I signed in right before the sale started, and clicked "buy it now" as soon as they dropped the price. This took me to a sign-in screen again, and as after signing in again, the next page timed out.
After about 20 minutes of hitting reload to try to get the payment page to load, the listing was removed. Then I moved on to the 32GB version; when I tried to buy it, it would give me a database error every time I tried to buy one. If I hit refresh on the listing, I could see the number go up on the purchase history, so other people were buying them, it just wouldn't let me.
Finally, after about 45 minutes, I managed to get through to the check out, and went all the way through the checkout process with Paypal, only to have it tell me the item was no longer available on the last screen, after I'd already confirmed everything.
Now it doesn't even do anything when I click "buy it now" or "ad to cart."
Ahh, I didn't realize that's what a heatpipe was. I always thought that kind of cooling was called "phase change" cooling. Thank you for for shedding light on the darkness of my ignorance.:)
And d'oh to me for not thinking to consult the oracle before I posted that comment.
Does this hollow copper pipe, with grooved edges coated with sintered copper, actually conduct heat better than a solid copper pipe? Or transfer it to the fins better?
Or is it simply a cost-cutting measure?
"Or can I now truck all this stuff down to recycling without a twinge of guilt?"
Nonono. Ebay.
Also, just because a game will run in Dosbox doesn't mean that it'll satisfy your nostalgia. I've recently learned that the music in Tyrian sounds like crap in Dosbox (and the music in OpenTyrian sounds like crap on a modern soundcard), nothing at all like it sounded on my Awe32. Ditto for Dune 2 and my PAS16.
As a current HP bastard (who didn't post this, BTW), this pissed me off. We've endured pay cuts, benefit cuts, no raises, mass firings, hell, my local office can't even purchase paper plates & disposable spoons, and somehow there's enough money to purchase another company.
Obviously you don't work in sales. When I left because I hadn't gotten a raise in four years and they were slashing my tuition benefits, they were offering used JAGUARS from the sales fleet on the portal.
I wish you the best of luck in finding greener pastures.
Come up with a system that somehow deterministically transmutates the name of the site or item you're making a password for into something else. For example, a password for Key Bank might be "K3y_b@nk-banking_site" or something like that. Bingo: strong password that's unique to that site, and easy to remember as long as you're consistent. Just don't tell anyone your pattern.
Of course, consistency is difficult when some sites don't allow passwords longer than eight characters, some don't allow special characters, and so on.
Interesting article. More of an editorial than a review, but it was thought-provoking, even if it does seem like it's wasted on the book that the editorial is about. However, that is not what I'm commenting about....
"The seller now has to sell their own cameras for $60 to stay competitive, so they are worse off by at most $20 -- however, if they voluntarily switch to some other business, then they'll be better off than they were when they were selling cameras for $60, and therefore worse off by some amount less than $20 from their original position."
This line made me want to argue with the internet. In addition to all the humanist and environmental considerations brought into play elsewhere in the comments, I think this argument is simply an oversimplification. The problem with cramming complex issues into nice little premise-sized chunks is that they don't always fit. This statement assumes that the American company is -capable- of selling cameras for $60 or switching to some other business, and completely ignores whatever damage might be done to the system by the American company going out of business (now the employees of the American company have $0 to spend on anything). I'm not saying I believe in protectionism, just highlighting what I perceive to be the flaw in the argument.
It's been years since I took a logic class and I almost thought about getting this book to refresh myself, but I think I'm going to pass on it. I think I would pop too many blood vessels upon reading it. You can't answer questions or solve problems with logic -- it is a filter to ensure that solutions are correct, not a solution itself.
Not a kilometer? :)
trying to figure out what this had to do with West Point, before I realized USMA here is an acronym for "U.S. Metric Association."
Ebay melted under the load.
I signed in right before the sale started, and clicked "buy it now" as soon as they dropped the price. This took me to a sign-in screen again, and as after signing in again, the next page timed out.
After about 20 minutes of hitting reload to try to get the payment page to load, the listing was removed. Then I moved on to the 32GB version; when I tried to buy it, it would give me a database error every time I tried to buy one. If I hit refresh on the listing, I could see the number go up on the purchase history, so other people were buying them, it just wouldn't let me.
Finally, after about 45 minutes, I managed to get through to the check out, and went all the way through the checkout process with Paypal, only to have it tell me the item was no longer available on the last screen, after I'd already confirmed everything.
Now it doesn't even do anything when I click "buy it now" or "ad to cart."
Lame.
Ahh, I didn't realize that's what a heatpipe was. I always thought that kind of cooling was called "phase change" cooling. Thank you for for shedding light on the darkness of my ignorance. :)
And d'oh to me for not thinking to consult the oracle before I posted that comment.
Does this hollow copper pipe, with grooved edges coated with sintered copper, actually conduct heat better than a solid copper pipe? Or transfer it to the fins better? Or is it simply a cost-cutting measure?
"Or can I now truck all this stuff down to recycling without a twinge of guilt?" Nonono. Ebay. Also, just because a game will run in Dosbox doesn't mean that it'll satisfy your nostalgia. I've recently learned that the music in Tyrian sounds like crap in Dosbox (and the music in OpenTyrian sounds like crap on a modern soundcard), nothing at all like it sounded on my Awe32. Ditto for Dune 2 and my PAS16.
As a current HP bastard (who didn't post this, BTW), this pissed me off. We've endured pay cuts, benefit cuts, no raises, mass firings, hell, my local office can't even purchase paper plates & disposable spoons, and somehow there's enough money to purchase another company.
Obviously you don't work in sales. When I left because I hadn't gotten a raise in four years and they were slashing my tuition benefits, they were offering used JAGUARS from the sales fleet on the portal.
I wish you the best of luck in finding greener pastures.
Come up with a system that somehow deterministically transmutates the name of the site or item you're making a password for into something else. For example, a password for Key Bank might be "K3y_b@nk-banking_site" or something like that. Bingo: strong password that's unique to that site, and easy to remember as long as you're consistent. Just don't tell anyone your pattern.
Of course, consistency is difficult when some sites don't allow passwords longer than eight characters, some don't allow special characters, and so on.
Interesting article. More of an editorial than a review, but it was thought-provoking, even if it does seem like it's wasted on the book that the editorial is about. However, that is not what I'm commenting about....
"The seller now has to sell their own cameras for $60 to stay competitive, so they are worse off by at most $20 -- however, if they voluntarily switch to some other business, then they'll be better off than they were when they were selling cameras for $60, and therefore worse off by some amount less than $20 from their original position."
This line made me want to argue with the internet. In addition to all the humanist and environmental considerations brought into play elsewhere in the comments, I think this argument is simply an oversimplification. The problem with cramming complex issues into nice little premise-sized chunks is that they don't always fit. This statement assumes that the American company is -capable- of selling cameras for $60 or switching to some other business, and completely ignores whatever damage might be done to the system by the American company going out of business (now the employees of the American company have $0 to spend on anything). I'm not saying I believe in protectionism, just highlighting what I perceive to be the flaw in the argument.
It's been years since I took a logic class and I almost thought about getting this book to refresh myself, but I think I'm going to pass on it. I think I would pop too many blood vessels upon reading it. You can't answer questions or solve problems with logic -- it is a filter to ensure that solutions are correct, not a solution itself.