Random traffic is a constant obstacle in Midnight Club: Los Angeles.
(Credit: CBS Interactive)
After playing Midnight Club: Los Angeles, for the past week, I have to agree with the Gamespot review: the races are very difficult. But that’s just the initial impression. Grind for a while, make some …
Originally posted at The Car Tech blog
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Tags: angeles, are-very, cbs, constant-obstacle, initial, interactive, make-some, midnight, midnight-club, past, past-week, races
Honda's new support system can do stairs.
(Credit: Honda)
See all the cool things we’ll have to look forward to when we’re older?
Honda unveiled another experimental walking-assistant device on Friday that lets people’s legs still do the walking while taking take some of the …
pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/2008-10-28_010403.jpg” align=”left” hspace=”4″ vspace=”2″ width=”494″ height=”250″ style=”display:block;float:none;” /br Web-based application Pixolu helps you find images by their similarity to each other. Enter a search term and Pixolu searches the image indexes of Google, Yahoo, and Flickr. Once Pixolu returns results, you can further refine them by dragging images to a holding area on the lower right corner of the interface. In my test run, I searched for pumpkins. I specifically wanted pictures of lots of pumpkins gathered together but not pictures of Jack o’ Lanterns or pumpkin pie. By dragging and dropping pictures of multiple pumpkins from my initial search into the sidebar and refining the search, Pixolu narrowed down the remaining images into just those of tons of pumpkins clustered together./p div class=”related”a href=”http://www.pixolu.de”Pixolu/a [via a href="http://www.makeuseof.com/dir/pixolu-images-find-images/"MakeUseOf/a]/div br style=”clear: both;”/
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pimg src=”http://cache.gawker.com/assets/images/lifehacker/2008/10/big_mac_meal.jpg” height=”119″ width=”128″ align=”right” hspace=”4″ vspace=”2″ align=”right”/Complex diet equations involving fat, protein, and carbohydrates get re-spun every other day, it seems, but a href=”http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/29/dining/29calories.html”calorie counting remains the basic math of weight maintenance/a, according to nutritionists. How much do you care about calories? How do you track your intake, and output, when you’re eating on the go?/p br style=”clear: both;”/
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CrunchGear got their meaty hands on the new HP HDX16 Blu-ray notebook we previewed back in September, and it’s pretty shiny. And I say “meaty” because they damn near broke some of those flashy, flush buttons during the initial feeling up. Keep those paws away from the 16:9 high def widescreen and I think we’ll be OK, fellas. [CrunchGear]




Filed under: Cellphones, Handhelds
So the good news is that T-Mobile has decided to keep right on taking pre-orders for the G1 through October 21, just one day before the handset’s official launch. The bad news, though, is that it doesn’t mean you’ll be getting your Android on come October 22. Turns out that the initial allotment of G1s set aside for pre-orders is now sold out completely, and any names taken between now and launch will be allotted phones being shipped “at a later date.” It’s not clear if a “later date” means a week, a month, or a decade after the 22nd, but for the sake of everyone involved, we hope its the former.
Update: T-Mobile’s site says that pre-orders taken from here on out will be delivered “as early as November 10,” so it looks like you early birds are going to have a nice little period of exclusivity. Thanks, everyone!
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