| CoolBook Update Fixes Controller App Bugs
CoolBook author Magnus Lundholm has released an e-mail to registered users as well as download links to a new build of his shareware application. The program, a 688 kilobyte download, allows users to monitor their MacBook and MacBook Pro laptops' CPU frequency, voltage and temperatures with registered users being allowed to manually set their voltage and frequency. Corrected settings can significantly reduce heat dissipation throughout the laptop as well as overall fan noise and help extend the life of their batteries. The update repairs a damaged build of the CoolBook Controller application that may result in problems activating the program or if an error occurs when clicking the "deactivate original driver" box doesn't show a window requiring authorization. CoolBook is available for a $10.00 shareware registration fee.
By now, governor used to bumps and bruises
The Terminator is looking all too human these days. The shattered leg that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger suffered in a fall on an icy ski slope was the latest in a list of injuries and ailments to befall the actor-bodybuilder-politician. The seven-time Mr. Olympia, whose broad shoulders and tree-trunk legs earned him the moniker ''the Austrian Oak,'' has a medical chart you might find at a senior citizens' home. Schwarzenegger, who turns 60 in July, has had a hip and a heart valve replaced. He had rotator cuff surgery in 2003. A rapid heartbeat sent him to a hospital last year. One motorcycle crash in 2001 left him with several broken ribs, and another in January resulted in 15 stitches in his lip. Now he is on crutches while the right thigh bone he broke while skiing with his family over the holidays in Sun Valley, Idaho, heals.
Pair plead guilty to church vandalism
Two Greenville-area men admitted doing more than $350,000 in damage to a West Salem Township church in July after prosecutors dropped most of the charges against them. Pair plead guilty to church vandalism More than $350,000 in damage done By Monica Pryts Herald Staff Writer WEST SALEM TOWNSHIP — Two Greenville-area men admitted doing more than $350,000 in damage to a West Salem Township church in July after prosecutors dropped most of the charges against them. .
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