Android Magazine now available in the UK
There is a new print magazine from Imagine Publishing that is on store shelves in the United Kingdom. It’s called Android Magazine and it’s dedicated to all things Android. The first issue is selling for £4.99 or around $8 a piece. Android Magazine isn’t available in the United States yet, but it will be making its way over in a few weeks.
Barnes & Noble executive predicts ebooks will overtake print very soon
Ebooks and tablets are poised to deliver a knockout blow to paper books. That’s according to Barnes and Noble vice president of direct marketing Marc Parrish, who spoke at the GigaOm Big Data conference recently. Parrish explained that ebooks will soon become the primary way consumers read and purchase books. Parrish admitted to mistakingly giving a two-year window as to when the book business will shift from physical to digital. Either way, the evidence he provided backed up his claims.
NYTimes.com To Be Pay-Walled
Like all print media now-a-days business on the print side is suffering. This includes the juggernaut of all newspapers and print media alike, the New York Times. For the past months, NYTimes.com has been updated with all of the latest stories and up until now, has been open to everyone for no cost. Not surprisingly, more »
Kodak’s new all-in-one printers
Kodak has two new All-in-One (AiO) printers, the EasyShare 7 (“ESP7″) and the EasyShare 9 (“ESP9″). The ESP7 and ESP9 showcase Kodak’s promise of the lowest ink replacement cost in the industry. MSRP on black ink is $9.99 and color ink is $14.99. Those prices are pretty reasonable. Other goals for these printers are lab-quality prints and easy to use.
Keep reading for specs on each printer and a SALE!
Gadgetell Review: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2
Gadgetell Quick Review: Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2
What is it?
Lightroom 2 is a program for Windows and Mac OS X designed to help organize, streamline, and develop your photos. It costs $99 for the upgrade from Lightroom 1 or $299 for first time buyers.
Pros:
Easy to use thanks to clean and organized interface.Imports all of your files using your preexisting directory structure.Works with a wide variety of file formats.
Cons:
Does not allow pixel editing. Requires another program for that task.Initial use can be frustrating and can cause loss of work.
Does it hit the mark?
Yes. Lightroom 2 definitely lived up to all of my expectations. It’s easy to see that this program would be extremely popular with anyone working in the art or ad industry, or someone who does batch work with photos. The program allows for very controlled editing and is remarkably easy to use.
For the full review, click “More.”
HP and MySpace team up: Better get rid of those risque shots on your site
HP and MySpace just announced that they’ve teamed up and the partnership will now be providing the ability to print on all user profiles on MySpace. Now, true, you could do this yourself before by going through steps of your own and saving things yourself and sending them to alternate programs to then print. But now, it’s just oh so much more simple.
Beginning in November, MySpace users will see a HP-branded button that says “Click to Print” all over the place, not just their photo album. It will be in their blog, comments, even the mail sections.
Plans are to extend this even further by selling personalized merchandise. The merchandise will have users’ photos on it. No details have been provided at this time as to exactly what kind of merchandise, but, expect the usual mugs, t-shirts, calendars, that sort of thing.
Sick of your printer lying to you? Trick it.
Once again your printer is out of ink way before you think there is any way it should be. Yet somehow, BOOM. It just refuses to print another page until you replace the cartridge. Well, when Farhad Manjoo’s Brother printer suddenly stopped printing; he started to wonder if his printer wasn’t simply lying to him that it was out of toner just so he would buy more before he actually even needed it. His prints hadn’t been fading at all; his printer just suddenly simply refused to keep going without a new cartridge.
Manjoo decided to look to the ‘Net for a way around this. And he indeed found some answers. He learned that by covering up the sides of his toner cartridge with a piece of electrical tape he could “trick” his printer into thinking it was full. He says the printer was been chugging along just fine ever since…eight months and hundreds of pages down the road…printing out perfect pages.















