Gadget Links: Still No New MacBook Pro Edition

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  • Apple introduces Aperture 2.0 on MacNN: “Apple on Tuesday released Aperture 2.0, a major revision of the company’s professional photo editing and management application. The upgrade brings in a new, sleeker user interface that allows users to flip between Browser and Viewer modes with a single key press and a heads-up display that makes the most of the screen area while still allowing quick access to editing or navigation controls.” This was the only change that Apple made at the Apple On-line Store today.
  • 8 Tips For Using Running As a Productivity Booster on LifeDev: “There is a certain type of activity that is my absolute favorite for clearing the mind for some really productive thinking. It has the ultimate blend of physical activity, low mental resource usage, and a change of atmosphere. A perfect storm for some good ‘ol fashioned subconscious problem solving. Nothing adds a shot of productive thinking to the day like a spirited run.”
  • Make iMovie ’08 find movies on other drives on MacOS X Hints: Using a symbolic directory link allows iMovie ’08 to utilize movie content from secondary or external drives.
  • {Leopard Update} 10.5.2 makes your {World of Warcraft} go faster on TUAW: “After hearing that the patch made reader Jason’s Mac play faster, WoW Insider’s Adam Holisky saw his FPS jump from 30 to 50 on his first-gen Intel iMac (he also has 2gb of RAM, and installed the graphics update with 10.5.2).”
  • 30 Benefits of Ebooks from Epublishers Weekly: “Read an Ebook Week is a yearly event, and this year (2008) it runs from March 2 to March 8. To encourage the celebration of this little-known happening, here is our list of 30 Benefits of Ebooks. We love pbooks (paper books), and hope that they are never replaced by their electronic grandchildren. Yet ebooks are a worthy companion to their paper elders.” [ via Lifehacker ]
  • Run Your Personal Wikipedia from a USB Stick on Lifehacker: “You don’t have to lease server space or keep your home computer always on to access a personal web server—you can run a web, FTP, and database server straight from a USB drive. A slim web server package called XAMPP fits on a USB stick and can run database-driven webapps like the software that powers Wikipedia, MediaWiki. Almost two years ago you learned how to set up your “personal Wikipedia” on your home web server to capture ideas and track document revisions in a central knowledge repository. Today we’ll set up MediaWiki on your flash drive for access on any Windows PC on the go.” It’s incredible that you can run MediaWiki on a thumb drive now.

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