Author: Daniel Brusilovsky
Apple Universe Episode #2 iphone
Brand new episode came out today: The iphone is coming out on June 11 along with buddy Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard coming out sometime in June. Best Buy finally decides to sell Mac’s at 200 stores. A Russian Lab finds the first virus in the ipod, sort of. Mac Office 2008 is almost here, as it hit a private beta. Apple’s Mac OS X may gain multi-sized icon interface. MacNN reports on the latest Apple patents, published today by the US Patent & Trademark Office. The new patents include a centralized printing queue, a variable-sized icon GUI, a thermal-contact arrangement between chips and heat sinks, and an audio battery status patent. Does your five-year-old watch in fascination as you work with Photoshop? Encourage your child’s interests by turning your retired Mac into a digital art station. Apple Upgrades Boot Camp With Windows Vista Support. All of this on this special friday edition of Apple Universe!
San Francisco Giants win 1st game of season!
Boos rang throughout AT&T Park in Thursday night’s ninth inning after San Diego’s Josh Bard blooped an Armando Benitez pitch into left field for a two-run single. The fans’ displeasure conveyed impending doom. But Benitez, the object of the scorn, remained calm.
“I didn’t worry about it,” he said later with a reassuring smile.
Benitez indeed remained in control of the situation. He coaxed a popup from the next hitter, Mike Cameron, to preserve the Giants’ 5-3 decision over the Padres that gave Bruce Bochy his first managerial victory with San Francisco.
After losing their first two games, the Giants regarded this triumph as more than just a milestone for Bochy.
“I know it’s a long season,” second baseman Ray Durham said. “But you don’t want to be climbing out of an 0-3 hole with L.A. coming in and then going on the road.”
“I’ll be honest. The last thing we wanted to do was to open up this thing getting swept,” Bochy said after the Giants avoided their fifth 0-3 start since moving to San Francisco in 1958.
A lot happened for the Giants before Benitez took the mound: Matt Morris’ six solid innings, Barry Bonds’ first-inning RBI double off the base of the right-center-field wall, sparkling defense and a four-run uprising in the fifth inning that stemmed from patience and luck.
All of it would have been undone if Benitez had squandered his save opportunity — as he did 12 times during the previous two seasons, which fueled the fans’ disdain.
The Giants almost didn’t need Benitez. They took a 5-1 lead into the ninth, which Steve Kline began by retiring the first two Padres hitters. Then Marcus Giles doubled and Brian Giles rolled an infield single up the middle. Although Bochy could have stuck with Kline, a left-hander, to face left-handed-batting Adrian Gonzalez, Benitez was summoned to fulfill his role.
“He’s a closer,” Bochy said. “When it gets to that situation, he’s in the ballgame.”
Benitez promptly loaded the bases by walking Gonzalez on four pitches, although he had a plausible explanation for doing so.
“We did it on purpose,” he said. “Sometimes it’s better if you stay away from somebody who can hurt you. … It’s not like I was afraid of him. I was careful with him.”
Bard’s fly was softly hit but nowhere near a Giants defender, enabling the Giles brothers to score. Up came Cameron, representing the potential go-ahead run. Cameron was 1-for-12 lifetime off Benitez, who remained unimpressed with his own success.
“I didn’t want to play around with Cameron,” Benitez said. “One mistake and he can crush it.”
Cameron lifted a 2-2 pitch to Durham, ending the drama.
After accumulating only nine at-bats with runners in scoring position in their first two games — the 4.5 per-game average was the National League’s lowest — the Giants finally sustained some offense in the fifth, when they broke a 1-1 tie.
San Francisco benefited from San Diego starter Clay Hensley’s wildness and a little luck. With two outs, Hensley prolonged the fifth by walking Roberts, Omar Vizquel and Bonds to load the bases.
After taking a close 3-1 pitch for a strike, Durham singled to right field, scoring Roberts and Vizquel.
“If I hit that ball, I’d beat it into the ground or roll over and hit it to second base or shortstop,” Durham said, referring to Hensley’s 3-1 delivery. “Once he went to 3-2, I knew he didn’t want to walk me and that he’d get something up. I think it was a cutter or a slider he threw and I got pretty good wood on it.”
Rich Aurilia lifted a popup to shallow left field, where Padres third baseman Kevin Kouzmanoff and Khalil Greene, the shortstop, converged on the ball. Kouzmanoff backed into Greene and knocked him over, enabling the ball to fall untouched for an RBI single. Ryan Klesko, who went 3-for-4, followed with a clean single up the middle to drive in the inning’s final run.
Defense contributed to the Giants’ balanced effort. Roberts made a lunging grab of Greene’s fly to shallow center field in the second inning. Durham complemented his clutch hit with a fielding gem, gloving Gonzalez’s sixth-inning grounder by diving to his right and throwing from his knees for the out at first.
Morris, who improved to 7-3 lifetime against San Diego, surrendered only one hit through four innings. Then he became a tightrope walker, stranding two Padres in each of his final two innings.
“I thought that they were pretty aggressive, but I got it in my head that they were going to be aggressive,” Morris said of the Padres hitters.
Getting their first victory out of the way freed the Giants to pursue other objectives.
“Now we can relax and play our archrivals,” Kline said.
Apple Universe
I have started my own podcast about Apple called the Apple Universe with Daniel Brusilovsky. Please check it out! I already did my first pilot episode about the new Mac Pro 8-core. Enjoy!
Adobe Creative Suite 3
Optimized for the Mac
Built for Mac OS X and optimized for Intel-based Macs, Adobe Creative Suite 3 Design Premium is the designer’s dream toolkit, combining all-new versions of essential tools for designing engaging websites, interactive experiences, and mobile content in a unified design environment.
Experience the ultimate creative toolset on the Mac with Adobe InDesign CS3 for page layout, Photoshop CS3 Extended for specialized image editing, Illustrator CS3 for vector graphics creation, Flash CS3 Professional for interactive design, Dreamweaver CS3 for web design and development, and Acrobat 8 Professional for Adobe PDF workflows. Design Premium also offers visual asset management, effective file management for collaborative creative teams, mobile content previewing, and access to additional services.

Integrated for efficiency
With the unprecedented integration between the applications that comprise Creative Suite 3, you can use native files more easily than ever in different design workflows: Import Photoshop and Illustrator files into Flash, and copy Photoshop files into Dreamweaver. And enjoy a unified, integrated design experience with shared interface elements.

Designed for creativity
Like Creative Suite 3, your Mac is designed for creativity. Mac OS X knows when to get out of your way, allowing you to work or create without distraction. It also knows how to spring into action when you need it. Spotlight, for example, is always there to help you find that elusive file hiding somewhere in your computer. It shows search results literally as you type — in emails, contacts, PDFs, images, calendars, and applications. And with a single keystroke, Exposé lets you display all open windows as thumbnails, view windows of the current application, or hide all windows to quickly locate a file on your desktop.
And with support for RAW-format images, iPhoto helps you manage up to 250,000 photos using keyword tags, ratings, dates, and albums. You can even designate Photoshop CS3 as your image-editing application that opens when you double-click an image in iPhoto. It’s that easy.
Plus, you don’t need to buy any extra software to manage your calendar, keep track of your contacts, or video chat with clients. iCal helps you organize your schedule by letting you create as many separate calendars — for work, school, personal — as you need. View all your calendars separately or in a single unified window. Working seamlessly across the entire system, Address Book offers your contacts in Mail, iChat, iCal, and Spotlight. You can automatically sync iCal and Address Book with your iPod or Bluetooth-enabled devices, too. And iChat AV brings multi-way video and audio conferencing directly to your desktop with stunning, true-to-life picture and crystal-clear conversation. Everything you need to be productive is all there at your fingertips from day one. Seamlessly integrated into Mac OS X.
With an Intel-based Mac and Creative Suite 3, the possibilities are endless. Create beautiful and engaging content, collaborate effectively, push design further, and ultimately equip yourself with the tools to design for tomorrow as well as today. Wait no longer — make your creative studio dreams a reality.
Apple Unveils Higher Quality DRM-Free Music on the iTunes Store
Apple® today announced that EMI Music’s entire digital catalog of music will be available for purchase DRM-free (without digital rights management) from the iTunes® Store (www.itunes.com) worldwide in May. DRM-free tracks from EMI will be offered at higher quality 256 kbps AAC encoding, resulting in audio quality indistinguishable from the original recording, for just $1.29 per song. In addition, iTunes customers will be able to easily upgrade their entire library of all previously purchased EMI content to the higher quality DRM-free versions for just 30 cents a song. iTunes will continue to offer its entire catalog, currently over five million songs, in the same versions as today—128 kbps AAC encoding with DRM—at the same price of 99 cents per song, alongside DRM-free higher quality versions when available.“We are going to give iTunes customers a choice—the current versions of our songs for the same 99 cent price, or new DRM-free versions of the same songs with even higher audio quality and the security of interoperability for just 30 cents more,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “We think our customers are going to love this, and we expect to offer more than half of the songs on iTunes in DRM-free versions by the end of this year.”
“EMI and iTunes are once again teaming up to move the digital music industry forward by giving music fans higher quality audio that is virtually indistinguishable from the original recordings, with no usage restrictions on the music they love from their favorite artists,” said Eric Nicoli, CEO of EMI Group.
With DRM-free music from the EMI catalog, iTunes customers will have the ability to download tracks from their favorite EMI artists without any usage restrictions that limit the types of devices or number of computers that purchased songs can be played on. DRM-free songs purchased from the iTunes Store will be encoded in AAC at 256 kbps, twice the current bit rate of 128 kbps, and will play on all iPods, Mac® or Windows computers, Apple TVs and soon iPhones, as well as many other digital music players.
iTunes will also offer customers a simple, one-click option to easily upgrade their entire library of all previously purchased EMI content to the higher quality DRM-free format for 30 cents a song. All EMI music videos will also be available in DRM-free format with no change in price.
The iTunes Store features the world’s largest catalog with over five million songs, 350 television shows and over 400 movies. The iTunes Store has sold over two billion songs, 50 million TV shows and over 1.3 million movies, making it the world’s most popular online music, TV and movie store.
With Apple’s legendary ease of use, pioneering features such as integrated podcasting support, iMix playlist sharing, seamless integration with iPod® and the ability to turn previously purchased songs into completed albums at a reduced price, the iTunes Store is the best way for PC and Mac users to legally discover, purchase and download music and video online.
Apple ignited the personal computer revolution in the 1970s with the Apple II and reinvented the personal computer in the 1980s with the Macintosh. Today, Apple continues to lead the industry in innovation with its award-winning computers, OS X operating system and iLife and professional applications. Apple is also spearheading the digital media revolution with its iPod portable music and video players and iTunes online store, and will enter the mobile phone market this year with its revolutionary iPhone.
Mac Pro
Professional velocity.
8-core or quad-core Mac Pro workstation
Meet the latest addition to the Mac Pro family: The world’s first 3.0GHz, 8-core Intel Xeon-based Mac Pro. Consider the bar officially raised.
Performance standard
No matter which Mac Pro model you choose — 8-core or quad-core Intel Xeon — each delivers advanced performance, workstation graphics, and unparalleled expansion in so many possible configurations, your imagination has finally met its match.
Eight cores or four
Opt for the 8-core Mac Pro and you get the power of two Quad-Core Intel Xeon “Clovertown” processors running at 3.0GHz. Or choose a quad-core Mac Pro featuring two Dual-Core Intel Xeon “Woodcrest” processors and decide how fast they fly: 2.0GHz, 2.66GHz, or 3.0GHz. At 3.0GHz, the quad-core Mac Pro runs up to 2x faster than the Power Mac G5 Quad.1
Unparalleled expansion
Mac Pro accommodates up to four drives and 3TB of storage, offers eight DIMM slots to fill with up to 16GB of RAM, and provides up to two SuperDrives. It also gives you four PCI Express slots and lots of I/O options for ultimate flexibility.
Killer graphics
Looking for high-performance workstation graphics? You’ve come to the right place. Three graphics card options let you choose the card that meets your specific needs. And every one lets you connect up to two displays, including at least one 30-inch Apple Cinema HD Display.
More than 33 million possible configurations
You’re the expert. With build-to-order options available for processors, graphics cards, memory, hard drives, optical drives, and other features and components, the über-configurable Mac Pro lets you build your personal dream machine. The Mac you’ve been waiting for.
New look!
http://dbrusilovsky.wordpress.com has a brand new look! Hope you enjoy it!
Florida repeats as National Champions!
The Florida Gators took a chomp out of NCAA history with the repeat they simply had to have.Now they want more. They want to be called one of the best teams of all time.
The Gators made their case Monday night with an 84-75 victory over Ohio State to capture the second straight national championship that was their only reasonable goal this season.
They became the first team to go back-to-back since Duke in 1992 and the first ever to repeat with the same starting five.
“I think this team should go down as one of the best teams in college basketball history,” coach Billy Donovan said. “Not as the most talented, and not on style points — but because they encompassed what the word ‘team’ means.”
“We all love each other and we all love playing with each other,” Green said. “People made huge sacrifices. They all came back for this and wouldn’t have been satisfied without it.”
While the debate about the best teams of all time can truly begin, there is no denying that Florida’s overall athletic program is the best in the nation.
This win completes a 2007 championship-game sweep of the Buckeyes in the two biggest college sports — men’s hoops and football. Florida, a 41-14 winner in the football title game in January, remains the only program in history to hold both championships at the same time.
“I’ve said it a thousand times — once you think you’ve got it all figured out, you get in trouble,” Florida athletic director Jeremy Foley said. “We’re just enjoying tonight.”
The celebration looked much the same as last year. Lots of jersey tugging, jumping onto press row and Joakim Noah running into the stands to hug it out with loved ones.
Donovan added another gold star to his resume, which figures to command more than his current $1.7 million next season, whether he returns to Florida or bolts for a possible job offer at Kentucky.
“Right here at the University of Florida, I’m going to enjoy this moment right now,” Donovan said. “All that stuff will be addressed, but now isn’t the time to address it.”
His job this season was hardly just a matter of rolling the ball out there. He had to keep everyone motivated and focused — at first when things seemed too easy, then later when the Gators lost three of four toward the end of the regular season.
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They finished with a 10-game winning streak and haven’t lost a postseason game in 18 tries, counting sweeps at the Southeastern Conference tournaments the last two years.
But all teams, no matter how good, need something to fire them up. On Sunday, the Gators found it when Ohio State’s Ron Lewis labeled Florida only “good,” not “great” or “excellent.”
Lewis probably shouldn’t have gone there.
“Great teams never lose to good teams,” forward Chris Richard said. “It’s special and it speaks for itself. We’re now part of history.”
All season — including in the 86-60 victory over Ohio State in December — the Gators have morphed into whatever kind of team they needed to be to win, and this one was no different.
Stopping Oden figured to be the key, but really it was more complex than that. The 7-foot freshman, who may be one-year-and-done with the NBA beckoning, stayed out of foul trouble and played 38 minutes — just what the Buckeyes figured they needed to have a chance.
Florida’s focus, however, was more on stopping the rest of the team. Oden drew mostly single coverage when the ball went into the post. Donovan played a lot of zone and mixed his big men in and out. Horford, Richard and Noah all took turns, and 6-10 freshman Marreese Speights was added to the mix to give Florida five more fouls to play with.
“They had four bodies running in at me,” Oden said. “Chris Richard, I swear he plays on the football team.”
Oden had to work for his points and Ohio State couldn’t take advantage of any other matchups, especially on the perimeter. Ivan Harris was the only Buckeye to make a 3-pointer over the first 39-plus minutes of the game, and he finished 2-for-8. Mike Conley Jr. finished with 20 points for Ohio State, but lots of them came late after the Buckeyes were playing big-time catch-up.
Meanwhile, one thing Florida has always been able to do is shoot the ball — a nation-leading 53 percent this year — and Monday night was no exception. The Gators went 10-for-18 from 3-point range.
And Florida also had quicker hands.
How frustrating it must have been for Ohio State to watch Oden block shot after shot, only to see the Gators grab the rebound and feed back out to Lee Humphrey for a 3.
That happened twice in the second half, both times when an Oden block looked like it might spark Ohio State, which kept the game in reach but couldn’t get the deficit below six.
“The difference was they made some incredible plays, and we took away what we wanted to take away,” OSU coach Thad Matta said. “They were shooting runners in. When you’re playing a great team like Florida and those guys step up and make the plays, there’s not a lot you can do. They made some incredible plays on us.”
Green finished 3-for-3 from 3-point range and Humphrey was his usual killer self, going 4-for-7 and scoring 14 points. Florida’s versatility showed most in the first half when those two and Brewer (13 points) hit back-to-back-to-back 3s to push Florida’s lead to double digits.
Horford had a monster game, bodying up with the 7-foot Oden on defense and more than holding his own on the other end. Those runners Matta was talking about — a bunch came from Horford, who spotted up and made three 15-plus-foot jumpers and twisted and turned for a few more hoops.
Clearly, another year in college has helped this 6-10 junior, who now looks every bit like a lottery pick.
Noah, on the other hand, probably sacrificed the most. He might have been the top pick had he left last season, but the presence of Oden and Kevin Durant, to say nothing of Noah’s dwindling stats, have pushed him down.
He finished with eight points and three rebounds in this one, but big individual numbers were never the point with the Gators this year.
They came back for the championship and anything less would have felt hollow.
But there will be no regrets. Instead, how about a nice little debate about the best programs of all time?
“It’s in the book,” Noah said. “It’s not going anywhere.”
Repeats will almost certainly go down as a rarity in this age of one-year-and-done college players, and nobody in the last 15 years — even before the NBA money started skyrocketing — could do it anyway.
“Kids don’t stay long when they have a high level of success,” Donovan said. “To keep a program together these days, it’s very, very hard. Twenty years ago, all the kids would be coming back and the whole thing would start, `now can you three-peat?”‘
There were, indeed, a few fans yelling: “One more year. One more year. One more year,” as the trophy presentation began.
Nothing wrong with dreaming, right?
In a way, though, the Gators have already lived out their dream.
http://sports.yahoo.com/ncaab/news?slug=ap-ncaachampionship&prov=ap&type=lgns
Spring Break
I am now in spring break! Feel free to Yahoo! Messenger me. I am always free to talk! Yahoo! Messenger name: bebka_brusilovsky




