Esko Woudenberg, senior programmer/analyst in Apple Valley, Calif., talks about why he can't live without the Roku Netflix player.
more >Sean Tamura-Sato, of San Francisco, Calif., talks about why he can't live without the Internet.
more >Niranda Chantavy, a student in Honolulu, talks about why she can't live without her Wii.
more >Tracy Cox of San Francisco, talks about why he can't live without his Pandora.
more >Tom Andrade, California Highway Patrol officer in San Francisco, talks about why he can't live without Xfire.
more >Jennifer Presley of Cupertino, Calif., talks about why she loves her Kindle.
more >Bob Hoswell, Sydney, Australia, talks about why he can't live without his Dragon NaturallySpeaking voice-recognition software.
more >Michael Mauro, award-winning wildlife photographer in Arvada, Colo., talks about why he can't live without the Spot satellite messenger.
more >Vivek Jayanand, hardware engineer in Santa Clara, Calif., talks about why he can't live without Skype.
more >Michael Tuckman, systems architect in Jacksonville, Fla., talks about why he can't live without his Dash Internet-connected navigation device.
more >Chris Baldomero, recent college graduate in industrial engineering in San Jose, Calif., talks about why he can't live without Google Earth.
more >Ryan Marimon, testing infrastructure manager and VMHero blogger in Cleveland, talks about why he can't live without VMware Fusion.
more >Craig Wilkinson, solutions architect in London, talks about why he can't live without SkreemR.
more >Charles Lindsey, managing editor in San Jose, Calif., talks about why he can't live without Caltrain+, his commuter train schedule software.
more >
Ideal for the latest crop of flash memory-based camcorders, Kingston Technology has just announced the availability of its 32GB Elite Pro SDHC (Secure Digital High Capacity) flash memory card. This new 32GB card ($308 MSRP) offers the largest capacity in Kingston's lineup, capable of storing roughly eight hours of video (for 6Mbps HD long-play recording) or more than 6,000 still images
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