Word: ipodding
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Combine all that with consumers creating the illusion of status with luxe accessories--the camera phone, the iPod, the $4 latte--and the gentrification of Monopoly makes perfect sense. Is it so ridiculous to let a Toyota Prius define your identity on a game board? That's what Toyota Prius drivers do on the street...
...include titles from its vast mail-order library of 65,000 movies. No word yet on pricing. WHAT'S COOL It's easy to use. Apple has already sold 45 million TV programs through its iTunes store--and short shows and long films play seamlessly on a computer or iPod. You can buy a movie at work and have it automatically downloaded at home, and if you plan to watch a movie just once, you can pay as little as $1.99 to rent it. Netflix users make long movie wish lists, and if downloading those films is as easy...
...many people didn't use the amp and instead connected the ZonePlayer to their home theater system or stereo. Not long ago, Sonos addressed this by releasing the smaller ZonePlayer 80 - everything but the amp, for $150 less. Now you can get a ZonePlayer 80 and the $400 iPod-like Controller for a total of $750. With Rhapsody, you can connect the ZonePlayer to your home-network router and your stereo, set your thumb to the controller, and off you go. Sonos recommends two ZonePlayers - the $1,000 bundle - because the beauty of the product is its ability to synchronize...
...golddigga', but she ain't messin' with no broke, er, mates. Stereotyping & Prejudice–It's not that you hate [insert group here], it's just that you don't know enough of them–and of course you naturally assume that the guy that jacked your iPod by Mather last fall is representative of all those people. It's human nature. Just take a moment, remember that the naturalistic fallacy is more of a suggestion than anything else, and run with it. Cognitive Dissonance–We encounter ideas that conflict with our already-held beliefs...
...small things—from microwaves to atomic particles to stem cells. You’ll talk about the Alice-in-Wonderland-esque counter-intuitive nature of these super-small things (groovy!) and get to know the world of nano (hint: it’s not about the iPod). If you prefer the bigger picture, Science A-36, “Observing the Sun and Stars,” has some promise, but be prepared to put in the hours, as two labs a week—limited to 6 students—outside of class are required...