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I like the camera in the iPhone because of the touch controls and geo tagging. Plus, you can directly upload your photos and videos on-the-fly. But an iPod Nano would have neither of those features, so the only thing left would be a camera with mobile phone quality. Doesn't sound like a killer feature to me. Let's just wait and see; concerning the iPods, I have never been disappointed by Apple.
Copy & Paste itself may not be new, but I am not sure if other smartphones can c&p not only text, but formatted text, graphics and maps as well. I know my Symbian smartphone couldn't, that's for sure.
@John: And 16:10 is...? Exactly. ;)
Aint that an Omaura case? I thought they ceased business?
Why is Apple blurring the line between consumer and pro notebooks with the 13-inch? Why is it any less pro than the larger MBPs?

Because of the integrated graphics processor? The IGP is very powerful for its kind and will be OpenCL-compatible just like the dedicated GPUs. So it should suit any professional needs except for gaming. Or is the MBP13 less pro because it has fewer connections? Then the Powerbook 12" wasnt really a pro notebook either, because it had fewer connections, too, and even had a VGA output instead of DVI for a long time. The GPU was no more powerful at its time than the 9400M is today, because Apple used cheap entry level GPUs in its 12" model.

The MacBook Pro 13" has a high-quality display (that alone would justify the renaming), a good GPU, fast hardware and a digital video output capable of driving 30" LCDs. And its got Firewire 800. It is as much a pro notebook as the larger MBPs are and as the Powerbook 12" was.
That’s a TN panel; Eizo monitors with PVA usually cost twice as much.
The games sell for the same prices as the DVD versions (minus the usual steep drop in street prices) and you have to buy the needed disk space by yourself for ridiculously high prices from Microsoft. Even if you could use standard HDDs this would be tough to justify. Considering Microsoft’s HDD prices, it almost seems insulting!

I like downloads, but in order for this to work, the downloads would have to be constantly lower than the DVD versions and you should be able to use standard HDDs!
What about PGR, ain’t that a second racing franchise for Microsoft?
I have a DisplayLink USB adapter and it works really great – except for one thing: it doesn’t support the native resolution of my Cintiq 12WX (1280×800)! I am currently running it at 1280×720 which obviously gets stretched. Does anyone know how I can get it to support the native resolution? Technically this shouldn’t be a problem. I have already tried SwitchResX to manually add that resolution, but it doesn’t get through to the DisplayLink driver. I have Leopard.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I've found myself using my PC for a lot of conversations lately, and I'm also considering recording a podcast to share with anyone who will listen. There are tons of USB headset / microphones out there, and I'm hoping someone has some solid recommendations based on experience. I'll consider both headsets and standalone mics, by the way, but I'd like to keep the bill under $100 if possible. Help!"
 

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