Live from the internet, its your best of Weblogs, Inc.

The Weblogs, Inc. network features over 100 independent, unfiltered bloggers producing over 1,000 blog posts a week
across over 75 industry-leading blogs. Each week we ask our bloggers to choose their top posts, which we bring to you
in one easy-to-read weekly post. You’ll find links to the hottest posts from the past week after the jump including
coverage of the most overrated shows of all time, DVD disagreements, and even a Picasso. Enjoy the full listing after
the jump.

FlashInsider

?s Mike Schleifstein and
David Robinson
evacuate from New Orleans,
plus Mike wonders what could be wrong with the
Flash player
EULA
and listens more with expanded
Flash 8 sound
.

The Unofficial Photoshop Weblog?s David Chartier finds
leaked details about Photoshop CS3, Darren Chan
steers you to 24 hours of free tutorials at
lynda.com and Jan Kabili reminds you that Tim Grey has published a new e-book with everything you want to know about
sharpening in Photoshop.

The Digital Photography Weblog?s Jay Savage talks
the nuts and bolts of Senso size, pixel counts, and why
size probably does matter and Garth
Leach lists must-have under $10
accessories
for the serious photographer. Plus, the Battle of the Wi-Fi?s: Nikon and Kodak introduced the
first-ever Wi-Fi enabled digicams this week and
DPW does the rundown.

TVSquad?s Bob
Sassone
asks for your list of
The Five Most Overrated
Shows of All-Time
, Adam Finley has some ideas on how to
make tennis coverage more interesting and
Michael Sciannamea explains why this is the
best time of year for sports.

Divester?s
Erik Olsen wonders whether it?s wise to
hunt and kill the shark that killed a
diver
, while Willy Volk compares
diving solo versus diving with a
buddy
and asks What is a Hogarthian
Diver
?

HD Beat?s Matt
Burns
finds a new HDTV over-the-air
provider
while Kevin C. Tofel explains the difference
between HDTV and HD Ready sets and asks you to help
with a Late Show Top 10 list
for HDTV
.

The
Wireless Weblog?s Michael Sciannamea says efforts to
restore wireless communications in the Gulf Coast
area after Hurricane Katrina are underway, reports that
antitrust lawsuits against the big wireless
providers
charging them with forcing people to buy certain handset models were dismissed and thinks that
people who ?borrow? WiFi signals from others are
thieves, no matter how you slice it.

Download Squad?s
Marc Perton tells you how to
donate to Katrina victims via P2P,
Victor Agreda wants his
Flash TV and
Jordan Running
skips
the login screen
with Greasemonkey.

DVGuru?s Mike
Burgoyne
has some info on the
new Blu-ray Disk Burner for
the PC and discusses the failed attempt between of the Blu-ray and HD-DVD camps to
agree on a single
format
while Ajit Anthony discusses creating your own
online TV station.

Luxist?s Peter Thompson asks if
Britain?s most expensive seaside town is really worth it,
Deidre Woollard uncovers a trip to Paris that includes a visit
with Paloma Picass