
Largest Football (Soccer)
Largest Volunteer Ambulance Organization

Windows Vista Service Pack 2 went final earlier this week, with numerous fixes and tweaks to improve performance, bolster security, and squash bugs. But some PC World readers are seeing another welcome change to SP2: a lot more free disk space.

Key Features Of Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T70
*8.1-megapixels Sensor
* 3x Optical Zoom, 5.1x HD Smart (16:9), 6x Precision Digital, 15x Smart (VGA)
* New Face Detection Technology With Smile Shutter * Super Steady Shot
* Carl Zeiss Vario-Tessar Lens
* 3.0-inch Clear Photo LCD Plus
* Stamina (CIPA): Up to approx. 270 shots / approx. 135 min.





Windows 7 pricing is potentially an obstacle to Windows 7 adoption for some users, though in just about every other aspect the operating system is beating Vista, according to a Dell marketing executive.
Chrysler plans to officially announce on Thursday that with their 2009 lineup of cars, they plan to offer an optional 3G wireless internet service. This will make Chrysler the first automaker to offer such a service, and it is there hope that this service will assist them in reversing the tide of poor results over the last few quarters. The benefits of such a service is certainly great, technology can really assist in daily life. Stuck in rush hour, check your email, google directions to where your going out for dinner tonight, watch some youtube videos.








Pakistan: Khewra Salt Mine: Second Largest Salt Mine in the World
Pakistan: Tharparker
Sony announced three new digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) cameras aimed at consumers interested in transitioning from point-and-shoot cameras.
Priced at $550, the Alpha DSLR-A230 replaces the A200 as Sony's entry-level DSLR. The $650 Alpha DLSR-A330 replaces the A300. Both the A230 and the A330 feature a 10.1-megapixel resolution.
On the higher end of the spectrum, the Alpha DSLR-A380 replaces the A350. Priced at $850, the A380 has a 14.2-megapixel resolution.
All three cameras have APS-C size CCD sensors, Bionz image processors, lens mounts for Sony, Minolta, and Konica Minolta autofocus lenses, a built-in pop-up flash, a hot shoe, image stabilization built into the body, and a 2.7-inch LCD (the A330 and the A380 each have pull-out LCDs, while the A230 does not).
In a first for Sony, the new cameras also offer two memory card slots--both the proprietary Sony Memory Stick format and the more widespread SD/SDHC format.
The cameras feature a new software interface that aims to make it easier for inexperienced SLR users to understand and adjust camera settings. For example, the aperture and shutter speed settings each use a horizontal scale with iconic representations of the effect that a setting will have on a picture. Moving toward, say, the running-man icon on the shutter speed scale increases the shutter speed and lets the user know that the camera is being set to photograph action shots.
Each camera comes with an 18mm-to-55mm lens; the cameras are not available as body only. Sony also offers each camera in a two-lens kit, which includes the 18mm-to-55mm lens and a 55mm-to-200mm telephoto lens. Prices for the two-lens kit are $750 (A230), $850 (A330), and $1050 (A380).
The cameras have HDMI video-out for previewing images on an HDTV. However, running counter to a trend we've seen among new SLRs, the three new Sony cameras do not have the capability to record video.