Outdoor Life Writers

Ferr daa teens:dis or dat survey yoo!?
Chicken or Turkey
BBQ or Ketchup
Baked chips or Regular
Hi-C or Capri-Sun
Packing or Buying
Internet or Cable
Myspace or Facebook
like saying Teens or Adolescents
Target or Wal-mart
Burger king or McDonald’s
Subway or Quiznos
CVS or Wal-greens
California or Florida
Public schools or Private Schools
Apartments or Condos
Writer or News Anchor
CNN or FOX
Anderson Cooper or Brian Williams
Jackie Chan or Chuck Norris
ABC or CBS
The secret life or Make it or break it
Indoor pool or outdoor pool
Regular straws or Bendy straws
Beaches or Oceans
Swimming or Surfing
Cute guys or Hot guys
Birth or Death
Regular cable or Cable box
X-box or WII
Lip Gloss or Chapstick
Barack Obama or John McCain
Jeopardy or Millionaire
USA or UK
Somalia or Ethiopia
BQ: Have you ever had a stardoll?
Thanks!
:]
Chicken or Turkey : Chicken
BBQ or Ketchup : BBQ
Baked chips or Regular : Regular
Hi-C or Capri-Sun : Capri-Sun
Packing or Buying : Buying
Internet or Cable : Internet
Myspace or Facebook : Facebook
like saying Teens or Adolescents :Teens
Target or Wal-mart : Wal-Mart
Burger king or McDonald’s : Burger King
Subway or Quiznos : Subway
CVS or Wal-greens : Wal-greens
California or Florida : Florida
Public schools or Private Schools : Public
Apartments or Condos : Condo
Writer or News Anchor News Anchor
CNN or FOX : CNN
Anderson Cooper or Brian Williams : Idk
Jackie Chan or Chuck Norris : Jackie Chan
ABC or CBS : ABC
The secret life or Make it or break it : Secret Life
Indoor pool or outdoor pool : Outdoor
Regular straws or Bendy straws : Bendy.
Beaches or Oceans : Oceans
Swimming or Surfing : Swimming
Cute guys or Hot guys : Cute
Birth or Death : Birth
Regular cable or Cable box : Cable Box
X-box or WII
Lip Gloss or Chapstick : Chapstick
Barack Obama or John McCain : Idk
Jeopardy or Millionaire : Millionaire
USA or UK: Usa?
Somalia or Ethiopia : Idk
BQ: Have you ever had a stardoll? Nu.
Nucleus – Help Me Find Some Peace
Categories: Outdoor Life Tags: blog, design, news, outdoor life writers, outdoor life writers guidelines, photography, travel
Outdoor Life Optics Reviews
Apple 13-inch MacBook Pro Review
The new 13-inch Apple MacBook Pro brings a lot of new features to the table from the previous generation. Users now get a large battery that gives pretty amazing life, a better display, faster processor, FireWire, SD-card slot, and best of all a lower starting price. Getting more for less seems to be the trend during this slow economy, so is there any reason not to buy the new 13″ MacBook Pro? Read our full review to find out.
Build and Design
The 13.3″ MacBook Pro is very sleek and classy, which is what we have come to expect from Apple. The design is sharp with the unibody chassis showing no panel lines or breaks except on the bottom for the huge panel that covers the internals. Apple gives us a very simple interface with little clutter (and ports) turning what is usually a mindless appliance into a work of art. To further simplify the design they switched to an internal battery for this model, instead of having a cover and release bar like in the previous revision.
Build quality is excellent thanks to the very strong and rigid unibody chassis that is machined out a solid block of aluminum. Unless you were going to clamp the MacBook Pro in a vise and try to bend it, you can’t really find any flex anywhere on the main half of the notebook. The screen cover does flex slightly under strong pressure,but with something that thin it was expected. Without any plastic panels, except at the screen hinge, there are no parts to squeak or creak under normal use. Outside of a few rugged models I can’t think of a single notebook that has a stronger chassis than the unibody MacBooks.
Normally simple upgrades such as swapping in a faster hard drive or upgrading the system memory (or changing the battery) take a few additional steps on the new 13.3″ Macbook Pro. To access user-serviceable components you must buy a precision Phillips head screwdriver, and remove 10 screws around the perimeter of the notebook. With the cover off you get access to the battery, hard drive, optical drive, and tightly stacked system memory. Once you overcome the fear of ripping off the bottom of your new shiny MacBook Pro, upgrading the components isn’t that bad. The only problem that might come up is going against the recommended advice from Apple to not disconnect the main battery when swapping out components. Usually you want to unplug AC and the battery from notebooks before you change the RAM or hard drive to prevent damage.
Screen and Speakers
The screen on the MacBook Pro is average compared to other glossy panels, and has the downside of having the highly reflective glass layer over the LCD. This increases the amount of reflection from other objects, including you sitting right in front of the notebook. While you do adjust to it after a while, it can still be annoying. Pictures and movies look great thanks to the glossy surface and a healthy 60% bump in color gamut over the previous generation MacBook, which gives vibrant colors and deep blacks. Overall brightness is excellent for viewing in brightly lit rooms like in an office building or lecture hall. If you were able to find a spot of shade you could also use it outdoors as long as you find a strategic position away from any glare. Viewing angles are average for a TN-panel LCD, with colors starting to show signs of inversion when titled 20-25 degrees forward or back. Horizontal viewing angles are much better, with colors staying accurate at steep angles, right up until the point where reflections overpower screen.
The speakers sound weak compared to other notebooks, with little bass or midrange sound. The enclosed position of the speakers doesn’t help with stereo separation, so it ends up sounding like one mono speaker. For enjoying some iTunes music or watching a movie headphones are the best option. The MacBook Pro also supports digital audio out through the headphone jack, so hooking it up to a stereo for surround sound is another option you could go with.
Keyboard and Touchpad
The 13″ MacBook Pro offers a full-size Chiclet-style Keyboard that is fully backlit for typing where overhead light might not be the best. While Sony originally created this style of keyboard, I think Apple really perfected it and made the better version. The keyboard is comfortable to type on and easy to transition to if you are used to typing on a standard notebook Keyboard with tighter key spacing. Individual key action is smooth with less than average pressure required to activate each key. Key noise is low, with a smooth almost-muted click when pressed. If you enjoy stealth typing, look no further. The backlight is nice even when your room isn’t completely dark. If you are not used to an Apple keyboard, it makes it easier to spot keys since everything is lit up. The backlight is also fully adjustable, to be brighter when the room is brighter, and dimmer when you don’t need the keys blindingly-bright in a pitch black room.
One trade-off to the shape of the unibody MacBook Pro is the sharp edges around the perimeter. The palmrest on most notebooks have a slightly rounded or sloped edge for the front of the palmrest, whereas the MacBook Pro is a perfectly flat surface with a sharp edge. If you normally hang your wrists off the edge like I do, one thing you notice over time is the edge digging into your wrist. If you have small hands this might not be a big deal, but for someone like me it gets painful quick. This is just another example of form having a higher priority than function.
The touchpad is a large multi-touch surface with no separate touchpad buttons. The clicking action is through a clicker button under the touchpad, which allows the entire surface to “click”. If you are used to other touchpads, it takes a while to get used clicking the surface itself, instead of a button below it. In OS X the touchpad sensitivity is excellent, offering no lag on the default sensitivity settings. Contrast this with Windows, where the driver support doesn’t give you the same fluid experience. Movement is choppy and over-sensitive, where the cursor will sometimes release an object mid-drag or take many tries to double click. Another problem we ran into is the touchpad sometimes detected a slight increase in fingertip pressure as a double click, opening applications when moving over a list in the start menu. None of these problems happened within OS X.
Ports and Features
The new 13″ MacBook Pro offers two USB ports, one mini-DisplayPort, LAN, and the return of FireWire 800. While eSATA is generally the best when it comes to fast external storage, more Mac-targeted Storage devices offer FireWire from the long standing Apple support of the standard. The Macbook Pro also offers a headphone jack and a new SD-card slot, bringing it to the same level that most PC’s have been at for a number of years.
The most notable feature on the MacBook Pro is a handy battery gauge mounted on the side of the notebook. Pressing the button lights up a number of eight LED’s showing the current charge level of the battery. This is a handy feature if you are thinking about grabbing the computer before you head out the door without an AC adapter … just in case the battery is actually dead.
About the Author
SIMS 141 – Bradley Horowitz: Yahoo, Director of Technology
Categories: Outdoor Life Tags: blog, google, googlemaps, maps, mashup, outdoor life optics reviews
Outdoor Life Art

What is Yard Art?
Yard art, lawn decorations, embellishments…just what ARE garden accents and what purpose do they serve?
Garden accents or yard art can be ANY decoration or adornment used for the purpose of accenting your yard or garden area.
Embellishments can range from simple to elaborate. Garden accents can be as simple as a solitary bird bath alone in the yard to as elaborate as multiple tiered decking with flower boxes, trellises, and plant stands strategically placed for eye-appeal.
Yard art may be singularly visible as a simple gazing globe on a pedestal. Or it may be found as a hidden surprise in the garden that catches the eye upon closer viewing. Maybe a whimsical faerie garden statue set upon an old tree stump within a small clump of trees and placed so as to be slightly hidden from view yet easily seen from different areas within your garden.
Garden accents can be replaced or alternated to provide variety or change in a yard or garden area. Smaller pieces of yard art or garden statuary can be moved around easily. A newly painted old wooden wheelbarrow of pansies could be moved around and placed anywhere in your yard.
Yard art can be store bought or homemade. Store bought accents may range from an inexpensive item picked up at a dollar store to an expensive specially customized piece of signature art. Homemade yard adornments can be anything from an unused colored bowling ball sitting atop a plant stand to an elaborately built garden trellis or deck seat and pergola complex.
What are garden accents or yard art used for? Garden accents mainly serve as a fun and creative way to personalize your lawn or garden area.
Sure, you can use the same planting design as shown in any book or mow your grass in the same pattern as a neighbor does. But, would you go so far as to also set out the exact same embellishments in your garden that were in that book (if there were any) or would you set out the same lawn adornment that your neighbor did?
Probably not.
You have personal preferences that show up everywhere else in your life so it only makes sense for your lawn or garden areas to exhibit your personal touch also.
Just what are garden accents, yard art, or lawn decorations? They are that special touch that add your personal signature to your lawn or garden areas that only YOU can provide.
Get more ideas at MetalYardDesigns.com
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About the Author
The Art of Outdoor Survival : Triangle of Life
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October 1929 OUTDOOR LIFE Magazine Hunting Fishing Guns Nature Art Great PHOTOS $3.99 |
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1926 OUTDOOR LIFE FISHING + HUNTING CAMP SPORTING LAKESIDE TENT POSTER ART $21.95 |
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Outdoor Life August 1955 Cover Art–J. E. Mason $11.95 |