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Part 3 - Lace Wig Application & Removal by "The Hair Coach"
Posted by: thehaircoach
Video duration: 461 seconds
Global video hits: 72369
Professional Lace Wig Application, Preparation and Removal. High quality Lace Wigs @ www.invisiblehairlin eunits.com
Contact "The Hair Coach" @ www.deshawnbullard.c om.
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Lace Wig Application (Part 1 of 2)
Posted by: XantusHairStudio
Video duration: 469 seconds
Global video hits: 60087
EASY How to Apply Lace Wig application instructions for Full Lace Wigs and Lace Front Wig Application by Licensed Cosmetologists Specializing in Front Lace Wigs Copyrighted for www.XantusLaceWigs.c om
Related: application, apply, attach, attachment, front, full, how, lace, wig, wigs, xantus
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AMD OverDrive - Performance Tuning Utility
Posted by: AMDUnprocessed
Video duration: 404 seconds
Global video hits: 152536
Watch this "how-to" video of world champion overclocker, Sami Maekinen using the AMD OverDrive utility. He walks through the steps of overclocking the upcoming Spider Platform, based on AMD Phenom quad-core processors, next-generation ATI Radeon graphics and the AMD 7-Series chipset.
Related: amd, ati, chipset, computer, diy, electronics, overclockng, overdrive, pc, phenom, radeon, tuning
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iPod Touch Application Reviews #9
Posted by: drummer4drb
Video duration: 309 seconds
Global video hits: 13537
This is another quick review/showcase of some of the Free and Paid applications I have downloaded via the AppStore for my iPod Touch.
Related: 16gb, 2g, app, application, applications, dots, free, ipod, live, new, poker, reviews, store, touch, zynga
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iPod Touch Application Reviews #11
Posted by: drummer4drb
Video duration: 579 seconds
Global video hits: 11438
This is another quick review/showcase of some of the Free and Paid applications I have downloaded via the AppStore for my iPod Touch.
Related: 11, apple, application, beat, beatbox, box, cube, free, ipod, reviews, touch
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Latest comments made on this video:
By: alqods1. on 23 Nov 08, 09:05:17
we need flash player,,flash player flash flash flash flash flashhhhhhhh playerrrrrrrrrrrr mannnnnnnnn
By: ericunderscores. on 16 Oct 08, 06:06:45
I'll update this comment for people still viewing this.. Oct 22nd. Tmobile G1 for $180.
By: neoberlin22. on 23 Sep 08, 23:24:47
because when you travel back in time you are able to change the future. therefore you need to create a new state when you click on a different adress (or even the same). only the opportunity to do something different makes it neccessary to kill the maps state. am i clear? sorry for my english, i am german :-)
By: wfox. on 27 Aug 08, 00:44:32
1. Android is a platform, not a cellphone. 2. Copy? do a research first and then talk about the platform man. No offence :).
By: danielpineros. on 17 Aug 08, 05:25:54
i think i prefer the iphone. No offence but is better, this is like a copy of it
By: wiicow. on 12 Jun 08, 21:10:39
I sure hope it dosn't cost that much. other wise it can take a backseat with the iphone as far as i'm conserned.
By: pbpenguin5. on 05 Jun 08, 00:34:05
ok thanks
By: morenoh149. on 04 Jun 08, 17:18:43
lol, I think he meant the hardware it'll run on. A phone with these capabilities may cost $400+. There are rumors that the first ones will be available early 2009.
By: Mastakilla91. on 03 Jun 08, 12:38:15
its open source -.-' ^^
By: pbpenguin5. on 30 May 08, 21:16:09
ok i do love this product right now, but does anyone know how much one of these will cost?
By: davidmaxwaterman. on 28 Dec 07, 07:29:59
ah, the 'extra credits' part of the NotepadCodeLab helps a lot. There's nothing like actual code and a debugger to explain things :)
By: davidmaxwaterman. on 28 Dec 07, 02:17:54
when the user's looking at the maps application and 'presses' back, why isn't there any state saved for the maps application? where does the maps application 'go'? what if the user had changed something that they would like to see again next time they launch maps? is this a different scenario and so the app needs to save its state in some other way?
By: davidmaxwaterman. on 27 Dec 07, 14:12:53
..no, I'm wrong. The mail 'activity' that's in the activity manager part of the system process is the 'mail list' activity, and it's created *before* the mail process itself. If it was from some previous instance of the mail process it would have some saved state on it, but it doesn't....weird. Either I'm very confused, or it's a 'typo' on the video (or both).
By: davidmaxwaterman. on 27 Dec 07, 14:06:24
Why does the activity manager in the system process have the mail icon at the start, when there's no mail process? Is it because the mail application has a service which has been killed - and will presumably be launched again when it is time to check mail? If that's the case, why doesn't it have any state saved in it? ...but then there's nothing in the 'mail process' when it's created (should have something to represent a server along side the activity, no?). It's confusing me. Any ideas?
By: samunai. on 04 Dec 07, 19:13:21
I know, these guys know lot about me and their information hunger is getting bigger and bigger. BUT I LOVE GOOGLE!!!11 The applications they are developing are very good documented, so everyone can learn their products fast => google gets more popular...
By: protozone. on 24 Nov 07, 01:30:14
This isn't something that users will ever see. This is a video for developers. It is not possible for there to be a "forward stack," and when we say "back," we are not talking about the same type of "back" that you see in web browsers.
By: CM3PTb. on 23 Nov 07, 07:38:12
Hi everyone! I think i got how it works... now i have a question - what if that saved state will contain some data, wich leads to an error in application? Then user will navigate to such an application again, even if process is restarted, and... bang! we got same error again and again. User will never be able to use that app, will he?
By: danthelewis. on 20 Nov 07, 03:27:40
The whole point of having Back is so that I and the other millions of users do indeed think of this as being like a web browser. It's so the users can pick up on the interface without thinking about how it's implemented. You don't import a user interface metaphor like Back and then make it leak by breaking Forward. This is asking for confusion. Is there a big reason not to have a forward stack to go with the back stack?
By: protozone. on 19 Nov 07, 10:10:39
You're thinking of this as being like a web browser, but that's a confusing way of thinking about this. What is being discussed is what happens in the background when one Android application loses focus and another gains it. It's basically a really long way of saying "when an Android application loses focus, its state gets saved, and when an Android application regains focus, its state gets restored." There's a few other details in there, but that's the main message in this video.
By: protozone. on 19 Nov 07, 10:04:43
Sounds like the Home application is a special case. There is probably a limit to how much memory it will ever need, and since every other application is considered "less important" than the Home application, it should never need to be killed.
By: danthelewis. on 17 Nov 07, 06:15:17
From this admittedly brief explanation, Mike explained how Back works but not Forward. You can probably do this by saving the last user interaction (the one that launches the next activity) with the rest of the state information, then restoring it when you go back to the application. Is this built in?
By: NightSun666. on 16 Nov 07, 02:30:54
Really good question, i explain to you using the example of PC-OS, like Windows. You always have a way to dump the state of memory, and so of your machine, for management and fixes, this means you ALWAYS have an image of ALL processes saved into the memory, for a "work saving" scope. This is the HOME state, i think.
By: shonzilla. on 15 Nov 07, 13:49:22
That's a good question. At 2:20 Mike explains activity states are stored "if something bad happens" which is either freeing up memory when there isn't enough of it or when application crashes. I guess that might happen with Home application as well, since it takes up memory as well and nobody's perfect. ;-)
By: giacomolg. on 14 Nov 07, 20:09:10
Why do you save the HOME state if the process is never going to be terminated ?
By: jeremyfoo. on 14 Nov 07, 05:17:11
Great use of keynote 08 :)