Either dual-link or more literally as I mentioned we were doing: two connectors. They could just use both connectors from the non-Crossfire card to connect to the Crossfire card, giving you 1920x1200@100Hz.
Take a peek at high end nVidia cards, and it's a different story. Dual-link DVI with both ports combined you can push it to 3840x2400. I believe that to be at 60Hz, but don't quote me. We've got a FX3000 running at that at 15Hz.
No *way* was it left out due to size. I've got a Sandisk MP3 player that's got a built in radio and it's not exactly bulky. Admittedly it'd be less bulky if it didn't use a AAA battery, but I'll gladly live with that compromise.
Why can't a record company make money at 50 ukp a song? Let's assume they sell it as a 256kbit compressed download. Assume just less than an hour for the album and that's 100 Mbytes.
That's just not a lot for something with a cost of around 5 quid.
I think you're wrong to worry too much about the LCD. Pick a cheap ass video camera, and it has an LCD viewfinder with a roughly 200000 pixel screen. Bump that to 300k and you've got 640x480.
The VR headsets you can buy from people like virtalis go up to 1280x1024, and at the cheap end have stuff like a 800x600 0.49inch screen.
And your IBM calculation was off, as that's a 23" diagonal. The one I've got here is 19" across which gives 200ppi.
I'm not sure you couldn't knock something off reasonably cheaply.
I guess it depends at what stage and how your DNA is damaged. There's no reason why the DNA in your whole body has to be identical, nor is it necessarily a fault of the DNA. It could be a fault in how the DNA was activated.
You're wrong. Somewhere during he install you told it to format those hard disks. I've used mandrake since the early days, and it's never been that stupid.
No. If you thought of the idea before, but didn't patent it, then it would be a trade secret. You have a choice, either you put the information in the public domain by filing for a patent application (thus gaining protection) or you keep your information to yourself and have no such protection.
Patents were created to encourage information disclosure by providing benefits to those who did. If you fail to submit a patent application and someone else comes up with the same idea later, you have no rights. You'd be able to hinder them from getting a patent granted, but that's about it.
If you had a 1% slip at 4000rpm, then you'd be looking at your clutch plate grinding away at 40rpm. That ain't gonna last long as I see it. Do you know how much heat that'd generate?
As for gears slipping, that sounds wrong to me, but I'll bail at at this point as IANAM.
I don't buy it. A fully engaged clutch that's slipping? Doesn't sound good. Also engine braking will put far less stress on a clutch that hells bells acceleration with your right foot.
And it's becoming less of a problem than it used to be, thanks to much better disk brakes than in times of old. Unless you're a yank of course, in which case they seem to put the widdiest little disks invented on their big F150s...
I think you're very wrong on the duplexer front. The one thing my dad loves about his HP inkjet is the duplexer, as it avoids wasting paper and gives you a much smaller volume of paperwork to file (as he trusts paper for archiving).
Although a lot of ISPs shovel all your data through a transparent proxy, so you can just get the web proxy to dump the data. We are, after all, only talking about web traffic with this story aren't we?
You're quite right. It's probably easier just handling this with pam, as then the person at the other end doesn't know that they've been blocked, so will waste effort against an unbeatable login prompt.
That would be sound advice, were it not for the fact that just about any motherboard you can buy today has 2 or 4 usb connectors soldered onto the back edge of the board...
Although it'd be even neater as:
rpm -e $(rpm -qa *nautilus*)
For most things there's another way around it though that avoids substrings. The previous:
;)
rm -f $(find . -name "*.o")
could have been reworded as
find . -name "*.o" -exec rm -f {} \;
rm does get called a little excessively I'll concede...
As for that rpm -e $(rpm -qa | grep nautilus)
That's sort of my point. The basis of UK law is that you don't have individual rights. You don't even get to really own property.
But at the end of the day I don't think we're any worse off for it.
And you actually believe this? You really believe that I'm worse off in the UK just because the US system is based on an individual's rights?
I think the US obsesses about the roots of its government.
Either dual-link or more literally as I mentioned we were doing: two connectors. They could just use both connectors from the non-Crossfire card to connect to the Crossfire card, giving you 1920x1200@100Hz.
Take a peek at high end nVidia cards, and it's a different story. Dual-link DVI with both ports combined you can push it to 3840x2400. I believe that to be at 60Hz, but don't quote me. We've got a FX3000 running at that at 15Hz.
I've seen a shuffle, and they are indeed diminutive. But the free radios you'd get in cornflake packets years ago were a similar size.
A friend of mine owns all the iPods, and from what he saya, the shuffle actually sounds the best of the lot...
Which strikes me as a little odd.
No *way* was it left out due to size. I've got a Sandisk MP3 player that's got a built in radio and it's not exactly bulky. Admittedly it'd be less bulky if it didn't use a AAA battery, but I'll gladly live with that compromise.
An in built mode to zoom web pages making it resolution independent. Means that you can actually see a web page sensibly on a high res display.
Why can't a record company make money at 50 ukp a song? Let's assume they sell it as a 256kbit compressed download. Assume just less than an hour for the album and that's 100 Mbytes.
That's just not a lot for something with a cost of around 5 quid.
Streaming radio stations seem to cope...
I think you're wrong to worry too much about the LCD. Pick a cheap ass video camera, and it has an LCD viewfinder with a roughly 200000 pixel screen. Bump that to 300k and you've got 640x480.
The VR headsets you can buy from people like virtalis go up to 1280x1024, and at the cheap end have stuff like a 800x600 0.49inch screen.
And your IBM calculation was off, as that's a 23" diagonal. The one I've got here is 19" across which gives 200ppi.
I'm not sure you couldn't knock something off reasonably cheaply.
Optical has one benefit though for people who can't be bothered to fight with their setup.
Immune to ground loops
I guess it depends at what stage and how your DNA is damaged. There's no reason why the DNA in your whole body has to be identical, nor is it necessarily a fault of the DNA. It could be a fault in how the DNA was activated.
My god, $6 billon of us. Do you really rate our lives as being worth so little? Bloody capitalist pig.
You're wrong. Somewhere during he install you told it to format those hard disks. I've used mandrake since the early days, and it's never been that stupid.
No. If you thought of the idea before, but didn't patent it, then it would be a trade secret. You have a choice, either you put the information in the public domain by filing for a patent application (thus gaining protection) or you keep your information to yourself and have no such protection.
Patents were created to encourage information disclosure by providing benefits to those who did. If you fail to submit a patent application and someone else comes up with the same idea later, you have no rights. You'd be able to hinder them from getting a patent granted, but that's about it.
You're right, although that only goes to confuse people when they get a NullPointerException...
Poor wording I feel.
That could explain the crap in the top 40 these days
If you had a 1% slip at 4000rpm, then you'd be looking at your clutch plate grinding away at 40rpm. That ain't gonna last long as I see it. Do you know how much heat that'd generate?
As for gears slipping, that sounds wrong to me, but I'll bail at at this point as IANAM.
I don't buy it. A fully engaged clutch that's slipping? Doesn't sound good. Also engine braking will put far less stress on a clutch that hells bells acceleration with your right foot.
And it's becoming less of a problem than it used to be, thanks to much better disk brakes than in times of old. Unless you're a yank of course, in which case they seem to put the widdiest little disks invented on their big F150s...
I think you're very wrong on the duplexer front. The one thing my dad loves about his HP inkjet is the duplexer, as it avoids wasting paper and gives you a much smaller volume of paperwork to file (as he trusts paper for archiving).
Although a lot of ISPs shovel all your data through a transparent proxy, so you can just get the web proxy to dump the data. We are, after all, only talking about web traffic with this story aren't we?
You're quite right. It's probably easier just handling this with pam, as then the person at the other end doesn't know that they've been blocked, so will waste effort against an unbeatable login prompt.
Trusted Software could be allowed to run on TS VirtualPC on TH mac though couldn't it?
That would be sound advice, were it not for the fact that just about any motherboard you can buy today has 2 or 4 usb connectors soldered onto the back edge of the board...