Bitcoin currency rules – 03 – Video
05-05-2012 08:59 This video is a short animated introduction to Bitcoin. How to use Bitcoin for merchants and donations from the Bitcoin community.
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Bitcoin currency rules - 03 - Video
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05-05-2012 08:59 This video is a short animated introduction to Bitcoin. How to use Bitcoin for merchants and donations from the Bitcoin community.
See the original post:
Bitcoin currency rules - 03 - Video
05-05-2012 09:00 This video is a short animated introduction to Bitcoin. How to use Bitcoin for merchants and donations from the Bitcoin community.
05-05-2012 09:03 This video is a short animated introduction to Bitcoin. How to use Bitcoin for merchants and donations from the Bitcoin community.
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Bitcoin rule enforcement part 1 - 05 - Video
Kenwood KDC-U5049DAB, $499.
We compare two after-market digital car radios.
The digital-radio revolution has reached our cars, offering crystal-clear sound and extra channels while we're behind the wheel.
If you have already spent good money upgrading to a decent car stereo with plenty of bells and whistles, you might prefer a separate digital tuner such as the Pure Highway 300Di. It clips to your dashboard and uses an FM transmitter, so you simply tune your car radio into the signal. Pure still recommends professional installation, as it relies on a separate digital aerial.
If you're ready to ditch your old stock-standard car stereo, it might be easier to just rip it out and drop in a new digital-friendly stereo such as the Kenwood KDC-U5049DAB AM/FM/digital car radio. Again, you'll probably want to pay extra for professional installation.
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Pure Highway 300Di, $499.
The Kenwood includes a CD player that also plays MP3 and WMA music files, which is handy if your existing player won't handle them. You can also buy a Bluetooth adaptor for streaming music wirelessly from your phone to the Kenwood.
Otherwise, there's little to separate the Pure and Kenwood - both offer all the new digital channels, plus USB and iPod support, along with an auxiliary 3.5-millimetre input for other devices. The Pure's extra trick is that it lets you pause and rewind live broadcasts.
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Toss up: digital car radios
Ahead of France voters inside the consulate. Photo: AFP
FRENCH people living in Australia voted yesterday in the second round of presidential elections. Those living in Canada, the United States and South America went to the polls on Saturday, casting their ballots a day ahead of their compatriots in France.
In Australia, where close to 15,000 people are eligible to vote, electors began arriving shortly before polls opened at 8am at Sydney's French consulate, one of eight polling centres in the country.
''I'm proud to do that,'' Marcelle Vettier, a resident of Australia for almost four decades, said in English after casting her vote. ''As a French citizen, I take that from the bottom of my heart - as well as being faithful to the country where I am.''
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Others said it was important to cast their vote in the French elections, given the global impact of the economic crisis in Europe.
''What I believe is that this election is very important because of the global crisis and now what has become the European crisis,'' said Christiane Frisch, speaking in English. ''The French position and French policies will have an impact, not just in Europe but in the whole world, including in Australia.''
Agence France-Presse
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First to vote: French expats rally for the Republic