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Source of ClifNotesNewsletter050220

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on February 26, 2007 at 12:06:37 am
 
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        <td valign="top"><font color="#000000" size="4"
        face="Arial"><strong>Reviews</strong></font><font
        color="#FFFFFF" size="4" face="Arial"><strong> </strong></font><font
        face="Arial"><br>
        <br>
        </font><table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial"><img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/doc.gif"
                alt="Editors" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32">&nbsp;<strong>BK ReplaceEM</strong> -
                easy text replacements in multiple files</font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">I have used this
                utility to replace text in over 300 files with
                one click of the mouse. I can tell you that it
                works and it works very well. It will keep track
                of file groups that you work with. It also keeps
                track of the individual replacement operations
                you perform on each group. </font><hr>
                <p><a href="http://www.orbit.org/replace/"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - </font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Freeware</font><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>your premiere-quality, </em><em><b>freeware</b></em><em>
                string-replacing utility for Windows. At its
                core, </em><em><b>ReplaceEm</b></em><em> is
                essentially a text search-and-replace program.
                However, unlike the search-replace functionality
                of a standard text editor, </em><em><b>ReplaceEm</b></em><em>
                is designed to operate on multiple files at once.
                And you need not only perform one search-replace
                operation per file -- you can setup a list of
                operations to perform. If different groups of
                files need to have different operations performed
                on them, this is no problem either. You can also
                specify a backup file for each file processed
                just incase the replace operation didn&#146;t do
                exactly what you wanted.</em> </font></p>
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            <font face="Arial"></TBODY></font>
        </table>
        <p><font face="Arial"><br>
        </font></p>
        <table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial"><img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/doc.gif"
                alt="Editors" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32">&nbsp;<strong>DirHtml</strong> -
                creates a webpage index of files</font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">An index making
                tool such as this one, will basically create a
                webpage that contains a list of links to files or
                other webpages. I have used this freeware index
                page maker to create websites. It offers a wide
                variety of layouts and offers the ability to
                customize the layouts. I&nbsp;found
                it&nbsp;was&nbsp;simple to install and easy to
                use. </font><hr>
                <p><a
                href="http://home.pacbell.net/nitzsche/dirhtml/dirhtml.html"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - </font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Freeware </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>Dirhtml creates index.html files
                from a directory branch using the GUI or command
                line, optionally including HTML code of your own
                design at any point in the generated file. With
                dirhtml, your index.html files can be unique and
                arbitrarily complex. Dirhtml works under Windows
                98/NT/2000/XP.</em></font></p>
                </td>
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            <font face="Arial"></TBODY></font>
        </table>
        <p><font face="Arial"><br>
        </font></p>
        <table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/system.gif"
                alt="System" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32">&nbsp;<strong>Find Product (CD) Key</strong>
                - for old PC's</font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">I bought an old
                Win98 PC for . They even threw in an extra
                monitor. Great deal? Sure, but it didn't come
                with the Windows OEM Recovery CD and I couldn't
                find the product key so I can re-install a legal
                copy of Windows. A quick trip to Doug Knox's MVPS
                website got me this Visual Basic script that did
                the trick with no problem. I also tried it out on
                my WinME machine and it worked just as
                well.&nbsp;It's a good idea to&nbsp;keep a
                backup&nbsp;copy&nbsp;of your Windows CD's and
                the product keys if you can. You never know when
                you'll need them. </font><hr>
                <p><a
                href="http://www.dougknox.com/utility/scripts_desc/productkey.htm"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - </font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Freeware</font><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - will not work for Win2k
                / WinXP </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>Productkey.vbs is a Visual Basic
                Script file which will check your System Registry
                and retrieve the product (CD) Key that was used
                when you installed Windows 95/98/98SE/Millennium.
                This is the 25 digit key with the format
                XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX&nbsp; Note: This
                file requires that you are able to boot into
                Windows.&nbsp; If you cannot boot into Windows,
                click </em></font><a
                href="http://www.dougknox.com/utility/scripts_desc/cdkey_dos.htm"><font
                size="2" face="Arial"><em>HERE</em></font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"><em>.</em></font></p>
                </td>
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        </table>
        <p><font face="Arial"><br>
        </font></p>
        <table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/help.gif"
                alt="Help" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32">&nbsp;<strong>Merriam Webster's
                Concise Dictionary</strong> - free downloadable
                dictionary</font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">This is very
                cool. While the program is running, just double
                click a word anywhere and up pops a definition.
                Checks your spelling automatically if you need it
                to. How can they afford to make this free? </font><hr>
                <p><a
                href="http://www.download.com/Merriam-Webster-s-Concise-Dictionary/3000-2279_4-10059666.html?tag=txt"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - </font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Freeware</font><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>This download puts easy access to
                Merriam-Webster right on your computer. Simply
                move your cursor over a word and the software
                searches the content and returns the dictionary
                article instantly in a pop-up box.
                Merriam-Webster's Concise Dictionary contains
                more than 40,000 entries, clear and concise
                definitions, written pronunciations, and variant
                spellings. The iFinger engine under the hood
                works both online and offline, checking spelling
                automatically, or allowing you to run manual text
                searches for specific queries.</em> </font></p>
                </td>
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            <font face="Arial"></TBODY></font>
        </table>
        <p><font face="Arial"><br>
        </font></p>
        <table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/system.gif"
                alt="System" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32">&nbsp;<strong>Rain</strong> - cool
                off your CPU</font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">Marty wrote to me
                about this program. He says <em>&quot;... a small
                freeware program they have called
                &quot;Rain&quot; that will cure any case of
                laptop overheating. Basically what it does is to
                put the processor into a suspend mode by
                executing an &quot;HLT&quot; instruction (halt)
                when it is not actively computing. Although used
                mainly by &quot;overclockers&quot; whose CPU's
                generate enormous amounts of heat, I have used
                this program successfully on my laptop whose fan
                was running about 90% of the time and it was
                still running very warm.&nbsp; Now the cooling
                fan rarely if ever comes on, the laptop is as
                cool as can be, and there's NO effect on
                computing power or speed.&quot;</em> </font><hr>
                <p><a href="http://www.benchtest.com/rain.html"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> -&nbsp;</font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Freeware</font><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>Originally designated as tool for
                the serious overclocker, this is a cooler program
                with few frills.&nbsp; During the installation,
                you may set up Rain to optimize for a list of
                older processors - the most recent being the
                Pentium Pro and Celeron (the original version -
                pre Celeron A).&nbsp; As Rain version 1.0 was
                written before the Celeron A was brought out,
                Rain incorrectly identifies the Celeron A,
                Celeron II, and all Pentium III CPUs as a Pentium
                Pro.&nbsp; This does not hinder the effectiveness
                of the HLT instruction.</em></font><font size="2"
                face="Times New Roman"> </font></p>
                </td>
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            <font face="Arial"></TBODY></font>
        </table>
        <p><font face="Arial"><br>
        </font></p>
        <table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/system.gif"
                alt="System" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32">&nbsp;<strong>Windows XP Security
                Console</strong> - lock out features
                for&nbsp;other users on your WinXP</font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">Do you have a
                &quot;guest&quot; login on your WinXP machine? Do
                you want to keep them from changing the settings
                on your machine? This little utility is free for
                home use. All you have to do is install it and
                then log in as the user you want to change the
                settings for. When you run the program you'll get
                a wide variety of Windows features that you can
                either turn off or on. If you get a license for
                this you'll be able to change all user settings
                without logging into them. </font><hr>
                <p><a
                href="http://www.dougknox.com/xp/utils/xp_securityconsole.htm"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - </font><a
                href="http://www.dougknox.com/xp/utils/xp_seccons_scrn.htm"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">ScreenShots</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - </font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Crippleware</font><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - requires WinXP </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>Doug's Windows XP Security Console
                allows you to assign various restrictions to
                specific users, whether you're running XP Pro or
                XP Home.</em></font></p>
                </td>
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            <font face="Arial"></TBODY></font>
        </table>
        <p><font face="Arial"><br>
        </font></p>
        <table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/graphics.gif"
                alt="Grahics" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32"> <strong>Wink</strong> - easily
                create your own flash animated tutorials</font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">This is just one
                more of those programs that I really have a hard
                time believing is&nbsp;free. Wink allows me to do
                something that I've seen done with tutorials but
                never imagined I could do myself without a lot of
                hard work. In a few easy steps Wink allows you to
                make a tutorial with mouse cursors zipping around
                and opening menus. It lets you pop up comments
                and advice. It also lets you create branch points
                based on the user decisions on what they want to
                see next. Finally Wink creates the html code that
                lets you publish your flash tutorial for the
                whole world to see and appreciate. </font><hr>
                <p><a href="http://www.debugmode.com/wink/"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> -&nbsp;</font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Freeware </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>Wink is a Tutorial and Presentation
                creation software, primarily aimed at creating
                tutorials on how to use software (like a tutor
                for MS-Word/Excel etc). Using Wink you can
                capture screenshots of your software, use images
                that you already have, type-in explanations for
                each step, create a navigation sequence complete
                with buttons, delays, titles etc and create a
                highly effective tutorial for your users.</em> </font></p>
                </td>
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            <font face="Arial"></TBODY></font>
        </table>
        </td>
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        <td><font color="#000000" face="Arial"><strong>TIPS</strong></font><font
        face="Arial"><br>
        <br>
        </font><table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/internet.gif"
                alt="Internet" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32"> <strong>Clif Notes Newsletter Review
                Archive</strong> - a list of all these reviews in
                one place</font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">What's been the
                number one complaint from my Newsletter readers
                and Website visitors? They say <em>&quot;I know
                you reviewed this certain program but I've looked
                and looked but just can't find it at your
                website.&quot; </em>I decided to create an index
                page that lists all of the reviews from my
                newsletter and link the reviews to it for easy
                searching. All you have to do is bring up the
                main page and scroll down through the list or hit
                CTRL-F to search the page for your wishes. Later
                on I'm going to see if I can also index it by
                categories. I used DirHTML (reviewed this week)
                to create the index list on the home page. </font><hr>
                <p><a
                href="http://freewarewiki.pbwiki.com/f/OlderReviews.html"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - </font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Tip</font><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>Clif Notes Newsletter - Review
                Archive / Devoted to promoting freeware and free
                information</em></font></p>
                </td>
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            <font face="Arial"></TBODY></font>
        </table>
        <p><font face="Arial"><br>
        </font></p>
        <table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/email09.gif"
                alt="Email" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32"> <strong>GMail is expanding</strong>
                - get your new GMail account here</font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">I signed up for a
                free 1 gigabyte GMail account almost within a
                week or so of them opening up. They are still in
                beta testing and are still accepting new accounts
                by invitation only. Once every couple weeks I
                would see that they had given me a few
                invitations to give to others. This last week
                they gave me fifty invitations. </font><font
                color="#800000" size="2" face="Arial">Contact me
                via the email&nbsp;address below&nbsp;and I'll
                send you an invitation to receive an account</font><font
                size="2" face="Arial">. </font><hr>
                <p><a href="http://www.gmail.com"><font size="2"
                face="Arial">Website</font></a><font size="2"
                face="Arial"> - </font><font color="#008000"
                size="2" face="Arial">Tip</font><font size="2"
                face="Arial"> - <strong>Gmail is now open to
                everyone, no invitation required</strong></font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>A Google approach to
                email.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br>
                Gmail is an experiment in a new kind of webmail,
                built on the idea that you should never have to
                delete mail and you should always be able to find
                the message you want. The key features are: </em>&nbsp;
                <em>Search, don't sort.<br>
                Use Google search to find the exact message you
                want, no matter when it was sent or received.</em>
                &nbsp; <em>Don't throw anything away.<br>
                1000 megabytes of free storage so you'll never
                need to delete another message.</em> &nbsp; <em>Keep
                it all in context.<br>
                Each message is grouped with all its replies and
                displayed as a conversation.</em> &nbsp; <em>No
                pop-up ads. No untargeted banners.<br>
                You see only relevant text ads and links to
                related web pages of interest.</em></font></p>
                </td>
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            <font face="Arial"></TBODY></font>
        </table>
        <p><font face="Arial"><br>
        </font></p>
        <table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/help.gif"
                alt="Help" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32">&nbsp;<strong>GMail tips</strong> -
                find out the best ways to use GMail</font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">Latest Updates
                from </font><a
                href="http://www.xanga.com/home.aspx?user=cyberguide"><font
                color="#3366CC" size="2" face="Arial">cyberguide</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"><br>
                </font><font color="#3366CC" size="2"
                face="Arial">EMAIL: GMAIL TIPS</font><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> &nbsp; I have a Gmail
                account but have not fully used it yet...Jim's
                Tips include a section on maximizing the use of
                Gmail...If I could squeeze some time in my busy
                schedule to address my lack of use...hmmm, a
                still long way to go.... </font><hr>
                <p><a
                href="http://g04.com/html/modules.php?name=News&amp;new_topic=12"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - </font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Tip</font><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font><font face="Arial">&nbsp;</font></p>
                </td>
            </tr>
            <font face="Arial"></TBODY></font>
        </table>
        <p><font face="Arial"><br>
        </font></p>
        <table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/website.gif"
                alt="Website" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32">&nbsp;<strong>Spyware Doctor using
                deceptive advertising?</strong></font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">Last week I
                reviewed Spyware Doctor. I wasn't impressed with
                the product but I didn't see anything major wrong
                with it other than the fact that their free
                version is Crippleware. Since then, I've found
                out that there's a little more to the story
                behind the success of Spyware Doctor. Are they
                using deceptive advertising to steal business
                from Spybot S&amp;D? Read this article at the
                Spybot website (safer-networking.org) and see if
                you agree with the accusations that
                safer-networking is making. </font><hr>
                <p><a
                href="http://www.safer-networking.org/en/news/2005-01-17.html"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - </font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Tip</font><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>&quot;If you search for the keyword
                Spybot on Altavista or some other search engines,
                you'll got a bunch of sponsored results. One of
                them is Spyware Doctor, who seem to be
                aggressively using our name Spybot to advertise
                their software. We receive a bunch of emails
                every week from people complaining to us and
                asking for a refund. After some mails we usually
                find out that those people believed they had
                bought Spybot-S&amp;D, but actually got Spyware
                Doctor... &quot;</em></font></p>
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        <td><font color="#000000" face="Arial"><strong>COOL
        WEBSITES</strong></font><font face="Arial"><br>
        <br>
        </font><table border="0" bgcolor="#C0C0C0">
            <font face="Arial"><TBODY></font>
            <tr>
                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/website.gif"
                alt="Website" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32">&nbsp;<strong>ClockLink.com</strong>
                - free clock for your website</font></td>
            </tr>
            <tr>
                <td><a href="http://www.vsubhash.com"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">V. Subhash</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> wrote to me about this
                site. Thanks Subhash!&nbsp;Make sure to check out
                Subhash's site for his cool freeware. </font><font
                face="Arial">&nbsp; </font><font size="2"
                face="Arial">Clocklink.com provides cool looking
                clocks for your website. Just cut and paste the
                code into your page. They also have a desktop
                version for your PC. </font><hr>
                <p><a href="http://www.clocklink.com"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> -&nbsp;</font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Cool
                Website</font><font size="2" face="Arial"> </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<embed
                src="http://www.clocklink.com/Clocks/0001P-Blue.swf?Place=Clif_Notes&amp;TimeZone=EST"
                align="baseline" border="0" width="200"
                height="200" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"
                wmode="transparent"></font><font size="3"
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                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/website.gif"
                alt="Website" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32">&nbsp;<strong>RewardTV.com</strong> -
                watch tv, answer questions correctly to earn
                points</font></td>
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                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">Guest Review by </font><a
                href="http://respect2glory.150m.com/"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Respect2Glory</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> (my wife) - <em>I've been
                going to this site for three days and I've made
                over 100,000 points so far. My email that I
                registered with hasn't been spammed. It's just
                fun trivia.</em> </font><hr>
                <p><a href="http://www.rewardtv.com/"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> - </font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial">Cool
                Website</font><font size="2" face="Arial"> </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>Cash in your TV Points! There are 3
                ways to redeem the points you've earned --
                auctions, shopping sprees, and sweepstakes. Check
                your account balance and click on one of the
                following categories to begin.</em> </font></p>
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                <td align="middle" bgcolor="#002866"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">&nbsp;<img
                src="http://img29.photobucket.com/albums/v88/clif_notes/website.gif"
                alt="Website" align="absmiddle" width="32"
                height="32">&nbsp;<strong>Science on TV from Nova
                </strong>- must see TV and Web</font></td>
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            <tr>
                <td><font size="2" face="Arial">Here is a guest
                review by CyberGuide. I personally enjoyed
                &quot;The Elegant Universe&quot; program. </font><hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Latest Updates
                from </font><a
                href="http://www.xanga.com/home.aspx?user=cyberguide"><font
                color="#3366CC" size="2" face="Arial">cyberguide</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font><a
                href="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/programs.html"
                target="_new"><font color="#3366CC" size="2"
                face="Arial">SCIENCE ON TV: NOVA</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> &nbsp; Head to the
                PBS-based NOVA site for an excellent selection of
                online science&nbsp;programs, nicely watchable if
                you have broadband. &nbsp; Features include:
                &nbsp; </font><a
                href="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sciencenow/watch/"
                target="_new"><font color="#3366CC" size="2"
                face="Arial"><b>NOVA scienceNOW</b></font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font><a
                href="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/mars/program.html"
                target="_new"><font color="#3366CC" size="2"
                face="Arial"><b>MARS Dead or Alive</b></font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font><a
                href="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/elegant/program.html"
                target="_new"><font color="#3366CC" size="2"
                face="Arial"><b>The Elegant Universe</b></font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font><a
                href="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/miracle/program.html"
                target="_new"><font color="#3366CC" size="2"
                face="Arial"><b>Life's Greatest Miracle</b></font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font><a
                href="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/genome/program.html"
                target="_new"><font color="#3366CC" size="2"
                face="Arial"><b>Cracking the Code of Life</b></font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font><a
                href="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/cancer/program.html"
                target="_new"><font color="#3366CC" size="2"
                face="Arial"><b>Cancer Warrior</b></font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font><a
                href="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/thin/program.html"
                target="_new"><font color="#3366CC" size="2"
                face="Arial"><b>Dying to be Thin</b></font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><a
                href="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/programs.html"><font
                size="2" face="Arial">Website</font></a><font
                size="2" face="Arial"> -</font><font
                color="#008000" size="2" face="Arial"> Cool
                Website</font><font size="2" face="Arial"> </font></p>
                <hr>
                <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Quote from the
                website - <em>The Elegant Universe: One of the
                most ambitious and exciting theories ever
                proposed&#151;one that may be the long-sought
                &quot;theory of everything,&quot; which eluded
                even Einstein&#151;gets a masterful, lavishly
                computer-animated explanation from bestselling
                author-physicist Brian Greene, when NOVA presents
                a three-part series on the nuts, bolts, and
                sometimes outright nuttiness of string theory.</em></font></p>
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