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  • Member Since Dec 28th, 2005
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Recent Comments:

@accidental
Ooops, sorry didn't see your comment.
Awesome! Gimme, gimme!

@Nina et al:

Now, before the misconceptions about MIDI get out of hand I'd better tell you that MIDI in itself is NOT a way of producing sound. That is to say that "MIDI music sounds crap" is just incorrect. There IS NO "MIDI music".

MIDI is nothing but a protocol for sending DATA (not actual "music") such as note pitch, pitch bend, length of the note etc etc to your synth, computer or whatever is waiting to be fed information in the other end. So you could have a 300GB symphony orchestra sample library on your computer sounding like the real thing, your hardware Nordlead synth or a gameboy as a sound source for that matter.

I'm just saying that you shouldn't mistake MIDI for being some kind of sound source as it is not. There are for example a lot of dedicated MIDI controllers out there. They can look like a piano keyboard, drum set, well you name it, and produce no actual sound themselves. Instead they just send the "note data" to you preferred sound source.

Considering I'm stupid enough to two DS:s (phatty and a lite) I. WANT. THIS! :)
J:

Unless I'm missing the joke or some sarcasm in your post those in your first paragraph are all in already...?

Filesize of more than one selected file: press alt+rightclick (can be done even after the menu appears)

One folder above and seeing the path to current folder: right-click on finder toolbar and drag the "Path"-button to your toolbar. Click it!
OddManOut: You are totally right.

ENGADGET CREW:
There is *nothing* as good as a *dedicated* electronic dictionary. PDA:s are *crap* compared to these. The only thing I gather from your news post is that none of you have ever studied a language like japanese or chinese. When or if you ever do, you will soon realize that an electronic dictionary is second to none when it comes to looking up words, characters and sentence patterns. The problem might be to find and choose the right one which has relevant dictionaries of *good* quality but then again most of the electronic dictionaries are of good quality as long as they are $200-300.

PDA:s have a very limited library of dictionaries and most of them just plainly suck - due to limited contents and/or input problems. Believe me, I have tried - hard enough. Nothing beats keyboard typing for quick input even if a stylus input could be nice for kanji every now and then (there are some chinese-jap-eng ones that have this and it seems to be getting more popular just in the last few months). That said, though, it usually takes a couple of seconds if you know your "kanji-theory".

Don't post about things you know nothing about. Without my dictionary I'd have to pack jap-eng, eng-jap, kanji and classical japanese dictionaries for my studies. No joke, I and many other students in east-asian languages *need* those 3-4kg of books worth (not taking the volume into account) for our everyday studies. Sure there are positives with a regular paper dicitionary as well but when you are given a text you have never seen before on a subject you might not have even heard about it will be a test of your nerves and patience. Having a electronic dictionary is a pain reliever, to both your head and back. There is noone in my current class (japanese language fulltime studies, third year) who do not own an electronic dictionary. It's a necessity.

So please, keep posting about electronic dictionaries but stop slandering them every time. It's like me saying doctors are crap because I have never been ill (now *that* was a lie).

Now, about that mp3-player... I guess as long as it doesn't drain the batteries in one sitting... Batteries usually hold for more than a month in a plain electronic dictionary.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I'm heading to university next year, and I've purchased a MacBook. I'm also taking my four year old desktop, just in case I'm left with no computers when the MacBook is being repaired or whatnot. With only two USB ports on a MacBook, I want a Bluetooth mouse. Budget is about $100, and of course, it needs OS X support. Thanks for the help!"
 

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