Monday, May 31, 2010

Battery Charger


I always love to use my digital camera. I love to take pictures of nature, people, houses, automobiles, animals and just about anything. That is why, when I have my daily pictorials, I make sure that my batteries are full so that I will not end up neglecting and missing the entire shot before the batteries inactivate.

With the help of this battery charger, I am able to love what I do in a most happy way. I am able to take more pictures and capture that once-in-a-glimpse moment of extraordinary feature of things and people. And this battery charger makes my picture capture perfectly because it transmit much energy that keeps my work going well and fine.

I know that I am not missing out what is going on in life because this battery charger makes my work in a real capture. I am glad it works!

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Sudoku

Sudoku is fun. We pull out a morning paper or a sudoku book and play a game sometimes. However, sudoku with glitzy, distracting backgrounds and no way to take notes make the sudoku experience less appealing. Still, if you are a sudoku genius and are itching to play your morning pastime on your PS3, Go! Sudoku and it’s smattering of add-on packs offers hundreds of sudoku games for you to indulge in. For everyone else, Go! Sudoku might only succeed in making your brain hurt.

Friday, May 28, 2010

Carb and EFI Complete Fuel System Kits

You can only bolt so many speed parts onto an engine before the fuel system becomes inadequate. Rather than piece parts together here and there because a certain product company has put together packages for carb and EFI systems that included everything you need to build a complete fuel system. Systems include an Edelcrock electric fuel pump, a matching fuel pressure regulator, a Profilter fuel filter, a fuel pump relay and wiring assembly, 20 feet of ProClassic or ProFlex hose, plus an assortment of hose ends, adapters and mounting brackets. And if red and blue aren’t your style, black and silver fittings are optional.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Manic compression: preserving audio quality

In order to store a sound on a computer, sound waves must be convereted to a digital format. The computer does this by ‘sampling’ each wave many times per second. The more samples that it takes every second, themore accurate the representation of the wave and the better the audio quality. CD-quality audio is sampled 44,100 times every second, and each sample is 16 bits in size.

By default, PCs store the date from a recorded sound wave as a Wav file unless compression is used. Wav files preserve the quality of the original audo but are generally latge, which is why the idea of compressing them to make them smaller is attractive, particularly to those who have portable music players with less storage space.

If you consider that a 70-minute CD album usually uses up an entire 700MB disc, you can work out that a Wav file containing one minute of audio wil use up 10MB of hard disk space.

If you want to archive your CD collection, condiser buying a large hard disk and storing the copies in the uncompressed Wav format to preserve the audio quality. You can then convert the tracks you want into MP3 format for use on your MP3 player. When a significantly better format comes along, you then convert your high-quality Wav files into that format directly rather than reconverting lower-quality MP3s, which would result in a loss of quality.