I have to agree with this. I live in Norway and I have 3 MD players - one in my stereo (I use it for recording, mostly), one in my car (MDs fit in the elbow rest - no need to have CDs scattered all over the car) and one walkman for travelling. It and a thick book are excellent companions on long plane trips. I have gone through 2 walkmen before then one i have now - it is the smallest Sony I could find. Most of my friends have MD walkmen and love them.
As for being able to find prerecorded MDs, there are a few to be found, but not a lot. Most people record their own. One has to keep in mind that like the cassette, the MD is used so that people can create their own "best of" collections with the tracks they like at the moment.
That would be a *switch* implements layer 2 functionality, and beginning to implement layer 3 functionality. A popular definition is that a Layer 3 switch is a router that routes more than 1.5 million PPS (packets per second). Another is that a Layer 3 switch is a router that routes in hardware instead of software. Now, the main issue here is that you really need both: a layer 2 device creates collision domains, while a layer 3 device lets traffic flow between subnets. Okay, this is a HUGE generalization, but hopefully you get the idea.
I have to agree with this. I live in Norway and I have 3 MD players - one in my stereo (I use it for recording, mostly), one in my car (MDs fit in the elbow rest - no need to have CDs scattered all over the car) and one walkman for travelling. It and a thick book are excellent companions on long plane trips. I have gone through 2 walkmen before then one i have now - it is the smallest Sony I could find. Most of my friends have MD walkmen and love them.
As for being able to find prerecorded MDs, there are a few to be found, but not a lot. Most people record their own. One has to keep in mind that like the cassette, the MD is used so that people can create their own "best of" collections with the tracks they like at the moment.
That would be a *switch* implements layer 2 functionality, and beginning to implement layer 3 functionality. A popular definition is that a Layer 3 switch is a router that routes more than 1.5 million PPS (packets per second). Another is that a Layer 3 switch is a router that routes in hardware instead of software. Now, the main issue here is that you really need both: a layer 2 device creates collision domains, while a layer 3 device lets traffic flow between subnets. Okay, this is a HUGE generalization, but hopefully you get the idea.
What happens if someone brings out a PSX2 disc that enables you to connect to an ASP from home? Do you really need a computer at home then?