Word: ipodding
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...universities in Europe, India, China. The U.S. universities are where we get the most out of that, but we want to make sure we're doing it everywhere. There are famous cases. Google's done a super good job on search; Apple's done a great job on the Ipod. We're a company that's brave enough to say that we will keep those categories very competitive and see what we can do to come up with something that's even better in the years ahead. Certainly video games are a great example, where Sony's done a great...
...College administrators, the new advising program should have a substantial policy to ensure prefects are performing adequately. Under the current system, the program’s officers have little leverage to ensure that students complete prefect evaluations. Simple steps such as online evaluations of prefects (with a free iPod or other giveaways for lucky participants) or random checks by officers would dramatically improve the program. We hope that the SAB will focus on the aforementioned modifications to the Prefect Program rather than adding formal academic advising to prefects’ duties. Such a move would be ineffective, as upperclassmen...
Apple is finally joining the battle for the living room, having arrived a bit later than rival combatants Microsoft and Sony. Apple fired its first salvo last week when it unveiled its iPod Hi-Fi and Macs with its updated media networking system Bonjour...
...something of a hybrid iPod dock - not quite a "bookshelf" stereo, but not quite a home-theater system either. It's more expensive than the Bose SoundDock and Klipsch iGroove, but those are meant for small spaces. The bigger, heavier Hi-Fi is meant to fill a room. Still, though it has an auxiliary input for stereo sources, it's not necessarily something you'd think to connect to your cable set-top box. And because it's all one piece, it wouldn't make a good speaker system for a computer...
...Yesterday a film producer called me. He wanted to make a movie of my life," Cavalli reveals as he dumps several international cell phones, an iPod and a few loose Cohiba and Montecristo cigars out of a python tote. The designer's rags-to-riches tale is certainly fit for the big screen: a high school dropout with a serious stutter and an impoverished background makes millions of dollars...