Flash MP3 Players

Posted in Uncategorized by admin Wednesday October 29, 2008 at about 4:35 pm

A Flash MP3 Player is a compact portable player that uses embedded flash memory instead of the rotating hard drive.

The major reason everyone loves a Flash MP3 player is that is the smallest MP3 player created today, so you can carry it in your pocket, purse, or briefcase and have your favorite tunes with you everywhere you go. It runs on either AA or AAA batteries according to the type and manufacturer that you choose.

This type of MP3 player gives you more freedom to have your hands free will, jogging, climbing mountains, sailing, or just pushing the baby carriage. It is the perfect MP3 player for every life-style. Men, women and children will love being able to carry around up to 20 hours of their favorite music with a personal Flash MP3 Player .

The choices of colors and styles will fit any personality and are stylish, dependable, durable, and great to receive as a gift.

The Flash MP3 Player does not have as much storage space as the larger hard drive players but can be found in a range of 64MB to 1 Gig. Prices can range from £25.00 to £234.00.

Once you begin searching for your favorite Flash MP3 Player you will amazed at just how many features these small, compact players have to offer. Some of the most popular features you can find with the various Flash MP3 players include full solid State recording technology, 64MB 128MB or 256MB On-board memory, MP3 Playback, Supports ID3 Tag’s, normal repeats one all shuffle intro playback modes, various equalizer modes – Normal Classic Jazz Rock, hold function, adjustable contrast, file delete mode, search speed and skip speed set, and many other features according to the Flash Mp3 player you choose.

Google Earth News

Posted in Uncategorized by admin Wednesday October 29, 2008 at about 10:09 am

Once you’ve seen this, you;ll need 5 minutes to get your breath back! Then you can Travel.

What’s google earth.com Google Earth.com is stunning, it is another great package from the kings who can do no wrong. Simply follow 2 steps to take advantage of this great free download from Google for any holiday traveler. Google Earth.com is going to take some processing power, so firstly make sure you meet the minimum spec on your machine by checking the following before you download it:

- Windows 2000, or XP – Pentium 3, 500Mhz – 128M RAM – 400MB disk space – Network speed: 128Kbits/sec – 3D-capable video card with 16Mbytes of VRAM – 1024×768, “16-bit High Color” screen

- “Google Earth” is a free product and shares an installer with “Google Earth Plus”. You can upgrade your Google Earth to Plus via the Help menu.

- “Google Earth Plus” This version is for non-commercial use only

- This version supports Windows 2000 and Windows XP. – It does run on Windows Server 2003 and XP-x64.

- It does not run on Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows 98SE, or Windows ME.

- There are known issues with “Windows XP for tablet PCs” and Windows XP Media Center.

- It has also been tested successfully with Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP2) with this exception:

- A minimum screen size of 1024×768 pixels is required. Also, “True Color (32-bit)” resolution and a sufficient graphics card are required for clamped filled polygons; otherwise, they will be displayed as outlines only.

- The default OpenGL graphics rendering engine is the usually the best from both a performance and visual quality perspective for Google eart.

- The DirectX version of Google Earth.com can be selected in the Preferences panel. If there is a problem at startup, you can also change it from the Start Menu item. Use it on older machines and laptop computers that have trouble with the default OpenGL version.

- The DirectX version of Google Earth.com requires DirectX 8.1 or newer.

I would suggest you try it now. It really is an incredible tool from Google and will prove to be great from a educational and useful viewpoint , especially when they start adding Google Maps and Google Local to it. You can soon see whats around the corner. A 9 out of 10 from the Google Talks Team