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Have a martini theme reception. Buy nice bottles, inexpensive vodka and jolly ranchers. pour the vodka into bottles and slip a couple same flavor candy into each bottle(sour apple-- youve got apple infused vodka. saw this on one of those wedding shows on tlc. you can buy plastic martini glasses at any party supply store
1. Does anyone have any tasty variations on the p-nut butter and jelly sandwich for my little ones?
P-nut butter and Honey and if you want slice a banana and stick it in there it is really good. If you want just get other dark colored Jelly's and tell them its Purple Jelly or something. also P-nut butter and apple, Grilled Pb&j are delish!! I love them, and they were elvis's fav. food!.
2. 64-bit Windows - Applications designed for 32-bit (x86), will they run?
Well you divided into numbered parts, so I will answer it that way (by the way, ignore the first answer, I actually use Vista 64, so I know what I am talking about.) 1) Yes they will all run (with a few exceptions detailed below), and if any do not , it is not for the 64 bit reason but for other reasons. Same performance. 2) No better or worse performance. If you had a program that came in either 64 bit or 32 bit, obviously you could only run it in 32 bit, which would degrade performance. 64 or 32 bit has ABSOLUTELY nothing to do with multi-core processing, a very common misconception. 3) If they came in 64 bit versions, they would perform better, otherwise no change. 4) If you plan to get 4GB or more of RAM, a 64 bit OS is a MUST. But make sure all your parts have available 64 bit drivers (do this by going to the manufacturer's website). Now to those exceptions I mentioned. There are a few programs that have problems with working well in a 64 bit OS, usually it is a driver compatibility issue. These are usually very small and obscure programs, and you can easily find a suitable alternative. If there are any professional type programs that are essential for work/school reasons, it is smart to check first at the manufacturer's website. Then of course, there is the one big glaring compatibility problem, and that is from those wonderful idiots over at Apple. For reasons that are beyond my comprehension, they STILL have not gotten around to making iTunes fully 64 bit compatible. You will run into two major problems. One is burning CDs from iTunes, you wo not be able to do it. The second is if you own an iPhone or an iPod Touch, neither of these will sync properly using a 64 bit OS. This is not Microsoft or Intel or AMD or anyone elses fault, this one is squarely on Apple, as it is up to them to design the proper drivers and such for their own program. That should about cover everything, if you have further questions, I am online on Yahoo Messenger.
3. G1 or the Iphone Which would you prefer?
Well, there's going to be a lot more available for the iPhone because the platform has been available for a couple of years, almost. The G1 was just released about 90 days ago. That being said, I think the application development arena for the G1 is going to explode for one reason: Google is placing no restrictions on the development of apps with the Android operating system, which is used on the G1. Android is an open system, based on a Linux kernel. With the iPhone, you are forced to structure your development within Apple's system, and your app may or may not get approved by Apple for distribution via their iPhone store. Since Android is an open system and will likely begin to be used by other vendors (Motorola has already announced development of an Android-based device), developers will be able to create apps, games, tools and other utilities for multiple devices with the same code. I have a G1...bought it last Monday, in fact. I love it. I am not a big fan of Apple, period, so I am not unbiased, but give me an "open" system any day. And RIM has been very uncooperative with open source developers who want to create Blackberry tools for Linux and other systems. So, buh-bye, Blackberry. I am not married to one computer anymore. And even though you need a Google account to get started with the phone, you are not *required* to use it...you can use your own email service, or just browse to your web mail using the browser. So, the answer to your original question (sorry to go off like this) is "even though the iPhone has a richer feature set right now, the G1 will catch up, very quickly." Some additions: The guy above me said the G1 "does not even have a touch screen keyboard." It has a flip out screen, FULL qwerty keyboard, music player (plays Ogg files in addition to MP3 and others...iPhones do not ) and a lot of the same things the iPhone has. The G1 supports T-Mobile's new 3G network, which has been rolled out in major cities and is rapidly expanding into other areas (we have 3G in the DC area, where I work), But, like all other GSM phones, it works fine with Edge and other GSM protocols. And with the open development, we will probably have touch screen keys shortly. I personally know someone who's working on it right now.