Awe! What a cute kid!
Wha- no!..... NO ! NOOOOOOO
@mysticfoxdesigns @gelu-the-babosa-multiversal
seen from Thailand
seen from China

seen from Malaysia

seen from Thailand
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Thailand
seen from Japan
seen from Mexico
seen from China

seen from Thailand

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Russia
seen from China

seen from Australia
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
Awe! What a cute kid!
Wha- no!..... NO ! NOOOOOOO
@mysticfoxdesigns @gelu-the-babosa-multiversal

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
- the iPhone already is, so the iPad 2 will be too. The iPad 2 has HDMI mirroring working for all apps. That means games too. It also means that you can play games on your HDTV in 1080p! Now that I call awesome! And the iPhone 4 can play games in 720p. Think about it, it means that iPhones and iPads gets gaming controls for the big screen. It's like playing Nintendo Wii with hand controls with a wire instead of wireless. You have the motion control built in to the iOS device. Games are so cheap on iOS so they sell a lot of them. You rather buy 10 games for the same price as one on the Nintendo Wii...

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Is the iPad a personal computer? - yes to me it is
Definitely. It can replace a "normal" computer for me. I can do everything I do on a computer on it. There is nothing that I can't do on my iPad. Via Apple Informatory: http://j.mp/iAPPLE
Amplify’d from www.mercurynews.com
Is the iPad a personal computer?
Palo Alto industry researcher Canalys this week insisted that it is -- and that it helped push global PC sales 19 percent higher and propelled Apple -- the Cupertino maker of Macs and "i" devices -- to No. 3 in market share in the holiday quarter.
"Pads gave the market momentum in 2010, just as netbooks did the year before," Canalys senior analyst Daryl Chiam wrote in an e-mail.
But are pads really PCs? Yes, as much as netbooks are, Chiam wrote: "With screen sizes of seven inches or above, ample processing power and a growing number of applications, pads offer a computing experience comparable to netbooks. They compete for the same customers and will happily coexist."
According to Canalys' analysis, Palo Alto tech titan Hewlett-Packard shipped 18.7 million PCs in the fourth quarter of 2010, up 2.9 percent from a year earlier. HP was No. 1 in market share at 17.7 percent, but that dropped from 20.5 percent in the fourth quarter of 2009.
Taiwanese computer maker Acer was No. 2, with 13.6 million PC shipments (up 8.8 percent); its market share dropped to 12.8 percent from 14 percent.
Combining iPads and Macs, Apple's holiday-quarter shipments skyrocketed 241 percent to 13.6 million, according to Canalys. Apple's market share jumped to 10.8 percent -- pulling ahead of Dell and Lenovo -- from 3.8 percent a year earlier.
"Each new product category typically causes a significant
shift in market shares," Chiam explained. "Apple is benefiting from pads, just as Acer, Samsung and Asus previously did with netbooks. The PC industry has always evolved this way, starting when Toshiba and Compaq rode high on the original notebook wave."
References
^ MercuryNews.com (MercuryNews.com)
^ SiliconValley.com (SiliconValley.com)
^ Twitter.com/mercspike (Twitter.com)
Read more at www.mercurynews.com
See this Amp at http://svrt.se/gjKbeC