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You can pick up a Wintec WBT-200 that works with Google Earth for less than $100. Bluetooth and USB. Data downloads fine with gpsbabel on Linux and OSX.
Squeezebox/Slimserver on the Mac for audio. Tivo Series 2/TivoDesktop on the Mac for video.
Congressional Cemetery. Lots of old gravestones to shoot and it doubles as a dog park so there are other things to shoot as well.
Life on Mars, BBCA.
Unfortunately while it looks great, Delicious Library is the most unusable application I have ever encountered on any platform. The UI is painfully slow and it takes ages to start or even to quit the application (this on a G5 with 1.5GB of RAM) with our library of ~3000 books/cds/movies. Exporting your data to HTML requires a third party application (which usually try to mimic the UI of the application) or heavy scripting.

I decided to chalk it up to experience and invest in the various Pedias instead (http://www.bruji.com/index.html). They also support iSight scanning and are lightning fast. They also have many HTML export options and support developing your own export templates.
Just remember to be careful when using it. The method they use for finding related files is pretty primitive so when I wanted to remove Q (the Qemu front end) it suggested all of my Quicktime and Quicksilver components were related. Luckily you can remove results before executing the Zap command.
You think that's a bargain, my wife and I picked up a 20" iMac G5 with iSight at the local Apple Store for $1199. Open box, but never used.
I'd love some hot Treo 650 on Mac action.
Well, the thread at DCFoodies is closed, but I came across this informative page of rules about what you can and cannot photograph.

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/columnist/andrewkantor/2005-12-29-camera-laws_x.htm

It seems pretty cut and dried that anyone can photograph their food at any time. I would even wager to say that even if a restaurant has a policy forbidding photographing their food you seem to be legally allowed to do so - you might risk getting thrown out of the restaurant so chow down fast, but legal repercussions are unlikely.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I'm in the market for a new laptop, and I want a 13-incher. I need something with a great keyboard for typing, as this will mostly be used for note taking in class. I am absolutely smitten with the XPS 13, but I'm afraid that with its age Dell is going to give it an update soon. Any advice for someone in my shoes?"
 

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