Well, I usually drive with friends, and have music on, so there's no contest for me. I've drove stick during driving classes but that was pretty much it.
What upsets me the most is that if I legally purchase windows for my computer I am limited on how much I can upgrade,
No, you're not. People who legally purchase Windows are allowed all updates, and you can upgrade your computer as you wish. You may have to reactivate it.
The library of Congress contains over 10 terabytes of information (a 1 with 13 zeroes after it). If you used Light Peak technology operating at 10 billion bits per second it would take you only 17 minutes to transfer the complete library of Congress.
If you can transfer 1 LoC in 17 minutes, then you can transfer 0.000108243216 LoCs per second.
Since the Blu-Ray movies can be transferred in less than 30 seconds, the size of the Blu-Ray movie is anywhere from 0.000108243216 LoCs, or (30 * 0.000108243216), that is, 0.09417159792 libraries of congress.
The last 7 install I did had a bug that made it very, very slow to install, so I can't really give you solid numbers. However 30 minutes is unusually high for a machine like yours, so I suspect you suffer from the same bug. I've seen people on laptops with specs lower than my desktop machine, and their install was done much faster than that.
Considering the software I install is mainly composed of stuff that's already on the CD, and that Windows is several GBs more than Ubuntu, yes, it's pretty much similar.
I'm not sure if you're talking about the Ubuntu ones or the Windows ones, but both of them take under 20 minutes to complete on a relatively recent computer for me.
Cool story bro. I'm talking about Ubuntu, though. And just like you didn't seem to have any bad experiences with Mandriva, I never really had a bad experience with XP (or non-upgrade installs of Ubuntu for that matter). Both of them last about 20 minutes.
Just read my other reply.. people are so anal about things.
Just read my other reply, durr.
Perhaps wasting time wasn't the right term to use. Getting rid of an annoyance would be more appropriate.
Well, I usually drive with friends, and have music on, so there's no contest for me. I've drove stick during driving classes but that was pretty much it.
Because then no one would live in Australia.
They want an efficient car, but they still don't want to waste their time shifting. They give up on efficiency so that they can skip on a boring task.
What upsets me the most is that if I legally purchase windows for my computer I am limited on how much I can upgrade,
No, you're not. People who legally purchase Windows are allowed all updates, and you can upgrade your computer as you wish. You may have to reactivate it.
No one uses Freenet. It's too slow for regular usage, and the last thing I want to do is to wait 30 mins to find out a leak didn't interest me anyway.
Setting up a torrent tracker would be a much better idea.
If you have friends that can bring their own alcohol and buy their share of pizza, $0?
Then you'd have the exact same problem as above once all browsers reach 100.
Depends on the ASIMO road map, really...
But that's not sudo doing that. Whatever pops up that box ends up using sudo to up your privileges, though.
both work, dipshit.
Thanks man.
Any instructions on how to build a local mirror?
Do you want to game? [Simple] [Advanced]
I'm not sure you're aware, but the simpsons aren't real!
Or you could, you know, use a non-obsolete version of Windows that doesn't require a reboot every system and driver update.
XP came out in 2001. A lot has changed since then.
The library of Congress contains over 10 terabytes of information (a 1 with 13 zeroes after it). If you used Light Peak technology operating at 10 billion bits per second it would take you only 17 minutes to transfer the complete library of Congress.
If you can transfer 1 LoC in 17 minutes, then you can transfer 0.000108243216 LoCs per second.
Since the Blu-Ray movies can be transferred in less than 30 seconds, the size of the Blu-Ray movie is anywhere from 0.000108243216 LoCs, or (30 * 0.000108243216), that is, 0.09417159792 libraries of congress.
I'm not sure if this was supposed to be a joke or an insult, but no, it was Ubuntu 9.04, with three of us running laptops.
The last 7 install I did had a bug that made it very, very slow to install, so I can't really give you solid numbers. However 30 minutes is unusually high for a machine like yours, so I suspect you suffer from the same bug. I've seen people on laptops with specs lower than my desktop machine, and their install was done much faster than that.
Considering the software I install is mainly composed of stuff that's already on the CD, and that Windows is several GBs more than Ubuntu, yes, it's pretty much similar.
I'm not sure if you're talking about the Ubuntu ones or the Windows ones, but both of them take under 20 minutes to complete on a relatively recent computer for me.
Cool story bro. I'm talking about Ubuntu, though. And just like you didn't seem to have any bad experiences with Mandriva, I never really had a bad experience with XP (or non-upgrade installs of Ubuntu for that matter). Both of them last about 20 minutes.
Sure, associate me with the stereotype in your reply because I used the only possible way I could've used to express an idea. Good one!
But sadly for you, I mean it. And I don't see it in posts shunning on the practice either.