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Written by Bobrocky
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Wednesday, 04 February 2009 |
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There's a good article over at MacCentral about replacing your glass screen on your MacBook or MacBook Pro. Seems an awful lot of people don't like them because of the glare on the screen. Others don't like the way the colors are displayed. And of course, others like it better. All a matter of taste.
So a new company, http://techrestore.com/ , has come up with their own process of getting you back the old matte LCD screen we have all come to love over the years. If you are one of those, you can get your screen replaced for around $200.00 from Techrestore.
The reviewer, who had this done, was very pleased with how it all came out. You can read his entire and lengthy review at MacCentral .
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Written by Bobrocky
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Tuesday, 03 February 2009 |
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It's been a long time, too long, since we've been here to socialize. In a simple effort to upgrade to a better provider, Maclectic seemed to get involved in a struggle for who owns whom. Seems ipower wasn't all that happy to lose us, while Dreamhost did there best to get us in. But, after much effort and a lot of down hours we are back online. Rich has worked hard to get everything reconnected. Thanks, Rich, for your hard work!
Now that we are on Dreamhost, it is our hope that we will have faster service and a lot less errors. iPower just seemed to go downhill after they made some changes that did not seem to be very beneficial for us. Now that we are back online, I hope you'll stop in and get things moving again around here. Time to round up the old crew and get some serious posting done.
Come on in, the water is fine. We need recipes, stories, reviews and lots of friendly chit chat. Hope you'll help get us moving once again.
Bobrocky
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Written by RichMedia
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Friday, 09 January 2009 |
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While I was wandering around Adobe's site doing some research today I took a brief time out when I discovered their Xtrain Digital Design Online Training Series. Here's the direct link. It was an entertaining tutorial on how to create reduced color vector images from jpegs, RAW files, or tiffs. Anyway, here it is, I hope that you enjoy this discussion about transforming images into vector art at 256 colors or less. . One of the coolest things is a quick demo towards the end of the video. It seems that there is a site at Stanford which enables anyone to perform these little tricks online at http://vectormagic.stanford.edu. I haven't checked it out yet, but it seems to be very promising! What a great gesture from Adobe, although I'm sure that they'd rather sell you the latest copy of CS4 Premium Design! Let me know what you think!
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