IconFinder.net has free, high-quality icons to use in your websites. Many very nice collections!
I have several pages of third-party apps on my iPhone 3GS, but there are only a few I use a lot.
Those are the apps I use all the time. If I'm having connection problems, I might use a network test app (Speed Test, iNetworkTest).
"About 75 percent of spending, for instance, goes to taking care of chronic disease."
Read about it and get the facts at Factcheck.org.
I'm quite sure any bill put together by politicians will be full of provisions aimed at pleasing powerful special interest groups, but people need affordable health insurance. Is the health care bill a good first step? I don't know, and it will be hard to tell until it all shakes out.
It's definitely been interesting to see the hatred generated during the drafting and the passing of this bill. Can't we all just get along?
Mmmm. Yes, I had pancakes this morning, and, yes, I follow a strict 100% gluten-free diet. (Gluten is a migraine trigger for me.)
Q: What's the secret to gluten-free pancakes?
A: Don't mess around with trying to find the perfect mix of various gluten-free flours. Just rush out (to the grocery store or to the internet), and buy Bob's Red Mill Gluten-Free Pancake Mix.
Even the finicky husband wolfs down these pancakes.
The original Airport card in the 1 GHz Titanium Macintosh PowerBook cannot handle any network except WEP. It will see WPA neworks, but fail to connect citing an "incorrect password" error.
This tidbit of info isn't necessarily easy to sort out because the Airport hardware in the various Mac models is not clearly labeled. How do you know your Mac has an Airport Extreme card if the Airport card reported merely says "Airport"?
In any case, the fix I found was not necessarily easy. I bought an EDIMAX EW-7108PCg 802.11g/b Wireless LAN PC Card from Newegg for under $20.
It doesn't come with Mac drivers, so you have to download those from the Edimax website. Here's how I got it to work:
I bought a Verizon Novatel Mi-Fi 2200 Wireless Hotspot to work with an Apple Tablet. (It's actually an iPad, horrid name, yet to be released by Apple.)
I tested the speed of the Mi-Fi* at work and at home and at various places using my favorite iPhone speed test app, SpeedTest.net. Well, the Mi-Fi was getting TROUNCED by AT&T 3G on SpeedTest.net every single day. I chalked it up to a very nice AT&T 3G setup in this area. (*I understand I'm actually testing the speed of Verizon's 3G CDMA-based EVDO data service, not the speed of the Mi-Fi, but it's much shorter to say "Mi-Fi" than all that!)
Then something big happened. The "Great AT&T Melt-Down of 2010" at work began. Too many iPhones. Too much drain on the AT&T amplifier in our buildings. AT&T's service tanked to a range of 0.00 Mbps to 0.09 Mbps download last week.
The Mi-Fi provided zippy network access to three of us, including two who were hitting Pandora, and still the Mi-Fi download speed was reported around .29 Mbps. Hmmm...
I finally decided to get the computer at home on the Mi-Fi, and I used the internet version of SpeedTest.net to check the speed. What? The Mi-Fi reported 1.66 Mbps, a huge jump.
That's when I figured something was fishy. I tried the iNetworkTest app on the iPhone. Mi-Fi: 88.79 Kbps. AT&T 3G: 54.68 Kbps. What?!
So when I cruised to dslreports.com on the iPhone (i.dslr.net/iphone_speedtest.html), the Mi-Fi was 1510 Kbps, and AT&T 3G was 640 Kbps. Double what?!
The SpeedTest.net app (NOT the website) appears to be reporting incorrect data. SpeedTest.net app indicates the iPhone on Mi-Fi is .29 Mbps (296.96 Kbps), and on AT&T 3G is .38 Mbps (389.12 Kbps). Clearly wrong.
Speeds are measured in bits per second, not bytes. To translate megabits to kilobits, multiply the megabits by 1024, or divide the kilobits by 1024 (your choice).
The conclusions to be drawn are:
The seven Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour "Road to..." movies are comedy classics, favorites of my Mom and Dad. I can't exactly remember any of them, but they all involved journeys and lots of slapstick comedy.
Trying to buy my adult child a car has involved journeys and lots of silliness. First, there's my kid, who had her heart set on a RAV4. I was near the end of my negotiations when the "acceleration problem" of 2009/2010 arose. So being cautious, I thought she should look at other vehicles, although her heart was set on the RAV4.
She FINALLY went to test drive the RAV4, the CRV, and an Equinox, and found she hated the RAV4! Now wouldn't that have been nice to know before I had three dealers in a bidding war?! How silly is that?
She didn't like the CRV's styling. But she LOVED the Equinox, and Consumer Reports gave it a thumbs up, so we were good to go.
Not knowing diddly about the Equinox, I went to the website, built what I thought the brat would like, and requested a quote from a nearby dealer, and then the fun began. First the "internet specialist" tries to sell me a demo Equinox which is NOTHING like the vehicle I requested, has 12,000 miles on it, and costs more than the list prices of the brand-new car I want!
Then, this "internet specialist" kept forgetting the prior emails from me, and apparently didn't have the one from Chevy with the car details. After four emails back and forth, he asked me if I want a four or six cylinder?? I wanted the car in the price quote request!!
Once I pointed that out, he sent me back a "price quote" with the MSRP after we've already established I work for a certain company which qualifies me for special set "no haggle pricing. I had to remind him again of a prior email from me.
So I tired of all this back-and-forth and requested a price quote from a different dealer, and her first email to me stated, "So, what can I help you with?" Oh, my gosh??? How about a price quote on the exact vehicle you have sitting in your inventory that I am interested in buying that I requested a price quote for (which is why you have my email address in the first place)???!!!
There is something wrong with Chevy's redirection of price quotes or "internet specialists" at Chevrolet dealers are clueless (based on my random sample of two :D).
First, you need to understand the concepts involved here:
We'll be using DD-WRT, third-party firmware for numerous routers, to turn our Linksys into a bridge. What's DD-WRT? So let's get started.
I've helped a friend's son get his Xbox fix by employing this hack. (His Xbox is too far from the wireless signal when it's attached to the TV.) And now a local Boy Scout troop gets to reap the benefits when I extend the church's wireless network for them to one of our outbuildings.
The best general purpose gluten-free flour I've found is Sylvan Border Farm General-Purpose Flour. (You can order it from this link, or I've found it at Amazon in a "case" containing three small bags.)
Use it in place of regular flour for things such as:
Each bag contains gluten-free baking tips and recipes.
NOTE: Don't use the general-purpose flour for bread. Sylvan Border Farm has a special flour for bread.
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