Word: inkly
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...course this is not the first time the media has wasted ink on Harvard’s sexual exploits. When a few members of the Harvard crew team decided to construct a nine-foot snow phallus last February, they triggered a school-wide controversy that soon captured national news attention. After the structure was destroyed in the name of feminism, the campus—and the nation—erupted into an impassioned debate on the merits of a snow depiction of male genitalia. The Wall Street Journal, The Boston Globe and The Washington Times all devoted editorial space...
There is one catch. While both the Olympus and Sony are fast and simple, the price per print (about 50 to 70) is about twice what you would pay to get prints from an online photo service such as Ofoto.com or off an ink-jet printer. Also, dye-sub prints may fade faster over time. But if you're willing to pay a premium for glossy prints, these petite powerhouses can't be beat...
...quality. Now, printing digital pictures at home just got more appealing, thanks to two new compact photo printers, from Olympus and Sony. Both hook up directly to a digital camera, eliminating the fuss of connecting to a PC. They use a printing process called dye sublimation, which heats the ink and vaporizes it into the photo paper. The result: glossy, 4-in.-by-6-in. prints that are virtually indistinguishable from the ones you get from a professional photo lab. Even better, both devices sell for less than...
...slick prints in less than a minute apiece. While you can hook up the P-10 to any camera that supports the new PictBridge standard, you can also attach it to your computer to do some preprinting editing and touchups. It will be available in late February for $199. Ink-and-paper packs cost $25 for 40 prints...
...were more encouraging or more cheerful. History classes with Sillery were a form of academic boot camp—rigorous, tiring, occasionally dispiriting, but highly beneficial in the long-run. Usually the papers she gave back were covered—and I mean covered—in green ink. She had essentially rewritten my essays, removing all the fluff and the pretentious (mixed) metaphors, leaving behind passable pieces of work. “Your writing suffers from adverbial overkill,” she explained. “And one day perhaps you’ll learn, as George Orwell once...