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...first place and why I'll maintain my subscription despite the fact that it often makes me feel as though America were a high-tech hologram and I were a futuristic ghost. This feeling struck me acutely during a yawn-inducing 10-hour drive from Montana to Colorado via Wyoming. Except in feeble, quivering bursts, normal radio signals can't conquer that barrenness, but thanks to some wonderful gizmo in outer space, I was able to stay in touch with the most minute developments in the Michael Jackson trial and the Brad Pitt--Jennifer Aniston breakup. I couldn't have...
...have a digital camera, you can plug it into the Xbox 360 and pop the images up on your TV, which beats making everybody crowd around the computer monitor in your study. If you have sufficient techno-gumption, you can even connect the Xbox 360 to your PC wirelessly, via wi-fi, and access whatever music and pictures you have stored there...
Right now you can use Xbox Live to talk to people you're playing with via voice chat--think free long distance over the Internet. Soon you will also be able to send e-mail and instant messages. If you have a camera peripheral, you will be able to send short video messages and even videoconference. And here's an important point: with Xbox 360, you don't even have to be playing a game. You will be able to chat with other people over Xbox Live when you're just plain watching TV. The words appear over the show...
...make iPods even more versatile. For iPodiacs, there's nothing like cruising on the open road to a customized list of tunes. But driving with headphones is illegal, so Griffin has designed a smart solution. Just slip the SmartDeck adapter ($29.95) into any cassette player and operate your iPod via the stereo controls. If your battery becomes drained after days of driving, plug your iPod into TuneJuice ($19.99), which converts an ordinary 9-volt battery into poddable energy, to get eight extra hours of playtime. Your TV, DVD and stereo all come with remotes, so why not your iPod? Picture...
...make iPods even more versatile. For iPodiacs, there's nothing like cruising on the open road to a customized list of tunes. But driving with headphones is illegal, so Griffin has designed a smart solution. Just slip the SmartDeck adapter ($29.95) into any cassette player and operate your iPod via the stereo controls. If your battery becomes drained after days of driving, plug your iPod into TuneJuice ($19.99), which converts an ordinary 9-volt battery into poddable energy, to get eight extra hours of playtime. Your TV, DVD and stereo all come with remotes, so why not your iPod? Picture...