On-CPU Peltiers From AMD?
Hack Jandy writes "Remember those people who lived on the edge and put peltiers between their CPU and heatsink (or your favorite beverage)? A peltier is a devices that gets cold on one side and warm on the other when an electrical current passes through it. It looks like there is talk that AMD will actually incorporate some of these devices on the CPU according to Xbitlabs. AMD already incorporates some degree of the peltier effect with it's Silicon on Insulator."
Among the top 10 universities, Jews enjoy shocking overrepresentation: Only the California Institute of Technology has an undergraduate Jewish population below 10 percent, and four schools have particularly stark Jewish advantages -- Harvard (30 percent), Yale (23 percent), UPenn (31 percent) and Columbia (25 percent). Keep in mind that, at best estimate, no more than 3 percent of all Americans are Jewish.
I patented jizzing on your 'girl' friend's face and donkey punching her
becuase Jews own all the major testing corporations and know how to score well on the tests
Languages evolve. Deal with it. What are you some sort of grammer exceptionist? "Its" does't follow standard grammatical rules for contractions. It's evovling towards actually fitting general rules in this case. Isn't it better that way? There is however, another possibility: perhaps you just like being an ass with your superior knowledge of useless things? IMNSHO It's better. Quit with the knee-jerk reactions. You understood what was meant, and is that not the general purpose of the english language?
So english boy wtf does :) mean?
Looks like you never learned how to use punctuation either jackass. It's called context, we all got what he was saying. Now try shutting the fuck up or contributing to the conversation.
Apple used peltiers on the Powermac 6100... those PowerPC 601 where hot !
Apple, as aways, is 10 years ahead on some fronts, and 2 years behind on others...
Answer: Because I have his large cock in my mouth.
Question: Why is this fuckstick above me?
Of course heat can be "destroyed". Ever heard of endothermic reactions?