If you think you've got it tough on Valentine's Day, consider your poor,
humble Download.com editor. My wife's birthday is on Valentine's Day!
Luckily, we've been together long enough that I don't have to impress her with
dozens of roses, buckets of chocolates, and the rest of the conventional
commercial holiday paraphernalia. However, a homemade card is always a great way
to demonstrate my love.
Creating your own Valentine's Day cards with commercial design software like
Adobe
Photoshop or CorelDRAW will provide you with a wide array of options for tweaking your images, text,
and other graphical elements. Those programs also offer instructional assistance
and templates to help you through the process. But if you're willing to use a
little elbow grease and your imagination, you can create a fantastic Valentine's
Day card using free design software.
For this tutorial, I'm going to use Paint.NET, a top-rated download that offers many of the important features that you'll find
in commercial image editors. GIMP is another great free program that actually offers a bit more power in terms of
third-party plug-ins and online tutorials, but I find that Paint.NET is an
easier program for new users to learn.
Also, I'm going to create a basic Valentine's Day card that includes an image
with overlaid text and the date on the front, and some graphic elements and
romantic sentiments on the inside. If you're the artistic sort and can create
your own graphics, more power to you. One good free app for doing so is the
vector-illustration software Inkscape. I'm artistically incompetent, so I tend to focus on using cool pictures and
injecting some wit into my text.
Panasonic announced a new SDHC (Secure Digital High Capacity) flash card on
Tuesday that offers both high speed and lots of space for those willing to pay.
The 32-gigabyte card, called the RP-SDV32GU1K, is due to ship in April for about US$700. It's a high-speed "class 6" card that can transfer data at speeds of 20MB per second--the world's first at the 32GB capacity, Panasonic asserts.
One major flash card alternative to SD, CompactFlash, can transfer data at a
maximum of 45MB per second. However, top transfer speeds are often more useful
when copying files from a flash card, since cameras and videocameras often can't
write data at those top speeds.
The latest update to Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard is available, with fixes for several different issues.
Apple posted a support document on its Web site and began informing Leopard users through the Software Update mechanism that Mac OS X 10.5.2 is now ready for public consumption. A combo update that includes some security patches is 343MB and can be downloaded immediately. The first update to Leopard, version 10.5.1, was released in November.
This time around, Apple has fixed some issues with Time Machine, the automatic backup software available in Leopard, as well as Finder. Time Machine now works with a wider variety of external hard drives, and you can now access the application through the menu bar like you would a list of Wi-Fi networks. There's no support for wireless backups, however, unless you pick up Apple's new Time Capsule external hard drive.
Finder now seems more stable, with fixes that should prevent it from crashing in certain situations. And Airport is said to work more reliably with improved stability and security.
Apple also released two separate patches for Leopard users that improve graphics performance and update WebObjects to 5.4.1. It's not clear whether those are included in the combo update; they aren't included in the list of new things in version 10.5.2 on Apple's site.
Tiger users also have some work to do, with new security updates released for both Tiger and Leopard. The Leopard combo update does include the security update released Monday for that OS. About 19 percent of the Mac installed base has upgraded to Leopard, Apple executives said on their earnings conference call last month.
The WildCharger was met with some skepticism when it was announced more than a year ago because it sounded too good to be true. The rollup pad promised
to charge various devices simultaneously, regardless of type or brand.
But its manufacturer, appropriately named WildCharge, continues to prove its critics wrong by releasing new adapters compatible with more products. The latest of them will work
with the iPhone, iPod, second-generation nano, and two BlackBerry models (the
Pearl and 8800), according to Gizmodo.
The adapters still need to be placed on the back of the devices, which can
then be charged when placed on the flexible mat. WildCharge has long hoped that
the receivers could be integrated directly into their devices, but that would likely be a vastly complicated endeavor
involving multiple companies, technologies, licensing, and standards. In other
words, don't hold your breath.
Considering how much we've heard of Solid-State Disk's superior act over conventional spinning hard drives which are often prone to hard disk failure, it's only a matter of time before vendors get on the SDD bandwagon. First up with a large-capacity external version is Buffalo's 100GB model in its SHD-UHRS series of external USB 2.0 drives.
However, as much as some of us would love to flaunt one, there's a hefty premium to be paid for being the Big Cheese among your tech geek pals. That 100GB Buffalo SSD will set you back a very pretty penny of US$636 (67,700 yen). Compare that to a 100GB Hitachi HD that's retailing for just US$90 (S$129) at the local electronics mall, and the consumer's choice is really very simple for now.