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Canon Selects Corel Software Suite for its Consumer HG10 and HR10 AVCHD Camcorders Canon HG10 and HR10 AVCHD Camcorders Bundled with the Corel Software Suite Enable Fast and Easy HD Video Editing, Viewing and Playback. By BusinessWire This article is no longer available,but here are some related topics. Page: 1 Related Sites: Media Workstation , Digital Video Editing , IBC News , BN - Broadcast Newsroom , Digital Post Production , DVD Creation , DV Format , HD Issues , Oceania , DMN Newswire , CEN - Consumer Electronics Net , CEN - Camcorders , CEN - AV Software , CEN - Photography , CEN - Desktops , CEN - Audio , CEN - Toys , CEN - DVD , CEN - Gadgets , CEN - Games , CEN - PDAs , CEN - HomeOffice , CEN - HomeTheatre , CEN - Movies , CEN - Music , CEN - Notebooks , CEN - Peripherals , CEN - Phones , CEN - TVs , CEN - WiFi , Storage , IBN - IT Business Net , IBN - Storage , CEN - iPod , IBN - Business , IBN - Enterprise Applications , IBN - Hardware , IBN - Networking , IBN - ProductivityApps , IBN - Security , IBN - SoftwareDev , CEN - Web , BN - HD , BN - Software Related Newsletter: Waveform Newsletter , Timeline Newsletter , KNews Newsletter , BN - HD Weekly , CEN - Gadgets Newsletter , Tutorial Finder , Review Seeker , IBN - IT Weekly Newsletter , BN - Broadcast Newswire To Comment on This Article, Click HERE Most Recent Reader Comments: Canon Selects Corel Software Suite for its Consumer HG10 and HR10 AVCHD Camcorders by DMN Editorial at Jan.
Williams ahead of his time
The Times-Herald will feature an inductee each day leading up to the March 8 Vallejo Sports Hall of Fame banquet. D.L. Hurd could talk about Richie Williams for a week. Williams, the 5-foot-9, 133-pound blur, was ambidextrous, the guy nobody wanted to play a game of H-O-R-S-E with, stepped up his game against the best competition, was the consummate teammate and, best of all, a great person. These are just a few things Hurd lists about the very close friend he still speaks with on a once-a-week basis. Williams - a Vallejo High and Vallejo Junior College star in the 1950s, and later a basketball player at Gonzaga and San Francisco State - is slated for induction with the fifth class of the Vallejo Sports Hall of Fame on March 8. "I just can't say enough about him," said Hurd, a former football player with the Baltimore Colts and a VSHOF member.
Ellen Page's Sexuality! Jennifer Garner's Hairdo!
Tilda promises her award to her agent, but I bet he'll only take 10 percent of it. No Country for Old Men wins Best Adapted Screenplay despite the lengthy stretches with no dialogue whatsoever. What I have to say about that is . . . (silence; the wind blows a tumbleweed into the dead man's face; a coyote yelps in the distance). 9:54 p.m.: The legendary inflatable doll known as Miley Cyrus announces another lousy nominated song. Who could forget Miley's immortal Grammy moment when she professed love for dad, her brother, and Jesus Christ? The son of our Lord will be so thrilled to know he's on a par with the guy who did "Achy Breaky Heart"! 10:15 p.m.: Best Actress already? Did someone shuffle the cue cards? Cate Blanchett must be the first person to be nominated for a movie that got a 34 percent rating on rottentomatoes.com.
Gadgets PS3 Outsells Xbox 360, Bested Only by Wii in January Sales
PlayStation 3 beats all but the Wii during January hardware sales Holiday sales figures for gaming console hardware were predictable. Nintendo Wii was at the top, Xbox 360 somewhere in the middle and the PlayStation 3 near the bottom. But 2008 is a new year and so far looks nothing at all like 2007 – except, of course, the Wii is still number one. Nintendo's console sold the most in North America with 274,000 units, likely still selling out whatever is shipped to retailers. Believe it or not, second place belongs to the PlayStation 3, selling 269,000, just 5,000 fewer units than the Wii. The PS2 wasn't far behind either, with 264,000. The handheld systems occupied places fourth and fifth, with the Nintendo DS moving 251,000 and the PSP doing 230,000. Surprisingly, the Xbox 360 tied for last place with 230,000 units for the month.
McCain's Smoking Blonde
I don't hate Apple. I don't even hate Apple-lovers. I do, however, possess deep odium for the legions of Apple polishers in the press corps who salute every shiny gadget the company parades through downtown Cupertino as if they were members of the Supreme Soviet viewing the latest ICBMs at the May Day parade. The Apple polishers buffed and shined this morning in response to yesterday's Steve Jobs-led introduction of the new video iPod. The headlines captured their usual adoration for the computer company: "Apple Scores One Against Microsoft In Video Battle" (Seattle Post-Intelligencer); "Video iPod Premieres in Apple's Latest Showcase of Dazzling New Gadgets" (San Francisco Chronicle); "iPod Evolves from Sound to Sight") (Detroit Free Press); "The Video iPod: It Rocks" (Fortune); "Apple Seeds New Markets With Video Version of iPod" (Globe and Mail).
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