
The iPad has been gradually settling back to early after a less than stellar Steve Jobs introduction on Jan. 27. The truth is that, for many, a supersized iPod touch just isn't too terribly interesting.
A well-timed price cut could light a fire under iPad sales. That such a cut would be a bit of a black-eye for Apple would be noticed by only a few.
Just the fact that Apple appears to already be talking to analysts about "nimble" pricing suggests consumer interest in the iPad is less than the company hoped. A post-introduction survey actually found that the more consumers knew about the iPad, the less they wanted one.
Conservative wisdom might be for Apple to save face by keeping prices where they are and dropping them sometime after iPad sales begin.
Of course, some of us still have copies of the $100 rebates Apple reluctantly sent after it cut the price of the original iPhone a mere two months after many of us stood in line to get one on launch day.
If Apple has to wait to take iPad pricing action until it won't upset early adopters, however, it could take nearly a year. Better to take the cuts early, when Apple will make fans, not enemies.
There are lessons for all businesses here.
Apple is not the first company to have a product launch go a tad sour. A $50-$100 price cut would send hard-core Apple fans over the edge with iPad excitement. It might also convince fence sitters to make their purchases closer to launch day.
That it might cause others to wait for the next price cut would be lost in the noise. Just like the idea that if things had gone well, the price cut would not have been necessary.
It seems clear that a sudden, unexpected, even last-second price cut could turn so-so first week sales into a blockbuster, generating momentum to carry the iPad forcefully into the marketplace.
After all, 16GB iPad for $449 (a $50 cut) is the sort of pricing to which even a jaded tech columnist might succumb.
Duration : 0:2:55