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ovalsoftware

OVAL TECHNOLOGIES | Billing software | Web design and development - 0 views

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    We Know your Needs, also we doing IT products trading, used and new computers sales and Laptop servicing.
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    We have carved a niche for itself as a reputed supplier of new computers and IT products for retail and distribution. Our products are purchase by trusted companies in the market. We have always tried to give the outstanding services...
Adam Mills

iPhone 4 screen durability in question - 3 views

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    The iPhone 4's screen has been put through a durability test and the results don't seem to match up with Apple's claims about it. Take a look.
Bakari Chavanu

TidBITS Networking: Achieving Email Bliss with IMAP, Gmail, and Apple Mail - 0 views

  • Well, that's what I intended to do, anyway. The more I wrote, the more I realized how many aspects of the IMAP/Gmail/Mail universe are unclear or confusing, as evidenced by the many email messages I've received on those subjects, and as feedback to my books ("Take Control of Apple Mail in Leopard" and "Take Control of Spam with Apple Mail") and my Macworld articles on the topic. So, what I thought would be a straightforward article has turned into a manifesto. (That means it's quite long, and somewhat opinionated - fair warning!) And, I admit it: I've written it for a largely selfish reason, which is to save myself from having to explain this information repeatedly in email messages! But I do hope you'll find it interesting and helpful if you've ever struggled with the combination of IMAP, Gmail, and Mail.
  • POP and IMAP are both methods of retrieving messages from a mail server. (In fact, many mail servers support both protocols, enabling you to access the same messages in either way.) The most common way to explain the difference between POP and IMAP is this: With POP, you download all your messages to your computer, whereas with IMAP, all your messages remain on the server. That's more or less true, but it overlooks several important points.
  • In the first place, IMAP servers, unlike POP servers, can keep track of flags for each message, indicating things like which messages have been read, forwarded, or replied to. With POP, your local email client has to track this information. That means if you download a bunch of messages on computer A using POP but leave them on the server, and then switch to computer B, you can still download the messages again, but they'll all appear to be unread - computer B won't know which messages you've seen, filed, or otherwise dealt with, because that information isn't kept on the POP server.
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  • Second, speaking of filing, another key difference between POP and IMAP is that POP has just one mailbox - your inbox - on the server, whereas an IMAP server can have any number of mailboxes. So, if you check your email on computer A and move a certain message to your Read mailbox, and then check your email on computer B, that message will appear in the Read mailbox there as well.
  • If you use IMAP, you absolutely can have local copies of all your email messages, in their entirety, on your computer, and you can read, search, file, and do anything else you want to do with those messages even if you have no Internet connection at all - just as you can when you use POP.
  • And, as a bonus, you can use IMAP as a sort of rudimentary email backup. Even if your disk crashes or your computer is stolen, you'll still have a copy of all your messages on the server.
  • IMAP does have a couple of downsides, which may or may not be significant to you. First, most IMAP servers impose a storage quota on each user. If that quota is fairly low (say, 1 GB), you could run out of space for all your messages, forcing you to move some off the server to a mailbox that's stored only on your computer.
  • Apple Mail, which is a much better IMAP client than some, nevertheless has a handful of quirks in its handling of IMAP that can drive one to distraction. If you combine Mail's IMAP oddities with those of a less-than-standard IMAP server - Web Crossing, I'm looking at you - you could easily have unpleasant experiences that may lead you to the erroneous conclusion that IMAP itself is buggy or poorly designed. (Later on, I'll get into the even weirder ways that Gmail deals with IMAP.)
Adam Mills

Apple drags the Nokia N97 Mini into Antennagate - 0 views

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    Apple has posted N97 Mini antenna tests that show that not even Nokia's smartphones are safe from the clutches of the iPhone 4 death grip.
facebook guru

Facebook apps development company|Facebook Guru USA - 0 views

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    The Professional Facebook Application Development Company, feel free to contact us. Call now US Toll Free: 1-0800-371-3129, UK: 020-8780-0215"
thanaads Thanaads Noo

BBB warns of schemes related to iPhone 3G | iPhone News Updated - 0 views

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    The Better Business Bureau warns consumers about numerous schemes associated with Apple's new iPhone 3G.
thanaads Thanaads Noo

Griffin adds more sight, sound to iPhone 3G | iPhone News Updated - 0 views

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    At Apple Expo in Paris on Wednesday, Griffin Technology unveiled its latest iPhone accessories, including the AirCurve acoustic amplifier dock and the Clarifi protective case.
thanaads Thanaads Noo

Apple iPhone 3G wins Gadget of the year award | iPhone News Updated - 0 views

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    Reuters reports that the Apple iPhone 3G has been voted Gadget of the year by the readers of Stuff magazine. Apparently the Apple iPhone 3G out-beat the likes of Microsoft's Xbox 360, the Nintendo Wii Fit add-on, and B&W Zeppelin iPod speakers.
Zohar Manor-Abel

MagiCal | Software | Charcoal Design - 0 views

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    A free open source software menu extension that adds a calendar to the menubar
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    A free open source software menu extension that adds a calendar to the menubar
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    Like this http://www.hdfilmsaati.net Film,dvd,download,free download,product... ppc,adword,adsense,amazon,clickbank,osell,bookmark,dofollow,edu,gov,ads,linkwell,traffic,scor,serp,goggle,bing,yahoo.ads,ads network,ads goggle,bing,quality links,link best,ptr,cpa,bpa
Jyrki Lilja

Macworld | Seven open-source Mac apps you need right now - 0 views

  • 4. Though Mac OS X ships with a native PDF viewer, it doesn’t do much beyond letting you view a file’s contents. Skim is both a top-notch PDF reader and markup tool designed just for the Mac. Use Skim to preview the internal links of a document, add notes, highlight text and more. You can even use Skim to create presentations and control them-right inside the app-using an Apple Remote. As more corporate documents are transmitted every day as PDF documents, this is one app you can’t do without.
    • Jyrki Lilja
       
      *cough cough* Preview can create notes to and mark text in PDFs. Mostly everything you need to do with PDFs. Even merge multiple PDFs.
yc c

Pixelmator - 0 views

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    Pixelmator, the beautifully designed, easy-to-use, fast and powerful image editor for Mac OS X Tiger has everything you need to create, edit and enhance your images.
Jeff Johnson

JAMF Software: Client Management Software for Macintosh Professionals - 0 views

  • The Casper Suite is a client management tool for the Macintosh platform. Simply put, the Casper Suite is designed to inventory, image, update, and maintain Apple computers running OS X. With an approach developed natively for the Macintosh OS, the Casper Suite makes it easy to image machines, manage updates, and proactively support computers automatically and remotely. With the Casper Suite, system administrators no longer need to work nights and weekends or hire additional staff to support new or existing computers. The Casper Suite allows your school district or university to grow its population of fast, fun, and powerful Apple computers without growing your IT department.
canny00 lee

iPod Video Converter - 0 views

    • canny00 lee
       
      Convert all popular video formats to MP4 files for playing on iPod Video. dvdXsoft iPod Video Converter is a video/movie converting program designed for converting video/movie to Apple iPod video playing by the two formats supported: H.264 and Xvid. It can convert from MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, WMV, XVid, DivX, FLV, AVI, RM, RMVB, MOV, and more other formats. Support Windows Vista. It can convert almost all video format including FLV (Macromedia Flash), DivX, XviD, MOV, RM, RMVB, dvr-ms, MPEG, WMV, AVI to iPod Movie / iPod Video format MP4 files. It supports easy-to-use interface, fatstest converting speed with excellent output Video and Audio quality, it support Input/Output preview you can watch the movie when converting movies.
yc c

XLogo - A Logo learning and drawing application built for Mac OS X - 0 views

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    LOGO is a dialect of Lisp, and was first developed in the 1970's to be used as a teaching language. XLogo implements a subset of this language, it is freeware, open source, and is designed to be easy to use.
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