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Charlie Rose Saves MacBook Air Instead of Face

Charlie Rose Sacrifices Face for MacBook Air, Literally

Well Charlie Rose has proven his dedication to the gadget gods. The well-respected journalist, while strolling down 59th Street in New York City, tripped on a pot hole and had to make a quick decision: Save his face, or save his new MacBook Air. In case you can't tell by looking at the photo, Rose decided his super-thin laptop was more important.

But far be it for brutal facial trauma to keep one of the hardest working journalists in television from working. Rose showed up, blood-stained-MacBook-Air-and-all, to do his regular interview show looking like he had been on the losing side of a heavy weight prize fight.

Now that, our friends, is dedication.

From Engadget

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Computers, Video Games, TV, Kids

'PBS Kids Play!' Teaches and Entertains Children

'PBS Kids Play!' Teaches and Entertains Children
PBS just opened up its new online service aimed at children called 'PBS Kids Play!' The activities are aimed at children ages 3-6 and is currently available for a free trial as part of the beta test. When the trial ends, parents will be asked to cough up $79 for the year, or $9.95 a month.

Currently the application only officially supports Windows XP, or Vista. A web version of the edu-tainment games are available to users of Mac OS X and Linux, but let's just say it's still a little buggy. Kids play games with characters from various PBS shows such as 'Curious George,' 'The Berenstain Bears,' 'Bob the Builder,' and even 'Mr. Roger's Neighborhood.'

PBS Kids Play! is not a social networking service. There is no interaction between children or with children, so safety shouldn't be a concern. Parents can however sign in and check a child's progress in the educational activities or set time limits on play.

At $79 a year, the subscription is a bit on the pricey side. But PBS Kids Play! is definitely more useful than that tote bag PBS is always pushing.

From Reuters

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