clipped from www.realgeek.com
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Sunday, December 2, 2007
Ringtones for your Phone. Original and Unique
Saturday, November 3, 2007
Bold Journalism
clipped from www.theregister.co.uk
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Wednesday, October 31, 2007
More Stuff for Your Cell Phone
clipped from corp.handango.com
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Friday, October 26, 2007
New Trend in Wallpaper.
Become your own Wallpaper and Ringtones creator and salesperson. Create your own ringtones and wallpapers. Post them to Virgin Mobile and if others buy your rad designs and tones then you profit!
clipped from www.rcrnews.com
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Let your Cell Phone Tell you exactly WHERE you are.
clipped from www.rcrnews.com
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Ready to watch Live TV on your Cell Phone?
So far MediaFLO has a total of 8 channels broadcasting specifically for mobile TV with many more in the wings.
You will be able to watch the game from anywhere you have a cell phone connection.
clipped from www.rcrnews.com
Mobile TV provider’s operations similar to local affiliate |
Thursday, October 25, 2007
When Science Emulates Nature and Vice Versa
Still I found this theory to be incredibly inspiring.
clipped from www.pbs.org
Searching for a Theory of Everything |
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Will Social Networking be Coming to Your Cell Phone?
clipped from www.rcrnews.com
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Friday, October 19, 2007
Free stuff for your cell phone
clipped from www.thefreesite.com
TheFreeSite.com: Free Mobile Phone Resources
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Most requested Cell Phone Feature
clipped from cellphones.about.com
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Special Cell Phone Features.
clipped from www.wirelessguide.org
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The Brick is Back!
clipped from www.intomobile.com
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It was cutting edge technology.
In 1984 people were lining up in droves to buy this monstrosity.
Well in technical terms this first cell phone has truly turned into something of monsterous proportions.
clipped from www.msnbc.msn.com
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Cell phones are not just for making phone calls anymore.
In other words people buy more stuff from phones than on the internet. What are they buying? Read on...
clipped from en.wikipedia.org
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Cell phone etiquette
clipped from en.wikipedia.org
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Cell Phones and the Internet
Is this going to be a world wide trend? Will the instant gratification of using our cell phone to access internet information become commonplace in the future?
If so how is cell phone technology being developed to encompass this growing audience?
clipped from en.wikipedia.org
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Friday, September 21, 2007
Ketchup? Two Shakes to Health!
Ketchup was once used as a medicine in the United States. In the 1830's it was sold as Dr. Miles Compound Extract of Tomato. | |
Want to see a a cordon bleu chef hit the ceiling? Simply whisper that most horrific word, “ketchup”. This condiment is seen universally around the globe, and has been eaten with just about every food imaginable, but most commonly fries, burgers, scrambled eggs. And not so commonly cottage cheese and ketchup favored by Richard Nixon. But is Ketchup healthy or even good for you?
This is how Hienz first became a health food. The saucy tomatoey product became so popular, it’s was thought that the name is taken from Asian culture. The 17th century Asians were enjoying a pickled fish sauce, ke-tsiap, or kecap. But wait! The original didn't have tomatoes. Not until this spicy addition made its way across the Atlantic later in the next century.
The first ketchup.
Printed in Elizabeth Smith’s book, The Compleat Housewife,1727, but alas, still no tomotoes.
In the early 1800's, a recipe for tomato ketchup appeared first in a Nova Scotian recipebook of a former American, who named it “love apple” ketchup. This recipe was not published in the U.S.A. for a good reason, that being up until the early 1800s, tomatoes were actually thought to be poisonous. Colonel Robert Johnson ate a basket of tomatoes on the steps of the courthouse in Salem, New Jersey on Sept.26, 1820, survived, and this food was accepted as an edible product.
The abundent red fruit, created a scramble to produce a new variety of tomatoey sauce. By 1930, it had become a staple of western hemisphere diet, and not only was it not thought of as being poisenous any more it made it's way into being a healthful fad. As a marketing ploy, an enterprising manufacturer bottled it as Dr. Miles Compound Extract of Tomato. It was reputed to be the latest cure for everything from athletes foot to baldness. At this point, the H.J. Heinz company found scientific reports claiming tomatoes had antioxidants which were helped to prevent cancer. This may in fact be true but the carotenoid known as lycopene is in such small quantities even if entire bottles were heaped upon your macaroni and cheese the benifits would be nil.