Buy from Polywell Systems. They provide the actual Windows disks, with their pretty holograms and paper-thin manual and all that.
They also provide a floppy disk that you can use to recover your system to its as-shipped configuration. What they do is put a hidden file containing the original C drive image in the D drive. In my case it only takes 1.5 GB out of my drive, which is much better than taking 10+GB. They also give you instructions for creating additional C drive images using the ghost utility.
Unfortunately, online ordering from them isn't the best, but still, for what you get, it's probably worth the annoyance.
BTW: If you want Linux, or even Solaris (!), they do that too.
Three point one four one five nine two six... Oh, I've just been handed a note from our program director that we are to be preempted permanently by Loveline. This is John Doe signing off.
Wrong. They use Slashdot.
P.S. the editors will be punished by GOD for their actions...
Just.
Shut.
UP.
roquefort.co.uk
Too bad the Principa Mathmatica is prior art...
Little do you know Cthulu created the entire "Proclaimation of the Red Dragon" with a single breath...
Slashdot is tot.
Erinnern Sie sich, wenn Sie Kommentar moderieren, Sie fördern Terrorismus!
So CmdrTaco = God?
Don't make me laugh.
Slashdot is tot. Auf weidershen, mein Slashdot.
Slashdot ist tot. Auf weidershen.
Let's see... signs 23, 35, and 11... and # 12 is "Hulk Hogan rejoins the WWF"... looks like the end is near to me...
RMS just said something that actually sounds reasonable!
Let me check... ah yes, "Sign no. 23 of the imminent Apocalypse."
s/filesystem/file manager/
Then it makes more sense.
While true, you sort of missed the point. YOU HAVE THE WINDOWS CD, so you really don't need the recovery disk at all if you don't want to use it.
Bootable CDs are no problem. It's trying to fit 10GB on a 650MB device that's the problem.
Buy from Polywell Systems. They provide the actual Windows disks, with their pretty holograms and paper-thin manual and all that.
They also provide a floppy disk that you can use to recover your system to its as-shipped configuration. What they do is put a hidden file containing the original C drive image in the D drive. In my case it only takes 1.5 GB out of my drive, which is much better than taking 10+GB. They also give you instructions for creating additional C drive images using the ghost utility.
Unfortunately, online ordering from them isn't the best, but still, for what you get, it's probably worth the annoyance.
BTW: If you want Linux, or even Solaris (!), they do that too.
Absolutely nothing. It still isn't better than Windows XP home edition.
Another KDE release. Woo hoo.
So, is it as easy to use as Windows XP Home Edition yet? If not, I'm not buying. And neither will 265 million other computer users.
It's the truth. No moderation can change that.
I pick C: Wuss.
If you don't like the service, DON'T USE IT!
Dumbasses.
no text necessary
0.0.1 should be stable enough for you now.
Guaranteed. They've been predicting this kind of distributed computing is 10 years away for 20 years, at least, and guess what? Still 10 years away!
Time to give up and focus on writing easy-to-use secure systems that DON'T CRASH!
No, that is not the transcript.
The transcript reads like this:
Three point one four one five nine two six... Oh, I've just been handed a note from our program director that we are to be preempted permanently by Loveline. This is John Doe signing off.
What happens if you disable Autoplay, then run CDPLAY.EXE?
Even lamer than Apple Records?
"We'll give anybody who asks a contract." Riiiight.