Wednesday, June 1, 2011

seraphine de senlis

seraphine de senlis. Ay querida Séraphine, nos hace
  • Ay querida Séraphine, nos hace



  • faketom
    Aug 9, 04:43 PM
    Just ordered a 30" with my Mac Pro. Stuck with the stock graphics card however. It was a huge decision of whether to go for the single 30" or the two 23" displays - which is actually cheaper. Did I make the right choice?
    Anybody who has a 30" have anything good or bad:( to say about them?





    seraphine de senlis. Seraphine: A Film
  • Seraphine: A Film



  • dXTC
    Sep 28, 01:28 PM
    The house is a little bigger than those drawings depict, as there are stairs leading to a downstairs that is not shown. Probably to the 5th bedroom that is mentioned, likely a downstairs guest room of sorts or something.

    Agree with everyone else though. Simple, not over the top. I like.

    I like, too. I noticed the stairway leading downward as well. Could be a guest room or workout/fitness room.

    In addition, I would wager that there will be a small server room/alcove down there: a Mac mini or Mac Pro server (mini is more likely), with a couple of external hard drives (Drobo, perhaps?), wired to the latest AEBS and positioned directly underneath the living room. This would allow running Ethernet up to the living room TV, equipped of course with the new :apple:tv. That provides a solid Gigabit connection for streaming movies, and plenty of WiFi bandwidth for the master suite. An AirPort Express, set to Bridge mode, will likely be placed near the three smaller bedrooms for better Wi-Fi coverage at that end of the house.





    seraphine de senlis. dite Séraphine de Senlis.
  • dite Séraphine de Senlis.



  • mtwilford
    Jul 21, 10:30 AM
    http://www.macrumors.com/images/macrumorsthreadlogo.gif (http://www.macrumors.com/iphone/2010/07/21/apple-targets-nokia-with-new-signal-attenuation-video/)



    Apple you are pathetic :confused:





    seraphine de senlis. seraphine de senlis. seraphine
  • seraphine de senlis. seraphine



  • yellow
    Apr 11, 10:43 AM
    Finally bit the bullet and abandoned my BlackBerry Tour in favor of an iPhone 4. See you in hell, BlackBerry!





    seraphine de senlis. as Seraphine of Senlis;
  • as Seraphine of Senlis;



  • iJohnHenry
    Apr 26, 10:21 AM
    Yes, I do.

    Mord, wow. :eek: That's all. :)





    seraphine de senlis. Un jour, de passage à Senlis,
  • Un jour, de passage à Senlis,



  • iGary
    Sep 25, 06:45 PM
    Damn then there must be something wrong with you Quad again Gary. I regularly use 1.1.2 on my 1.67 powerbook and I find it perfectly acceptable. And on my G5/X800XT it's super fast.

    I think the issue with people finding it slow is there lack of understand of what Aperture is actually doing. And also not really knowing how to use Aperture to it's full potential.

    Everybody wants everything to be instant but that will never happen.

    I for one find the workflow of cataloguing, correcting and exporting in Aperture far faster and superior then any comparable app.

    I'm starting to think there is, because dual 2.0 G5's are crunching panos about 25% quicker than mine, and I have all the proper software in, according to Kevin. I may take it in soon and show "The Genius" the Aperture issues.

    As for catologing and exporting - no complaints here. Some corrections do take a bit of time for me. Not sure why - but I have talked to other Quad owners that have similar issues.

    I usually take upwards of 1000 images in an aerial shoot - there's nothing better on the market to sort and catalogue them. I get a bit frustrated at post processing, though.


    EDIT - And by the way - it is LIGHTNING fast in regular screen mode. My issues are in full screen mode.





    seraphine de senlis. Seraphine de Senlis
  • Seraphine de Senlis



  • Earendil
    Sep 25, 06:36 PM
    Why would Apple logically develop a piece of software that uses the graphics card when I have four processors - many others have two - begging to be worked. I guess I never understood the logic of using Core Image to power this thing.


    In a perfect world it would figure out your specs and use what it can. However I'm betting that using a graphics card to do a lot of the heavy lifting enables it to run on far more computers than going proc only. Many of us don't have duel or quad cores, and our procs are also doing other things. Heaven forbid I use other apps at the same time as Apature to. However my graphics card is decent, and sits idle even when other apps are open.

    Like I said, perfect world you'd have your cake and eat it too, however for the time being, I'm not so sure the path they chose was all that bad. I'm quite open for discussion on this though, as I'm no expert :)





    seraphine de senlis. Seraphine de Senlis.
  • Seraphine de Senlis.



  • DarkAdept
    Sep 25, 10:40 PM
    Why would Apple logically develop a piece of software that uses the graphics card when I have four processors - many others have two - begging to be worked. I guess I never understood the logic of using Core Image to power this thing.

    ... because CoreImage allows problems to be described in a way that scales not only across GPU pixel pipeliness, but also across CPUs? This is good bleeding-edge design that will take some time to tweak and tune, but sets the stage for amazing gains over time.

    Apple has done their homework on this one - every future release of OS X will do a better job of balancing resources to make Aperture scream.





    seraphine de senlis. quot;Séraphine de Senlisquot; ou
  • quot;Séraphine de Senlisquot; ou



  • twoodcc
    Aug 11, 07:06 PM
    ^^ is 200mhz really that important :p

    i'm tellin ya, there's something about starting with the number 4.

    but it got too hot, and i had to turn it down to 3.98 ghz. not quite 4. hopefully it'll stay at that though





    seraphine de senlis. seraphine de senlis. of
  • seraphine de senlis. of



  • erzhik
    Mar 15, 03:55 PM
    Now you see, OP is a true Apple diehard fan. FYI, Apple didn't and doesn't invent anything new. What they have in their devices is exactly what other devices have and had in them for a while. All Apple does is redesigns as they see it, but YOU pay the premium for that.

    Is Macbook pro amazing? Yes
    Will I swap my MCPro for anything else? No
    Did I pay a hefty premium for it? Hell yes
    Can I get the same thing from Dell or Toshiba for less? Absolutely YES

    Apple products look unique from the outside, but in reality they are the same devices others have but in different packages.





    seraphine de senlis. Séraphine de Senlis,
  • Séraphine de Senlis,



  • killuminati
    Sep 9, 04:33 PM
    While we're on the topic, I also e-mailed Apple, asking them to put the "EXPLICIT" warning next to the keynote. My 11-year old son likes watching them, but he won't be seeing this one; profanity = unprofessional.


    lol, I think he can watch the keynote. Just stop if you want at the last 2 minutes when Jobs intros Kanye. And at 11 years old I'm sure your son has heard profanity before.





    seraphine de senlis. aka Séraphine de Senlis,
  • aka Séraphine de Senlis,



  • skellter
    Apr 5, 03:48 PM
    Where can I download this app or whatever it is! :) I really wanna see the iAd stuff.





    seraphine de senlis. of Séraphine de Senlis,
  • of Séraphine de Senlis,



  • hatersgonnahate
    Apr 13, 02:55 PM
    Delivered today.

    thought about getting those but im getting the samson 3i's instead. lmk how they are





    seraphine de senlis. Séraphine de Senlis
  • Séraphine de Senlis



  • Full of Fail
    May 3, 02:09 PM
    The promise of an open system doesn't always play out in the real world.

    Just like communism





    seraphine de senlis. Seraphine de Senlis .
  • Seraphine de Senlis .



  • PowerGamerX
    Mar 24, 08:38 PM
    Happy birthday OS X.

    Although, OS X was never really that good until 10.3. 10.4 was pretty good too. Leopard and Snow Leopard are fantastic though.





    seraphine de senlis. Séraphine de Senlis.
  • Séraphine de Senlis.



  • gaseby
    Aug 2, 02:58 PM
    hi,
    I have had a chance to browse through the reply (allthough parts of it was cencored):
    - License agreement. Apple distinguish between license agreement for iTunes Jukebox and iTunes Music Store and they mean the government have been mixin this up
    - License agreement. They will do som smaller adjustments (clarifications) around the issue of changes to the license agreement would have effect on previously purchased music, the intention was not to have any effect on previously purchased music
    - License agreement. They will do changes so it will be clearer to the user when the license agreement has been changed
    - DRM, usage of iTunes music files in other players than iPod. They do not give in on this, their argument is 1) it is playable on the PC 2) it may be burned on a CD and played on other CD players. They also blend into the argument that Norway has a fairly new law with respect to music download and copy/usage rights and the different plotical parties and politicians have said "this and that" which may support Apples case. I would assume that sooner or later there will be a court case in order to put more details on the law and its interpretation. This may be it (or not).

    With respect to this having impact on other countries there are some arguments in the letter which quotes EU/E�S laws, however their DRM arguments is mainly reflecting their interpretation of Norwegian law.





    seraphine de senlis. SERAPHINE
  • SERAPHINE



  • Full of Win
    Apr 29, 04:41 PM
    For the love of god get rid of the faux leather.

    Its so ugly. I hope there will be a hack that will bring some taste back to 10.7.





    seraphine de senlis. séraphine de senlis,
  • séraphine de senlis,



  • mw360
    Apr 6, 10:05 AM
    I see your point, but I think that it's quite uncharitable to question the motives of individuals but let apple have a pass. They are in the position to do whatever they want, and there's no way that they WOULD reimburse those whose apps were rejected for the same function, but my point is that they shouldn't have rejected those apps at all. It's hypocritical of them to reject an app for a reason, and then when they get desperate for their iAd program to catch on more with advertisers (which apparently aren't as excited for the platform as Apple had hoped) they change their mind and create their own app.

    And besides, an ad impression is an ad impression. The only iAds that I click on are accidental. If people want to download an app to see what an iAd looks like, they are also getting the best of what the advertisers had hoped for: the chance to make somebody want to use their product. They pay for the option of changing somebody's mind, not to actually do it. They pay to put the advertisement in partial view. Not to actually sell products directly.

    It doesn't matter who makes the app, if they are putting the ads in front of people, they deserve the money. That goes for Apple or any of the several individuals that have already created such apps.

    With respect, you clearly don't work in advertising. You pay to put ads in front of the right people, not just anyone. Especially not competing advertisers and agencies. Why do you think Google (a) makes so much advertising revenue and (b) collects so much data about its users? Coincidence?

    Secondly individuals are just as greedy as corporations, and generally get to operate outside of the spotlight. Apple has a lot to lose if its iAd platform is seen to be poorly targeting users, but an App developer has a lot to gain from indiscriminate iAd spamming. So in this case, yes, for the sake of self interest I'd expect Apple to reimburse advertisers for clicks inside their iAd app, and I'd expect an independent developer of a similar app to laugh all the way to the bank.

    I never said btw I'd expect Apple to reimburse developers for their time on rejected apps. Or if I did I didn't mean it.





    seraphine de senlis. Séraphine Louis (Les grandes
  • Séraphine Louis (Les grandes



  • tingly
    Nov 24, 02:59 AM
    for next year's googlers:

    Macs
    Starting at $1,099. Save $101. MacBook
    Starting at $999. Save $101. iMac

    iPods
    Starting at $149. Save up to $31 plus free laser engraving. iPod nano
    Starting at $249. Save up to $31 plus free laser engraving. iPod

    Software
    $358, save $41.95, Office 2004 for Mac Standard Edition
    $68, save $31.95, .Mac
    $68, save $11.95, Parallels Desktop for Mac
    $68, save $21.95, Adobe Photoshop Elements 4.0
    $38, save $11.95, The Sims 2
    $38, save $11.95, Call of Duty 2
    $38, save $11.95, Sid Meier's Civilization IV

    Extras
    $238, save $61.95, Sonic Impact VIDEO-55
    $128, save $21.95, Canon PIXMA mini260 Photo Printer
    $88, save $41.00, AirPort Express Base Station
    $58, save $11.00, Apple wireless Mighty Mouse
    $48, save $21.95, Belkin TuneTalk Stereo
    $38, save $11.00, iPod Radio Remote
    $24, save $5.00, Nike + iPod Sport Kit

    Speakers
    $298, save $51.00, iPod Hi-Fi
    $98, save $31.95, Logitech AudioStation Express

    Audio
    $78, save $21.95, M-Audio Keystation 49e USB Midi Keyboard
    $58, save $21.95, JBL Creature II Speakers
    $18, save $6.95, Sony Personal Speakers SRS-P11Q

    Car Audio
    $58, save $21.95, Kensington Digital FM Transmitter/Auto Charger
    $58, save $21.95, Kensington RDS FM Transmitter/Car Charger for iPod
    $14, save $5.95, Sony CPA-9C Car Cassette Adapter (Bought it from apple.com a week ago. d'oh!)

    Headphones
    $398, save $101.95, Shure E500PTH Sound Isolating Earphone
    $398, save $101.95, Shure E5C Sound Isolating Earphones
    $238, save $61.95, Shure E4C Sound Isolating Earphones
    $138, save $41.95, Shure E3C Sound Isolating Earphones
    $78, save $21.95, Shure E2C Sound Isolating Earphones
    $48, save $11.95, Sennheiser PX100 Headphones
    $24, save $5.00, Apple iPod Earphones

    Bags
    $58, save $41.95, Incase Ripstop Backpack
    $48, save $21.95, Brenthaven Metro Bag
    $28, save $11.95, STM Alley 13" Shoulder Bag
    $24, save $5.95, Incase Neoprene Sleeve

    Cases
    $24, save $5.00, Apple iPod nano Armband
    $24, save $10.95, iSkin eVo3 Case for 30GB iPod
    $24, save $10.95, iSkin eVo3 Case for 60GB & 80GB iPod
    $18, save $11.00, Nike + Sport Armband
    $18, save $11.95, Incase Sports Case with Armband for iPod nano
    $18, save $11.95, XtremeMac SportWrap for iPod
    $18, save $6.95, Agent 18 VideoShield for 30GB iPod
    $18, save $6.95, Agent 18 VideoShield for 60GB & 80GB iPod





    Kingsly
    Oct 10, 06:22 PM
    Gawd. Will this rumor just die already?

    I want a vPod as much as the next guy... but please make the madness stop! :(





    Stella
    Mar 28, 06:09 PM
    Respectfully, I think you're missing the point. In its totality, installing an app is more like:

    1) Google or otherwise search for an app. Make sure its the Mac version, compatible with your OS version, processor, etc. There probably won't be any reviews, more like select quotes from people who liked it.
    2) IF you trust that website, fill out your credit card information, PayPal account, etc.
    3) Download it and do the process you described for installing.
    4) If you need to re-install the app, buy a new computer, etc. hope that the company allows you to re-download it.
    5) If you have a good/bad experience, good luck reviewing it or rating it.

    I'm a pretty tech-savvy guy and I still appreciate the ease of the Mac App Store.

    Hyperbole.. dear lord - over exaggeration.

    * use your favourite mac listing website of your choice - you only need to find a few, and they don't take long to find. Only need to do this once.

    * Pretty much all companies allow you to re-download, so no need to worry there.

    * a lot of software listing sites allow reviews, for example, mac update, versiontracker

    * most software companies use reputable payment processors, larger companies often use their own - and can be trusted.

    * UNLIKE, the mac appstore, you can very often download TRIAL versions so you can TRY BEFORE you BUY!

    Sure, the mac app store is convenient, but shouldn't be relied upon as the only source of software due to its limitations and limited software listings.

    If someone never ventures out side the appstore then they'll miss out on gems such as 1Password, Launchbar, bettertouchtool... and many others.





    belovedmonster
    Jan 5, 06:15 PM
    If it was live you wouldnt get all the split screen editing etc. It would be quite a linear and boring presentation.

    Editing the feed can give emphasis to certain aspects and also cut out anything that goes wrong.

    Havent you ever seen live TV? Doing Picture in Picture effects (split screen) is nothing that cant be done with a simple press of a button at the mixing desk and doesn't represent any problem for live broadcasts what so ever. In fact, actually editing those effects in afterwards would require way more work than just doing it live on the fly. No one in their right mind would do it after the event if they didn't have to.





    InsanelyApple
    Apr 15, 04:51 PM
    It's more.... FABULOUS!
    :)

    Bravo, good sir/madam. Bravo. You made me laugh. *applause*





    steviem
    Mar 13, 12:35 PM
    Apple used to innovate, right now they have acheived the goal of any capitalist company, they've hit the big time with the iPhone and are resting on their laurels.

    Notebooks / Computers, these aren't innovative, infact the PowerPC was innovative, OSX 10.1 was innovative but now... it's got to a point where they don't innovate, Intel does; Nvidia does; AMD does, apple are a box maker using the same components as everyone else.

    Apple A series mobile processors, these are innovated by ARM (spun off from Acorn, a british company). Again they don't innovate.

    Where they DO innovate is the idea of a vertical system where typically companies have gone to a horizontal view. The innovation is to capture you with something (be it a Apple TV, iMac, iPhone, iPod) and get you into their vertical structure. The innovation comes at creating a market for all possible user needs within this vertical structure, e.g. Movies, Music, Apps... where they can't make it themselves they take a cut from other developers (30% split).

    What is innovation?

    Apple have done a lot since the PowerPC. In fact, especially in the laptop area, Apple were severly lacking in innovation with the iBook and PowerBook. PowerBook to original MacBook Pro, not a lot changed, but let's look at what has changed since the first MacBook to now.

    Apple has found a way of manufacturing beautiful Aluminium cases out of a block of aluminium. During my day job, I work with Dell D-series, E-Series laptops and Macbook Pros. Admittedly, we get less Apple hardware with failure than we do with the Dells, and the 2-3 year old Dells are dropping like flies due to their Nvidia graphics chipsets failing. Last week I had 6 Dell laptops fail and had to replace their motherboards. Which leads me onto another of Apple's innovations. Component layouts. Yes, Apple use the same components as other PCs, they did during the late PowerPC era too (save the processor) and the way they engineer the layout and cooling is just of a much higher quality than Dell, where the parts do seem to be more cobbled together.

    Then let's look at 2007. Yes there were Blackberry and Windows Mobile phones around first, but the innovation that Apple made was making smartphones useful to more people. They also helped create an entire new software development industry, in the background they had a tablet, unlike any Tablet PCs, but too hard to make into a product at the time.

    Apple are great at taking something already there and making it work either in other applications or making the entire package in a way that their competitors just get confused on how to combat. Look at how Motorola desgined the Xoom, Samsung Designed the Galaxy Tab 10, there's something lacking in these designs in the entire packages. Yes they will be great against the original iPad and its original OS, but look at Garageband and iMovie. The iPad is geting powerful enough to be a device to create on. That is innovation.

    I'm not talking about the lower levels of computing. I'm talking about the parts of computing that End Users, who will never see an IDE in their entire lives. This is where computing is being redefined. They're shifting the way people use the "input. Process. Output.Store".



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