The images dont show it well but there are six plugs for standard connectors (they dont how in the photo of the black model) and four plugs for blocks over top of them (the dark grey in the photo at fellowes), an easy to reach/operate on off switch (you can even get one with a remote foot switch). The mount nicley. Some models have phone and coax, yadda yadda yadda.
Don't forget having to create a view everytime you want to hit more than one datasource. CR does't let you hit more than one DS, doesn't let you use Oracle user defined functions. It's seems there are far more things it doesn't do than it does. Oh and you want to schedule a report to run and save data guess what, you'll need Seagate Info also (big bucks) and you can't even run it on the same machine as the Crystal Web Server, so be ready to buy an additional machine. There is also poor interoperability between versions (Crystal 8 Reports don't run under the current version).
Shouldn't that be: Microsoft will buy/steal a third party's software and rebrand it as theirs adding only "Office Integration" (Visio/SQLServer/Any other product of theirs). Dell will use name brand components but rebrand it as theirs (The AMI MegaRAID they rebrand as the Dell PERC 2/SC comes to mind). And Unisys will mark it up 3-4x times for the identical OEM components and ensure that if you have to replace any 2 parts in the system you have exceeded the cost of the original system (A few years back the tape drive in a U6000-200 cost $6,500 to replace, the whole system itself was $13,000 new). The real question is considering the reputations of these three is who will get to put their name the biggest on the final product.
But you have to plug a Lite Brite in. If nothing else this could be the 21st Century self illuminating Lite Brite. Think they can get it onto the market before Dec 25?
Time for encrypting HD Controllers?
on
Laptop Lojack?
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· Score: 1
It seems a good solution would be for someone to come up with a HD controller with GPS/lojack integrated. The controller uses very strong encryption so that the disk by itself if unreadable and the controller must receive a GPS signal and send out a lojack beacon signal before it will spin up the drive. Would add a heck of a delay to boot up and wouldn't work in tunnels/undergroung/etc but would give more security than they have now. Of course any encryption can be bypassed eventually. (Perhaps explosives embeded in the drive so it goes poof is you use another controller to access it).
Actually this makes teaching 6.1 installation make more sense. In very loose generalities by the time the sucessor to a piece of software is announced the bugs in the older version are pretty well known (and in the case of linux, usually fixed). This gives the opprotunity to teach installing the fixes as part of installing a new system.
Re:Clue impaired mac-people
on
Rack An iMac
·
· Score: 1
Lets see bottom end iMac is $999, bottom end G4 is $1,599 (prices are from http://www.apple.com/store) factor in rack mount case price, your time, and the fact that you've blown your warrant to hell. Seems to me in the long run the G4 is a better value. Especially when you consider that's going from a 350MHz in the G3 to a 400MHz G4 and a 6GB disk to 10GB disk.
This filing from Wednesday seems to have the exact same verbage as the filing from Nov 13, 2000 and Be has annoucedsome good things since then
http://biz.yahoo.com/e/l/b/beos.html
The music industry has given up on making it impossible to copy music and decided to go for making music no one would want to copy.
"Charley Pride: A Tribute to Jim Reeves"
*pah* I scoff at your puny 6 plus strip check out the Fellowes model my wife and I use:
o de =A21D&page=3
C =2 51810
http://www.fellowes.com/Product/main.cfm?groupC
available from CDW at:
http://www.cdw.com/shop/products/default.asp?ED
The images dont show it well but there are six plugs for standard connectors (they dont how in the photo of the black model) and four plugs for blocks over top of them (the dark grey in the photo at fellowes), an easy to reach/operate on off switch (you can even get one with a remote foot switch). The mount nicley. Some models have phone and coax, yadda yadda yadda.
Gee DB2 doesn't count as one of the "Big" Databases? C'mon it even runs on Linux.
Don't forget having to create a view everytime you want to hit more than one datasource. CR does't let you hit more than one DS, doesn't let you use Oracle user defined functions. It's seems there are far more things it doesn't do than it does. Oh and you want to schedule a report to run and save data guess what, you'll need Seagate Info also (big bucks) and you can't even run it on the same machine as the Crystal Web Server, so be ready to buy an additional machine. There is also poor interoperability between versions (Crystal 8 Reports don't run under the current version).
Shouldn't that be: Microsoft will buy/steal a third party's software and rebrand it as theirs adding only "Office Integration" (Visio/SQLServer/Any other product of theirs). Dell will use name brand components but rebrand it as theirs (The AMI MegaRAID they rebrand as the Dell PERC 2/SC comes to mind). And Unisys will mark it up 3-4x times for the identical OEM components and ensure that if you have to replace any 2 parts in the system you have exceeded the cost of the original system (A few years back the tape drive in a U6000-200 cost $6,500 to replace, the whole system itself was $13,000 new). The real question is considering the reputations of these three is who will get to put their name the biggest on the final product.
Shouldn't that be P and not D?
But you have to plug a Lite Brite in. If nothing else this could be the 21st Century self illuminating Lite Brite. Think they can get it onto the market before Dec 25?
It seems a good solution would be for someone to come up with a HD controller with GPS/lojack integrated. The controller uses very strong encryption so that the disk by itself if unreadable and the controller must receive a GPS signal and send out a lojack beacon signal before it will spin up the drive. Would add a heck of a delay to boot up and wouldn't work in tunnels/undergroung/etc but would give more security than they have now. Of course any encryption can be bypassed eventually. (Perhaps explosives embeded in the drive so it goes poof is you use another controller to access it).
Actually this makes teaching 6.1 installation make more sense. In very loose generalities by the time the sucessor to a piece of software is announced the bugs in the older version are pretty well known (and in the case of linux, usually fixed). This gives the opprotunity to teach installing the fixes as part of installing a new system.
Lets see bottom end iMac is $999, bottom end G4 is $1,599 (prices are from http://www.apple.com/store) factor in rack mount case price, your time, and the fact that you've blown your warrant to hell. Seems to me in the long run the G4 is a better value. Especially when you consider that's going from a 350MHz in the G3 to a 400MHz G4 and a 6GB disk to 10GB disk.
>What resolutions do these monitors use?
Follow the link young grasshopper. First paragraph of the ee times story 1,920 x 1,200.
Create a tmp directory inside your home directory to fix lynx.