I'm not sure, but it's probably the blue laser that the high-def formats use. It's a shorter wavelength laser than normal DVD or CD lasers, so it would take more power to create the beam.
I can't see that taking more power than the 100% CPU needed to actually display the movie, or the LCD's power drain, though...
Read the links.
Especially the first one.
18:47:00 uninterrupted videos of exploding jello
18:47:45 first evidence of hijacked route propagating in Asia, AS path 3491 17557
18:48:00 several big trans-Pacific providers carrying hijacked route (9 ASNs)
18:48:30 several DFZ providers now carrying the bad route (and 47 ASNs)
18:49:00 most of the DFZ now carrying the bad route (and 93 ASNs)
18:49:30 all providers who will carry the hijacked route have it (total 97 ASNs)
20:07:25 YouTube, AS 36561 advertises the/24 that has been hijacked to its providers 1 hour, 20 minutes. Or, if you want, 80.
Read the license. You can. You just can't use it in a production environment.
I'm not sure, but it's probably the blue laser that the high-def formats use. It's a shorter wavelength laser than normal DVD or CD lasers, so it would take more power to create the beam. I can't see that taking more power than the 100% CPU needed to actually display the movie, or the LCD's power drain, though...
Leaked material, by definition, need to be authentic documents. If they're not, it's not leaked material-it's falsified trash.