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I actually thought it was kinda boring because my expectations were spoiled by Top Gear's productions.

I also have issue with this post's title: "Chronicling Development"? Seriously? I saw some grass. Then an Aston-looking car driving on a track. Yes, like every other car in the world, it drives around corners; and in the rain, slightly. Then in a garage. Oh, it has four doors. Nurburgring… wow, look at all that durability. Oh, they went to Stelvio Pass, yeah Top Gear did that already, and they brought three cars. What does any of that have to do with this car and its "development"?

The photography wasn't terrible, but there was absolutely no point to the piece. I could barely hear the car under the lame soundtrack. Some titles or narration or interviews would help me understand why it's important or why i should care. Because after watching that, i don't.
You shouldn't be able to run while walking.
Agreed. Just found DestroyTwitter last night. Best UI i've seen in power desktop clients, but still lacking groups.

Really suprised that TweetDeck seems to be the only game in town with grouping.

Twitter.com is still the most usable for me for interacting (writing, replying).
It may be "designed for the roads" and street legal, but it's only good for the track. The driver can't get in/out or open/close the hatch without help.

Unless maybe there's an ejection seat.
More example pics (T2 at the bottom):
http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Makeup/4303/vertical35mm.html

I don't know if sitcoms shoot Super 35, but it's the gist of the frame cropping idea.
More example pics (T2 at the bottom):
http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Makeup/4303/vertical35mm.html

I don't know if sitcoms shoot Super 35, but it's the gist of the frame cropping idea.
Think of it this way. The "original" show we've been watching for years was "cropped" to 4x3, even though there was still more on the film frame that was never seen. Now you're just seeing a slightly different area from the source film. A recomposition - as Rusty B said.

The only picture i could find to explain is this Super 35 diagram:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_35
Note the red and green frame outlines.
Yeah, i was gonna say, he probably owns, or could buy the traffic police.
Are they going to fit every pedestrian and cyclist as well? They use the same traffic signs and signals as motor vehicles.

I'd rather see "smart" signals that can look down the road, and better estimate when to stop or allow traffic.
All HD so far.
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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