* He's right of course, and most of us realise it. The worst culprit seems to be inkjet printers. They have a typical lifespan of a year or two. They are dirt cheap (often under £50), though a complete set of new ink catrtridges are typically 80% of the cost of an entire new printer. Therefore, at some stage, when your cartridges run out, you may end up thinking "say, I'll buy me a new printer, and get a new set of cartridges for free!", and then bin the old one (as it was probably on its last legs anyway).
Posted by nikn
blinkin' 'ell two posts at once… must be a late christmas present to us all.
I love the idea of the Leica - it looks gorgeous. It reminds me of the Telefunken TV sets - don't laugh - but in the olden days if you wanted to upgrade your TV, you just bought a new plugin module. I had 3 in the life of the tele…I don't think they ever made an LCD upgrade though ;-)
regarding the Mac Air… what do you do if you want to play a DVD or bung your favourite CD on i-tunes? I am sure they have a very clever method of doing this…. but what is it?
Posted by: Rohan at February 4, 2008 05:18 PMGorgeous camera, reminds me very much of my mom's 1960 Ricoh wide-angle that I used all during my photography courses for my BFA. The film advance lever is broken, I plan to get it fixed, even though I've not used actual film in a while. I am getting sort of disenchanted with the digital film revolution, I haven't had a photo with the depth and general gorgeousness, taken with either of our digital cameras, as I got with either the Ricoh or the Nikon FM2 which replaced it when the lever broke in 2000.
The MacBook Air looks like something Katie would snap in half in moments.
Posted by: Tazja at February 13, 2008 08:26 PM