I'm surprised no one has mentioned clustering of computers yet. Sure, no current hard drive --> hard drive transaction will ever flood the full gigabit of bandwidth, but what about CPU --> CPU? In a year or two when Apple's XGrid becomes a standard part of the OS, I'd be happy to have my little network of Macs become a clustered beast.
I've noticed the same effect on me too. Ever since my freshman year of college when I started sleeping within 5 feet of my computer, I can't sleep in a silent room anymore. I NEED to have some kind of white noise in order to sleep properly, so I usually have a fan or two running in my bedroom now.
While it's true that a LOT of people have defected to Adobe InDesign, there are also quite a few shops that still have all of their workflow built around Quark. These shops have been holding back on getting new Mac hardware because a lot of the new stuff can't boot into OS 9. Now we have a native version of Quark in one week, plus the much-rumored announcement in two weeks of PPC 970-based Macs at WWDC, and suddenly we have quite a bit of pent-up hardware demand combined with some compelling new hardware. Looks like a good sales summer for Apple.
A mouse with a rotary dial on it could be an excellent peripheral for a digital hub computer if they pull it off well. This would make scrubbing forward and backwards through video or audio clips during editing a breeze.
Beyond rotating, you can also deflect the discs left/right or up/down for scrolling purposes. Being able to easily scroll in BOTH directions (not just up/down) would be a great feature for editing large photos.
We're only one step away from a functional Mr. Fusion!
In case Freecache gets oveloaded, here's a Freecache link to Freeca... errr... hmmmm....
I'm surprised no one has mentioned clustering of computers yet. Sure, no current hard drive --> hard drive transaction will ever flood the full gigabit of bandwidth, but what about CPU --> CPU? In a year or two when Apple's XGrid becomes a standard part of the OS, I'd be happy to have my little network of Macs become a clustered beast.
I've noticed the same effect on me too. Ever since my freshman year of college when I started sleeping within 5 feet of my computer, I can't sleep in a silent room anymore. I NEED to have some kind of white noise in order to sleep properly, so I usually have a fan or two running in my bedroom now.
River Bed
You are in a deep river bed with high cliffs. The passage continues to the east and west.
It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a Grue.
Hmmm... I have a two thousand year old d20 that I want to liquidate. The auction folks think it'll fetch about $6000. How can I get more than that?
What if I can manage to get it mentioned on a news site for nerds where thousands of gamers will read about it? Wow! Slashdot ahoy!
It's also roughly the plot of 1983's Blue Thunder with good ol' Roy Scheider.
While it's true that a LOT of people have defected to Adobe InDesign, there are also quite a few shops that still have all of their workflow built around Quark. These shops have been holding back on getting new Mac hardware because a lot of the new stuff can't boot into OS 9. Now we have a native version of Quark in one week, plus the much-rumored announcement in two weeks of PPC 970-based Macs at WWDC, and suddenly we have quite a bit of pent-up hardware demand combined with some compelling new hardware. Looks like a good sales summer for Apple.
A mouse with a rotary dial on it could be an excellent peripheral for a digital hub computer if they pull it off well. This would make scrubbing forward and backwards through video or audio clips during editing a breeze.
Beyond rotating, you can also deflect the discs left/right or up/down for scrolling purposes. Being able to easily scroll in BOTH directions (not just up/down) would be a great feature for editing large photos.
Sosumi
Ask again later
There is a version for Mac OS X, but not for Classic. Check out www.macgamefiles.com