Posts Tagged Donkey

Shrek 3-D

Posted by on Saturday, 15 May, 2010

  • Four pairs of 3-D glasses included with DVD.
  • Great action adventure.
  • Full color.
  • DVD in plastic case with really cool holigram cover!
  • Shrek collector cards included!

Product Description
3-D full color extended adventure of Shrek! 16 minutes in length.
When we last left everyone’s newlyweds Shrek & Fiona, they were singing & dancing late into the night with Donkey and all the fairytale creatures. Happily ever after… but not so fast.. the honeymoon has barely begun when Princess Fiona (Cameron Diaz) is ambushed by Lord Farquaad’s henchman, Thelonius. A dizzying and hilarious chase ensures with Shrek (Mike Myers) and Donkey (Eddie Murphy) hot on the trail! More action and adventure, more fun that picks up right where SHREK left off.. and drops you off laughing and out-of-breath before SHREK 2 begins. Use the 3-D special glasses included with this movie to experience the excellent effects!!… More >>

Shrek 3-D


Poker Free Basic Poker Terms

Posted by on Tuesday, 8 December, 2009

poker free sites are a great way to learn how to play poker. If you are new to poker and unsure of the terminology at the tables? If so, worry no more here is a few to help you.

Hole cards – the two cards the dealer gives you.
Community cards – these are the cards dealt face up on the board in three different times.
Pre-flop – this is the betting done before the flop.
The flop – this is referring to the first three community cards dealt up.
The turn – this refers to the fourth community card dealt up.
The river – this refers to the final (fifth) community card dealt face up.
The button – this refers to the player with the dealer button in front of them.
The small blind – this refers to the person to the left of the button.
The big blind – this refers to the person two seats to the left of the button.

Hand definitions
Big Slick – this refers to ace-king suited (some people believe any ace king is big slick).
A set – this refers to three of a kind with a pocket pair and one on the board.
Trips – this refers to three of a kind with two on the board (community cards) and one in your hand.
Quads – this refers to four of a kind.
Wheel – this refers to a 5 high straight (A-2-3-4-5).
Broadway – this refers to an ace high straight (ten, jack, queen, and king, ace.).
Flush – this refers to five cards of the same suit.
Straight flush – if you are lucky enough to have 5 cards of the same suit.
Royal flush – this refers to the ten, jack, queen, king, ace of the same suit.
Snowmen – Pocket eights can also be called snowmen.
Donk/Donkey – this is sometimes used for a player that plays a weaker hand and wins. (Not really suitable in general).

So next time your on the poker free tables, impress your opponents with the proper lingo.


CrunchDeals: Braid for $5

Posted by on Thursday, 10 September, 2009

braid
Come on. This is one of the most acclaimed games of the last year and you’re getting it for the price of a medium popcorn at the movies. If you don’t buy this… I’ll be disappointed. Steam it up, fool!

And for more timestream-bending good times, hit up Time Donkey.



Review: Eye-Fi Pro 4GB wireless SD memory card

Posted by on Tuesday, 7 July, 2009

eyefipro

What can be said about the latest Eye-Fi SD card that hasn’t been said about every other iteration? The Pro is just that, a Pro. With support for RAW files, Ad Hoc network support and Selective Transfer, the Eye-Fi Pro is perfection.

Using the Eye-Fi Manager, it took all of three minutes to get the Pro up and running on my Mac. Setting up an Ad Hoc network to my Mac was simple enough that a donkey could do it. From the wireless network dropdown list, select the “set up ad hoc network” option and create an ad hoc network. Once you’ve done that, refresh the network list, select your new ad hoc network and configure the Pro to recognize it going forward. Switch back to your wireless network and you’re done.

DSLR users can now shoot in RAW or RAW+ and have those images directly upload to their respective desktops/laptops over Wi-Fi. Eye-Fi creates two separate folders for RAW images (7-6-09) and JPEG images (July 06, 2009) with differing date formats.

Rather than uploading every single image or video that you capture, the Selective Transfer mode utilizes your camera’s protect function to identify which images to upload and which ones to leave. It’s dead simple. Protect the images you want to upload and then Eye-Fi takes care of the rest.

The Pro, as I’ve said before, is a dream come true — but at $150 it’s tough to justify such a purchase for a slow 4GB SD card. However, it also automagically uploads to your photo sharing site of choice and supports Ad Hoc networks. In a pressure-filled situation, like a live blog, the Eye-Fi Pro is a required gadget in a blogger’s bag. I’d throw down $150 clams for one, but I have the luxury of expensing it back to the big guy.

Eye-Fi Pro [Eye-Fi]