Welcome to Episode 14 of the Mac Roundtable
This week Adam, Tim, Joseph and Steve discuss The Apple/Creative settlement, Apple’s battery recall, future of Mac OS X and features we would like to see in Leopard, waiting for Leopards release before purchasing a new Mac, and how many iPods we own.
Joseph Nilo from the MacPro Podcast pulls a Houdini on this episode. First he’s there, then he’s not, then he’s there again. Tim Verpoorten from MacReviewcast rants. Steve Stanger from the The Mac Attack rambles on. And Adam Christianson from the MacCast does a great job handling both hosting and editing duties this week.
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Battery Recall
My friend has a G4 iBook and his serial number matched those on Apple’s site. But when he entered him numbers it didn’t take. When he called Apple, they said only those batteries that are made in Japan are affect. His was made in China and those are apparently not affected by this recall. If they’d only state this on the website it would clear things up for people!
Comment by Brian Leslie — September 3, 2006 @ 7:19 pm
One of the things I would like to see in Leopard is to give spotlight the ability to search within iPhoto for titles. Right now only images outside of iPhoto are searched.
Comment by Bill Dahm — September 7, 2006 @ 4:30 am
Just to clear things up, I recall reading regarding the Apple/Creative lawsuit that if Creative sues other companies for using the interface and wins, Apple will get a portion of their 100 million back. I don’t think it’s a co-licensing agreement.
Comment by Keith — September 7, 2006 @ 11:38 pm
Web Hosting Providers Directory…
Sorry, it just sounds like a crazy idea for me :)…
Trackback by Web Hosting Providers Directory — August 7, 2007 @ 7:43 am
Web Hosting Reviews, Web Site Hosting…
I couldn’t understand some parts of this article, but it sounds interesting…
Trackback by Web Hosting Reviews, Web Site Hosting — October 20, 2007 @ 10:29 am
Just to clear things up, I recall reading regarding the Apple/Creative lawsuit that if Creative sues other companies for using the interface and wins, Apple will get a portion of their 100 million back. I don?t think it?s a co-licensing agreement.
Comment by gaia gold — June 2, 2009 @ 10:26 pm