Yes it's for squirting (dear lord, who came up with that term?), but it could be for so much more.
The obvious use for wi-fi in a media player is for ease of synchronization. Ideally there would be some sort of signature established during the initial setup tying the Zune to whatever computer it's software is installed on; anytime thereafter if the Zune were on the same wireless network as it's home computer, I should be able to just hit a button and it would synchronize. Hell, you could even have it so that the home system sends out a page every 15 minutes or so and it would synch up the Zune without any user intervention at all.
So yes, the wi-fi capability could be made much more compelling.
It doesn't matter how much the judges know about technology, they know the law.
This is where we go back to the statement "default judgment". Since Spamhaus never bothered to show up in court to contest the charges, the judge had to decide in favor of the plaintif and award them whatever they asked.
Now, what the impact of an American civil judgment is on the directors of a British company, I have no clue. But I'll wager the folks at Spamhaus knew exactly what the impact would be and the decision to blow off the case was an educated one.
to shop at Costco you -have- to have a membership card. Is that ok?
Yes. There are certain stores (Costco, Sams Club, etc.) that require you to have a membership to shop there. If you don't want to be tracked -- don't shop there. The stores that require memberships are few and far between, you are by no means required to shop at them. If however they all start requiring memberships I see a lot more people starting to shop at the mom-and-pop's, altogether not a bad thing.
As for full disclosure; I have a (free) discount card for my local grocery chain because, to me, the money I save is worth it (I don't care what they think my next door neighbor buys). At the same time I don't have a membership to Sam's Club because I did the math once and figured out that it wouldn't be worth it, their base membership is $40 and I can ususally find better prices at other stores if I pay attention.
So, yeah, it's fine if they require you to have a membership to shop there; they just can't require you to be a member.
Yeah, there are a lot of Hary Potter and Star Wars sets out there, but they still make the good stuff. I just bought my 5 year old daughter this at Target to add to her current collection. The only thing that bugs me is that the flat plates aren't part of the standard sets anymore, though you can still buy them directly from lego
Yep, and just wait till you have a leftie who discovered that they can not only move their mouse to the other side of the keyboard, but also switch the buttons. There's a frickin nightmare and a half.
Right-click on the network icon in the system tray then select "Disable". Seems easier to me than having to bring up a console, enter 25 characters, and hit return.
I'm no Microsoft fan but come on, ya gotta pick your battles a little better than this.
Yeah, it really does all depend on utilization of resources. If I am taking up a table for an hour that causes them to not be able to serve five other customers for whatever reason then they definitely do lose money. I don't think that this would be a major problem at your average coffee shop, but a restaurant at an airport might be a completely different story. Let's face it, you don't hear Starbucks complaining, nor has anyone everr given me a hard time for plugging in at one of the airport outlets while I wait for my flight.
In the airport it is probably to their advantage to let people plug in. I know that the last time I traveled with my daughter (3 years old at the time) my laptop and a copy of Finding Nemo kept har and quite a few other kids entertained after our flight had been delayed.
I do remember that guy in Japan being arrested, I can't find the news article offhand, I seem to remember that he just plugged into some building where he had no claim to being a customer. Almost like if someone walked up to my house and plugged into one of my external outlets, I know I'd be pissed on general principle. Feel free to correct me if I'm getting any of the details wrong.
I have a Compaq 610c that takes 1.5 hours to charge from empty if I'm using it, the power supply requires 125V and 1.6A, this works out to 200W or.3 KWh to charge. I pay about 9 cents/KWh at home for electricity, so a complete charge costs 3 cents.
My average trip to the coffee shop costs about $1.50 and I'm in there for all of 5 min. If I'm actually planning on being there long enough for a full charge I'd probably have 2 cups and maybe a muffin. As soon as I buy that second cup and the muffin, they more than offset the 3 cents worth of power. Any good store owner will think of this as a reason to keep your customers in the shop, the longer we stay, the more we buy, it's that simple.
I agree...I had the overwhelming feeling that this was EarthSea meets Harry Potter. I can see the pitch to some producer now:
Ged doesn't know he's a wizard, then he goes to Hogwarts and meets Vetch and Herminey and his arch-nemesis Jasper Malfoy. He then does some nifty tricks that will look realy good on screen, maybe something with a hawk or owl. He can then fight off Tygath and his DeathEaters to save the world and everyone lives happily ever after.
I mean come on, this thing was made to cash in on Harry and LOTR, not to actually tell a good story.
The way the cost of any war is reported has always bothered me.
People say "We have 100,000 troops over there, each one earns an average of $100/day and costs an additional $200 per day in supplies, so the war costs us $30 Million/day. Well no, even if we weren't at war, we'd still have to pay those soldiers. We'd still have to feed them, and drive them around, and let them practice firing their rifles and mortars and tanks. Yes being at war costs more, we fire off more ammo, we use more gas, we mobilize the Reserves which costs more. But don't say that it costs $30 Million/day when we would be spending $20 Million/day in times of peace, in that case the war is only costing an additional $10 Million for the basics. Get back to me when you figure out how much all the stuff we wouldn't have to pay for if these guys were sitting back here at some base in the US costs.
*- Note that I am pulling all these numbers out of deep dark places and are only to be used as examples and not actual costs.
The Lincoln assassination would have been successful if we didn't know the name "John Wilkes Booth". Ditto to Lee Harvey Oswald, Sirhan Sirhan, and James Earl Ray.
Yes, yes, they were all huge conspiracies involving the mafia, Cuba, Russia, the KKK, and an elite band of rebels from Omicron Persei 8. To be a truly successful assassination, the guy who pulled the trigger has to walk away free and clear.
Where I live electricity costs about 11 cents per kWh. My computer draws at max 300 W excluding the monitor which is always off when I'm not sitting there looking at it anyway. If my system were running at full power all day long it would cost me all of 79.2 cents for 7.2 kWh of electricity.
Now in reality when it's just sitting there downloading something, it's in low power mode using minimal processor, no video, and the CD's not spinning. The HD is about the only thing going so I'll ball park it at running at 1/4 power, and that's being generous. So to spend all day downloading whatever while I'm at work or sleeping, or just spending time with my family, it costs all of 19.8 cents per day for 1.8 kWh of electricity. How is this "a lot more electricity" again?
Amen. I get the newspaper everyday too, I go for the Fry's/Sears/Home Depot ads, my wife goes for OldNavy/Kohls/Kroger, and the kids like the funnies. OK, so my 4 year old just colors them in and doesn't read them, but that's probably the best use for most of them anyway:)
Basically we get the paper *for* the ads. If someone put that many ads into a CD, the thing would go down in flames. We get bombarded by enough ads against our will as it is, I like the ads in the paper because it's easy to compare. Say I want a new thumbdrive, I can put the Fry's ad next to OfficeDepot, next to BestBuy, next to CompUSA. I will immmediately know who is running the best deal, you can't do that with TV and Radio ads.
Newspapers have found a way to stay relevant in an age where they are no longer the best news source, the music industry needs to do the same.
::When did a hero become someone who throws their life away like yesterday's newspaper? A life-long dedication I can see, but not if the life isn't that long.
He didn't say anything about throwing your life away, just being willing to risk it. If nobody had been willing to put themselves on a rickety ass little boat and cross the Atlantic, the only people in America would be the indians (not that that would be a bad thing, but that's another discussion). If nobody had been willing to strap themselves onto a couple of pieces of wood and some canvas and set off down the beach, we wouldn't have airplanes.
Every major step in the course of humanity has involved risk. Peope died trying to cross the oceans, people died trying to create a plane, people died trying to get man in orbit. People die, you learn from their mistakes, and you press on. Your job is not to die in the persuit of the goal, your job is to be the first person to reach the goal. Accept that there will be losses and don't let them be in vain.
We will never truly understand the stars by staring at them through a telescope.
I think I would look at what type of hacker they are.
Is it someone who knows systems inside and out and enjoys toying with them? Then definitely yes.
Is it a script kiddie who just took someone elses work and capitalized on it? Definitely not.
The issue is not about elitism, it's about attitude, someone who has gone to the effort to learn something and apply it is in a whole different world than someone who is so socially mal-adjusted they feel the need to tweak the latest worm to say "I RULEZ" and sends it back out.
No MS, just a/.ed linux box. If you check, there is really black text on the black background saying:
Warning: Too many connections in/usr/local/plesk/apache/vhosts/backbonemag.com/htt pdocs/php_site/php_news/config/config.php on line 11
Warning: MySQL Connection Failed: Too many connections in/usr/local/plesk/apache/vhosts/backbonemag.com/htt pdocs/php_site/php_news/config/config.php on line 11
Warning: mysql_select_db(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL-Link resource in/usr/local/plesk/apache/vhosts/backbonemag.com/htt pdocs/php_site/php_news/config/config.php on line 18 Could not use database!
Why is it a troll? I didn't mod the comment, but I probably would have, and here's why.
Blogs have come into their own as a news source and this has caused major problems. Where is the accountability? There are very, very few blogs that have even a shred of journalistic integrity. Hell, not many major outlets do nowadays either, but that's another rant. So you come in here saying that Republicans, ostensibly with the blessings of "the party" are going on blogs and posting propaganda. Do you have any proof? I'll say that again nice and clearly.
Do you have any proof?
If you can point me to a blog, list the entry that you claim is made by a Republican as propaganda, and indicate some way to prove that it is what you say it is, I would believe you. But since you just came in here spouting off about how this is happening and everyone who knows anything knows it's happening, don't expect too many people to jump on your bandwagon without at least some evidence.
I am more than willing to be proven wrong, just give me evidence, not accusations.
First off, I'm not going to buy my kid a $900 computer just cuz it's blue and has mouse ears. Now to my actual point.
The nifty blue LCD monitor with the ears with speakers in them was obviously designed by someone who doesn't have a kid in the age range this computer is aiming at. I bought my youngest daughter an old Apple 7500 with a 15" monitor when she was about 18 months old so she could play the Jump Start and Blues Clues games, she is now 4 and has graduated to an iMac so she can play internet games, but that's a whole other subject. The monitor is thouroughly covered with stickers, has been colored on with crayons, and generally beat to hell. This is a nice solid CRT, think of what would have heppened to an LCD, it'd be toast. Moreover, I want to know how they're going to lock it down so the kiddos don't accidentally throw the Windows folder in the trash. Can you imagine having to reinstall and reconfigure it everytime something happens? The joy of that old 7500 was that it ran OS 8 and I could boot from a CD and recopy known good system folders and such over in about 5 min if necessary (and believe me it will be).
I have always seen kids as the perfect computer recyclers, they don't need a 2.6 GHz P4 to play Reader Rabit, even 500 MHz is overkill for most kids in the target age group. You hand your old computers down to them and buy yourself the new stuff. I see this going the way of the Barbie and Hot Wheels PC's that were on sale ever so breifly a while back. I take that back, I bet most of these will go to the grownups who are Disney freaks and would never consider letting a kid use it since it 's a "collectable"
I'm with you. It may happen someday, when people don't know any better (not all advances are for the best).
Somehow a good cigar, a glass of scotch, a pleasant evening on the back patio and a Palm just isn't right. There is something very soul satisfying about holdig a substantial hard back book in your hands that the device I use to remind me of dental appointments and phone numbers will never duplicate.
Ebooks may replace paper books for a lot of applications, but I don't think they will ever fully replace them. I can see the advantages of an encyclopedia that auto-updates every night and can be keyword searchable, but I also enjoy going back and reading entries in 20, 30, even 100 year old encyclopedias just to see the differing treatment of the same subject. I also see the weight advantage, I remember in highschool lugging heave textbooks around and a single 8 1/2" x 11" 2 pound device would have been much nicer, though lets face it, that's going to be a spendy display. Add to that the ability for schools to have up to date textbooks, and you have a significant selling point. On the other hand, with my tinfoil hat firmly in place, paper books make the rewriting and P.C.ing of history a lot harder, do you really want the powers that be able to overwrite our history on a whim and us not have the ability to grab an untainted 50 year old book and say "no, it's not"? Like I say, I see eBooks as a nice addition to the dead tree versions, but I don't think it will ever fully replace it.
Yes it's for squirting (dear lord, who came up with that term?), but it could be for so much more.
The obvious use for wi-fi in a media player is for ease of synchronization. Ideally there would be some sort of signature established during the initial setup tying the Zune to whatever computer it's software is installed on; anytime thereafter if the Zune were on the same wireless network as it's home computer, I should be able to just hit a button and it would synchronize. Hell, you could even have it so that the home system sends out a page every 15 minutes or so and it would synch up the Zune without any user intervention at all.
So yes, the wi-fi capability could be made much more compelling.
It doesn't matter how much the judges know about technology, they know the law.
This is where we go back to the statement "default judgment". Since Spamhaus never bothered to show up in court to contest the charges, the judge had to decide in favor of the plaintif and award them whatever they asked.
Now, what the impact of an American civil judgment is on the directors of a British company, I have no clue. But I'll wager the folks at Spamhaus knew exactly what the impact would be and the decision to blow off the case was an educated one.
to shop at Costco you -have- to have a membership card. Is that ok?
Yes. There are certain stores (Costco, Sams Club, etc.) that require you to have a membership to shop there. If you don't want to be tracked -- don't shop there. The stores that require memberships are few and far between, you are by no means required to shop at them. If however they all start requiring memberships I see a lot more people starting to shop at the mom-and-pop's, altogether not a bad thing.
As for full disclosure; I have a (free) discount card for my local grocery chain because, to me, the money I save is worth it (I don't care what they think my next door neighbor buys). At the same time I don't have a membership to Sam's Club because I did the math once and figured out that it wouldn't be worth it, their base membership is $40 and I can ususally find better prices at other stores if I pay attention.
So, yeah, it's fine if they require you to have a membership to shop there; they just can't require you to be a member.
Yeah, there are a lot of Hary Potter and Star Wars sets out there, but they still make the good stuff. I just bought my 5 year old daughter this at Target to add to her current collection. The only thing that bugs me is that the flat plates aren't part of the standard sets anymore, though you can still buy them directly from lego
Yep, and just wait till you have a leftie who discovered that they can not only move their mouse to the other side of the keyboard, but also switch the buttons. There's a frickin nightmare and a half.
Not that Microsoft is easier to use, but in this case it's certainly no harder.
Easy.
Right-click on the network icon in the system tray then select "Disable". Seems easier to me than having to bring up a console, enter 25 characters, and hit return.
I'm no Microsoft fan but come on, ya gotta pick your battles a little better than this.
Yeah, it really does all depend on utilization of resources. If I am taking up a table for an hour that causes them to not be able to serve five other customers for whatever reason then they definitely do lose money. I don't think that this would be a major problem at your average coffee shop, but a restaurant at an airport might be a completely different story. Let's face it, you don't hear Starbucks complaining, nor has anyone everr given me a hard time for plugging in at one of the airport outlets while I wait for my flight.
In the airport it is probably to their advantage to let people plug in. I know that the last time I traveled with my daughter (3 years old at the time) my laptop and a copy of Finding Nemo kept har and quite a few other kids entertained after our flight had been delayed.
I do remember that guy in Japan being arrested, I can't find the news article offhand, I seem to remember that he just plugged into some building where he had no claim to being a customer. Almost like if someone walked up to my house and plugged into one of my external outlets, I know I'd be pissed on general principle. Feel free to correct me if I'm getting any of the details wrong.
This made me wonder about my laptop.
.3 KWh to charge. I pay about 9 cents/KWh at home for electricity, so a complete charge costs 3 cents.
I have a Compaq 610c that takes 1.5 hours to charge from empty if I'm using it, the power supply requires 125V and 1.6A, this works out to 200W or
My average trip to the coffee shop costs about $1.50 and I'm in there for all of 5 min. If I'm actually planning on being there long enough for a full charge I'd probably have 2 cups and maybe a muffin. As soon as I buy that second cup and the muffin, they more than offset the 3 cents worth of power. Any good store owner will think of this as a reason to keep your customers in the shop, the longer we stay, the more we buy, it's that simple.
The Martian atmosphere is about 1/100th as dense as the earth's. In that case a 200 MPH wind on Mars would feel like a 2 MPH wind on Earth.
Of course that's if all you are being hit with is gas, as soon as the wind picks up sand it's a very different scenario.
I agree...I had the overwhelming feeling that this was EarthSea meets Harry Potter. I can see the pitch to some producer now:
Ged doesn't know he's a wizard, then he goes to Hogwarts and meets Vetch and Herminey and his arch-nemesis Jasper Malfoy. He then does some nifty tricks that will look realy good on screen, maybe something with a hawk or owl. He can then fight off Tygath and his DeathEaters to save the world and everyone lives happily ever after.
I mean come on, this thing was made to cash in on Harry and LOTR, not to actually tell a good story.
nj-69-69-69-69.sta.sprint-hsd.net
OrgName: Sprint DSL Network
OrgID: SDSL
Address: 500 N New York Ave
City: Winter Park
StateProv: FL
PostalCode: 32789
Country: US
So it looks like some Sprint DSL customer in New Jersey has it, unfortunately they don't have a website...yet.
The way the cost of any war is reported has always bothered me.
People say "We have 100,000 troops over there, each one earns an average of $100/day and costs an additional $200 per day in supplies, so the war costs us $30 Million/day. Well no, even if we weren't at war, we'd still have to pay those soldiers. We'd still have to feed them, and drive them around, and let them practice firing their rifles and mortars and tanks. Yes being at war costs more, we fire off more ammo, we use more gas, we mobilize the Reserves which costs more. But don't say that it costs $30 Million/day when we would be spending $20 Million/day in times of peace, in that case the war is only costing an additional $10 Million for the basics. Get back to me when you figure out how much all the stuff we wouldn't have to pay for if these guys were sitting back here at some base in the US costs.
*- Note that I am pulling all these numbers out of deep dark places and are only to be used as examples and not actual costs.
The Lincoln assassination would have been successful if we didn't know the name "John Wilkes Booth". Ditto to Lee Harvey Oswald, Sirhan Sirhan, and James Earl Ray.
Yes, yes, they were all huge conspiracies involving the mafia, Cuba, Russia, the KKK, and an elite band of rebels from Omicron Persei 8. To be a truly successful assassination, the guy who pulled the trigger has to walk away free and clear.
You're on crack, right?
Where I live electricity costs about 11 cents per kWh. My computer draws at max 300 W excluding the monitor which is always off when I'm not sitting there looking at it anyway. If my system were running at full power all day long it would cost me all of 79.2 cents for 7.2 kWh of electricity.
Now in reality when it's just sitting there downloading something, it's in low power mode using minimal processor, no video, and the CD's not spinning. The HD is about the only thing going so I'll ball park it at running at 1/4 power, and that's being generous. So to spend all day downloading whatever while I'm at work or sleeping, or just spending time with my family, it costs all of 19.8 cents per day for 1.8 kWh of electricity. How is this "a lot more electricity" again?
Jenny
Yep, it's commonly referred to as the tragedy of the commons and the Internet is a perfect example.
Amen. I get the newspaper everyday too, I go for the Fry's/Sears/Home Depot ads, my wife goes for OldNavy/Kohls/Kroger, and the kids like the funnies. OK, so my 4 year old just colors them in and doesn't read them, but that's probably the best use for most of them anyway :)
Basically we get the paper *for* the ads. If someone put that many ads into a CD, the thing would go down in flames. We get bombarded by enough ads against our will as it is, I like the ads in the paper because it's easy to compare. Say I want a new thumbdrive, I can put the Fry's ad next to OfficeDepot, next to BestBuy, next to CompUSA. I will immmediately know who is running the best deal, you can't do that with TV and Radio ads.
Newspapers have found a way to stay relevant in an age where they are no longer the best news source, the music industry needs to do the same.
::When did a hero become someone who throws their life away like yesterday's newspaper? A life-long dedication I can see, but not if the life isn't that long.
He didn't say anything about throwing your life away, just being willing to risk it. If nobody had been willing to put themselves on a rickety ass little boat and cross the Atlantic, the only people in America would be the indians (not that that would be a bad thing, but that's another discussion). If nobody had been willing to strap themselves onto a couple of pieces of wood and some canvas and set off down the beach, we wouldn't have airplanes.
Every major step in the course of humanity has involved risk. Peope died trying to cross the oceans, people died trying to create a plane, people died trying to get man in orbit. People die, you learn from their mistakes, and you press on. Your job is not to die in the persuit of the goal, your job is to be the first person to reach the goal. Accept that there will be losses and don't let them be in vain.
We will never truly understand the stars by staring at them through a telescope.
I think I would look at what type of hacker they are.
Is it someone who knows systems inside and out and enjoys toying with them? Then definitely yes.
Is it a script kiddie who just took someone elses work and capitalized on it? Definitely not.
The issue is not about elitism, it's about attitude, someone who has gone to the effort to learn something and apply it is in a whole different world than someone who is so socially mal-adjusted they feel the need to tweak the latest worm to say "I RULEZ" and sends it back out.
No MS, just a /.ed linux box. If you check, there is really black text on the black background saying:
/usr/local/plesk/apache/vhosts/backbonemag.com/htt pdocs/php_site/php_news/config/config.php on line 11
/usr/local/plesk/apache/vhosts/backbonemag.com/htt pdocs/php_site/php_news/config/config.php on line 11
/usr/local/plesk/apache/vhosts/backbonemag.com/htt pdocs/php_site/php_news/config/config.php on line 18
Warning: Too many connections in
Warning: MySQL Connection Failed: Too many connections in
Warning: mysql_select_db(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL-Link resource in
Could not use database!
Reminds me of the NASCAR driver "Fireball" Roberts who died when he wrecked his car and it burst into flames.
I get the feeling that's a name best avoided in the future.
Why is it a troll? I didn't mod the comment, but I probably would have, and here's why.
Blogs have come into their own as a news source and this has caused major problems. Where is the accountability? There are very, very few blogs that have even a shred of journalistic integrity. Hell, not many major outlets do nowadays either, but that's another rant. So you come in here saying that Republicans, ostensibly with the blessings of "the party" are going on blogs and posting propaganda. Do you have any proof? I'll say that again nice and clearly.
Do you have any proof?
If you can point me to a blog, list the entry that you claim is made by a Republican as propaganda, and indicate some way to prove that it is what you say it is, I would believe you. But since you just came in here spouting off about how this is happening and everyone who knows anything knows it's happening, don't expect too many people to jump on your bandwagon without at least some evidence.
I am more than willing to be proven wrong, just give me evidence, not accusations.
First off, I'm not going to buy my kid a $900 computer just cuz it's blue and has mouse ears. Now to my actual point.
The nifty blue LCD monitor with the ears with speakers in them was obviously designed by someone who doesn't have a kid in the age range this computer is aiming at. I bought my youngest daughter an old Apple 7500 with a 15" monitor when she was about 18 months old so she could play the Jump Start and Blues Clues games, she is now 4 and has graduated to an iMac so she can play internet games, but that's a whole other subject. The monitor is thouroughly covered with stickers, has been colored on with crayons, and generally beat to hell. This is a nice solid CRT, think of what would have heppened to an LCD, it'd be toast. Moreover, I want to know how they're going to lock it down so the kiddos don't accidentally throw the Windows folder in the trash. Can you imagine having to reinstall and reconfigure it everytime something happens? The joy of that old 7500 was that it ran OS 8 and I could boot from a CD and recopy known good system folders and such over in about 5 min if necessary (and believe me it will be).
I have always seen kids as the perfect computer recyclers, they don't need a 2.6 GHz P4 to play Reader Rabit, even 500 MHz is overkill for most kids in the target age group. You hand your old computers down to them and buy yourself the new stuff. I see this going the way of the Barbie and Hot Wheels PC's that were on sale ever so breifly a while back. I take that back, I bet most of these will go to the grownups who are Disney freaks and would never consider letting a kid use it since it 's a "collectable"
I'm with you. It may happen someday, when people don't know any better (not all advances are for the best).
Somehow a good cigar, a glass of scotch, a pleasant evening on the back patio and a Palm just isn't right. There is something very soul satisfying about holdig a substantial hard back book in your hands that the device I use to remind me of dental appointments and phone numbers will never duplicate.
Ebooks may replace paper books for a lot of applications, but I don't think they will ever fully replace them. I can see the advantages of an encyclopedia that auto-updates every night and can be keyword searchable, but I also enjoy going back and reading entries in 20, 30, even 100 year old encyclopedias just to see the differing treatment of the same subject. I also see the weight advantage, I remember in highschool lugging heave textbooks around and a single 8 1/2" x 11" 2 pound device would have been much nicer, though lets face it, that's going to be a spendy display. Add to that the ability for schools to have up to date textbooks, and you have a significant selling point. On the other hand, with my tinfoil hat firmly in place, paper books make the rewriting and P.C.ing of history a lot harder, do you really want the powers that be able to overwrite our history on a whim and us not have the ability to grab an untainted 50 year old book and say "no, it's not"? Like I say, I see eBooks as a nice addition to the dead tree versions, but I don't think it will ever fully replace it.