Thursday, June 28, 2007

Mac Poker & iPhone Poker

If you're interested in playing poker on Mac check out: http://www.mac-poker.net

A new poll on iPhone demand takes a more optimistic appraisal than. According to a Harris Interactive poll of more than 10,400 people between the ages of 13 and 64, 15 percent are at least somewhat likely to buy an iPhone, within which one percent Mac Poker is absolutely certain they will be buying. However, while four percent of the "somewhat likely" group wants to buy as soon as they can, 55 percent is willing to wait for a price cut, and an overlapping 49 percent wants to know how good the product is in practice.
Breaking results into Poker for Mac demographics, 17 percent of males say they are somewhat likely to buy an iPhone, whereas only 13 percent of females echo the same view. The group hoping to buy becomes 20 percent in rich households (over $200,000 in income), and even larger when solely considering teenagers: among those poker on a Mac aged 13 to 17, 27 percent of males want the product, as well as 20 percent of females.Of the 85 percent of total respondents who said they did not plan to buy an iPhone, 49 percent said it was too expensive. Another 42 percent said they had no need or desire for another device, and 40 percent answered that the extra features of the free Mac Poker iPhone were unnecessary to them.Since the poll was conducted between May 8th and 23rd, Harris Interactive notes that the desire to buy may have changed considerably in one direction or another as the June 29th launch approached.

Today’s Gem is a simple one, but a poker for Mac respresentative as a product that satisfies a complaint-slash-request I’ve heard from a surprising number of readers. That sentiment can be summarized as, “I like Safari a lot, but its source view doesn’t provide syntax coloring Mac Texas Holdem like [Firefox/Camino/etc.].” In other words, when you view the source of a Web page in Safari (using View: View Source), you get a page of plain text that’s difficult to read.
In fact, for those who need to look at the HTML source Macintosh poker of Web pages often—for example, anyone who does Web development—Safari’s stock source-viewing functionality, which just sticks raw text in a window, seems more like an afterthought than a legitimate feature.

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