| Digital Death |
TechnoratiMost people today have at least three social media accounts, including Twitter, facebook and LinkedIn as the most popular. New social media sites keep popping up as well, such as Pinterest, Google+ and FourSquare, all designed for you to easily upload ...
|
| What's next for Amazon's Kindle Fire? |
TG DailyAmazon's wildly popular $200 Kindle Fire tablet is getting about as much traction as the original iPad. Analyst Jordan Rohan recently estimated that 6 million Kindle Fire tablets have been sold, which puts the device right on par with the rate of sales ...
|
| 'Potted Potter' duo takes on 7 boy wizard books ... in 70 minutes! |
mysask.com (press release)A coffee shop in the Scottish capital is where Rowling famously penned the first instalment of her immensely popular series about the boy wizard with the lightning-shaped scar. But even though "Potted Potter" star Daniel Clarkson loves the idea of ...
|
| More murmurs of 15, 17-inch MacBook Airs surface |
CNETby Josh Lowensohn February 10, 2012 11:28 AM PST Follow @Josh Apple is once again said to be working on larger models of its MacBook Air line, with a new report making a rather bold suggestion that two new Air models would replace the company's popular ...
|
| 'The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn |
I Am Rogue.comNext month, Lionsgate is releasing The Hunger Games, a hopeful franchise-starter based on the first in series of phenomenally popular young adult novels by Suzanne Collins. For the past four years, Summit Entertainment has been quite profitably pumping ...
|
| “MADE” Meets BU |
BU QuadIn the past, typically pubescent teens signed on to star on MTV's popular reality show “Made.” Cameras would follow them through locker-lined high school halls on their quests to be cheerleaders, homecoming kings, and even ladies' men.
|
| College football requires an overhaul, not tinkering |
AZ Central.com (blog)One idea reportedly under consideration is the popular "plus-one" model, which consists of two semifinal games and a national-title game. It's an approach NCAA President Mark Emmert supports. It's a step in the right direction, but it's not enough.
|