FreeDMG: make Mac disk images with drag and drop
by Kevin Dangoor
…and do it for free! Seems like FreeDMG really has an appropriate name.
…and do it for free! Seems like FreeDMG really has an appropriate name.
A handy article with handy links: HOW-TO: Make your own annotated multimedia Google map. Very groovy post from Engadget!
Much as it seemed that online radio had been killed by the huge license fees that were set up, I guess the final nail has not been put in that coffin. Apparently, AOL and XM have joined forces to create a new online radio site offering 150 channels to anyone for free (including 20 XM channels). $5/month gets you 70 more XM channels. Cool! Something new to listen to when I’m working.
There’s a couple of bits of interesting news in RSS land. First, Bloglines has added package tracking to the list of feeds you can get. That’s a handy feature, and something I can guarantee I’ll have more to say about later.
The other bit is that some newspapers are creating their own RSS readers. I learned a lot about newspapers when I was at CareerSite, because CareerSite’s customers were newspapers. Some newspapers are painfully old-guard and might start thinking about that internet thing in a few years, because it’s probably just a fad. (That’s an exaggeration, of course.) The Denver Post is one of the more clued-in newspapers, so it’s not surprising to see that they’re one of the ones creating their own RSS readers. They’ve spied a threat and, rather than trying to sue it away, they’re facing it head-on and figuring out how to make a business out of it. I can think of a couple of industries that could use a good whack with that cluestick (that’s you, MPAA and RIAA!)