Would you like a Free PS3 80Gb, a free Nintendo Wii, or maybe a free Xbox 360,How about a Free iPhone, & more..
FreebieJeebies are also running a new competition! FreebieJeebies owner MovieDrome (aka Richard) released this press statement:-
Due to the success of the car competition last year we've decided to run another big competition: The Freebiejeebies Big Cash Competition!
The Prizes are:
1st Prize: £5,000
2nd Prize: £2,000
3rd Prize: £1,000
To be in with a chance of winning one of these fantastic free prizes, you need to sign up to one of the following sites:
Its as easy as 1-2-3!!
1st Sign up to the FreebieJeebies site here
2nd Complete 1 of the many offers available all from companies you will recognise from the TV adverts and fom the high street shops
3rd Get some friends to sign up and complete an offer then sit back and wait for your free Iphone4,Free PS3 or whatever free gift you want.
LoveFilm Recommends FreebieJeebies
Lovefilm now one of the UK's largest DVD/Blu-Ray & Console games rental companies, has partnered with Richard & Alex of FreebieJeebies!
This newly founded partnership should now help put aside anyones fears of Freebiejeebies being a scam!
The staff at FreebieJeebies have put thousands of hours into research and continous support for over 300,000 members that have signed up to FreebieJeebies.
As of 31st July 2010 FreebieJeebies have issued out a massive £959,055.89 in free gifts!!
Key points about FreebieJeebies
- Available practically anywhere- Freebiejeebies ship to most countries worldwide through branded names such as Amazon, Apple & Play.com
- Custom orders - Custom order allows you to ask FreebieJeebies for something that is not featured on any of the Freebiejeebies sites, If FreebieJeebies thinks it is possible to ship it to you, then it's yours free!
- Cash/voucher alternative - choose cash payments via bank transfer,Amazon Vouchers or Paypal.
24 hour support - a 24 hour response is promise but nearly all tickets answered in less than 2 hours.
Last years FreebiEJeebies Competition
Over the past several months freebiejeebies have been running a competition by the name of “The CarCompetition !” where by, yes you guessed it, a brand new car was to be given away to one lucky freebie hunter.
Every week freebiejeebies were giving away five golden tickets and each one of these tickets were entered into the main draw for the car. Two of the lucky weekly golden ticket winners also received one bonus referral credit on the Freebiejeebies site of their choice.-
To enter all you had to do is refer one friend who signs up and completes an offer and then submit the details of that referral to freebiejeebies.
The lucky winner of the car was one Ben Harris who decided to have the cash alternative of £7000 cash instead of the Ford Fiesta to help him through university.
Sony PlayStation 3 News
The PlayStation Move's been given a hard time in face of competition from the completely controller free Kinect for Xbox 360: so much so in fact that Sony's aired adverts defending its decision to opt for a controller that's actually tangible. What's the PlayStation Move controller like to hold and use, and did Sony need to get so defensive? Find out in this part of our PlayStation Move review.
Sony's done a fantastic job making the PlayStation Move as easy to set up as possible – and from a company known for its endless firmware updates, this is a welcome relief. Set up couldn't be simpler: you just plug the Eye camera in, and turn on the PlayStation Move controller like you would a typical DualShock PS3 gamepad. If you already own an Eye, well, all you have to do is press the PlayStation button on the Move wand, stick in a game and go.
Pairing up two PlayStation Move controllers, as you can do in Sports Champions, is just as simple, as is setting up two payer multiplayer where games allow. When prompted, you simply turn on and calibrate as required: the light up balls and icons on screen show you which hand to hold each in. In fact, more complex is getting your head around the concept that one person can use two of the same controllers at the same time as well as one, which might trip a few people up.
The build of the PlayStation Move controller is ace, and we're just as taken with it as we are with its accuracy. Sony's managed to craft a comfortable, light and striking peripheral that's easy to pick up and point – the squishy ball on the end looks silly, sure, but is helpful, and we were impressed at just how well the PS3 could map objects onto it on screen (like a tabble tennis paddle). The Move button on the front and the trigger on the back provide most of the control in games, but there are the traditional PlayStation symbol buttons within easy reach of your thumb also.
You'll be pleased to know that Sony's stuffed rechargeable batteries inside the PlayStation Move, so you can charge it up simply by plugging in a mini USB cable just as you would the normal PS3 controller – no faffing with AA batteries required. You can buy a dock to charge a pair of PlayStation Move controllers, but given that we've still not managed to drain the battery on either of ours, we don't think it's necessary: they only need the odd top up.
We only have a few minor niggles with the design of the PlayStation Move. The Select And Start buttons have been buried too deep in the sides of the controller, so you'll need to look away from the screen to shove them. There's also an unclear UI structure when it comes to confirm and cancel buttons. X and O usually provide the two actions in a menu on a PS3 pad, and the Move and Trigger buttons also do a similar thing on the PlayStation Move controller: but not all the time, and in every game, which can lead to some confusion – Sony needs to iron this out with developers.
In fact, our biggest complaint with the design of the whole PlayStation Move ecosystem is actually that the Eye camera, which you'll need to perch on top of your telly, needs a USB port. If you've got a slim PS3, you only have two anyway, and they're on the front, meaning you'll have wires going everywhere around the sides of your TV. We'd prefer Sony to have done what Microsoft did by sticking a whole new port for Kinect at the back of the new Xbox 360: it's not going to happen in the latest PS3 iterations, so you'll have to put up with this inconvenience for the time being.
But for the power of the PlayStation Move, we'll happily put up with a few wires showing: in a range of 1.5- 3m from your TV it works absolutely flawlessly with the right game, and we can see standing up for action games being what stops you playing. That and there not being many decent games to play with it right now obviously.
Apple iPad News Update
Nearly five months after the iPad's launch, Apple has finally matched supply with demand.
Apple's online store now shows iPad orders will be shipped within 24 hours , the first time the tablet has been available for next-day shipping since its early April debut.
Although Apple took pre-orders for most of a month before the April 3 launch, subsequent orders for the iPad were delayed 15 business days, a mark that fell to 7-10 days by mid-May. Earlier this month, shipping delays dropped again, first to 5-7 days, then to 1-3 days.
Last month, Apple's executives acknowledged that they had underestimated demand for the tablet.
"We went into the iPad thinking that planning of one million from our capacity was a very bold move," Tim Cook, Apple's chief operating officer, said in a July earnings call with Wall Street analysts when he was asked whether there were supply issues with specific components.
"What we are doing is we're increasing capacity as quickly as we can, and you know there are a number of things that we have to increase in order to do that," Cook told analysts. "But I am fairly confident that we will be able to increase the capacity. It is not a situation where there is something profound that we can't eventually increase."
Apple said it sold 3.3 million iPad's in the year's second quarter, one million of them in the first 28 days of availability.
Before that, Apple gave hints of other signs of stress on iPad supply when it pushed back the international launch until the end of May.
Brian Marshall, an analyst with Gleacher & Co., has projected that Apple will sell 12 million iPads this year, with sales in the fourth quarter of 4.9 million units, a 51% increase over 2010's second quarter number






