Enterprise Desktop was recently announced by VMware it sounds closer to what you are looking for?
Enterprise Desktop Products
Support the needs of a global workforce by providing virtualized computing environments to enterprise employees, partners, and customers to secure access and manage resources. Provide a full PC experience without compromising security or hampering users. Improve desktop manageability, security, and mobility by apply virtualization technologies to client PCs and the data center for server hosted desktops.
"The reason for this move, which Oracle executives later declined to provide any real detail on, is that Red Hat isn't doing a good enough job of providing that support itself, Ellison said. 'Red Hat is too small and does not do a very good job of supporting them [customers],' he said."
has been reported from Suntang (google cache), however it can be difficult to find out information from them as their website is almost always down and they never reply to email: office@suntang.com. They primarly install Linux based thin client systems around China, and have moved development over to supporting Windows and concepts like VDSA (the Virtual Disk System Architecture) and Virtual Hard Drive Technology.
They are not flash though, the solid state storage devices use banks of DIMMS with backup batteries and hard drives to save state when power failure occurs.
Flash isn't a terribly fast medium either, hence all the marketing over 12x, 20x, 50x compact flash cards in the digital camera market.
How about real educational prices and technology?
on
The $899 Educational iMac
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· Score: 2, Interesting
The popularity of the LTSP is showing that Apples high priced eMac machines, even with high discounts aren't really the best solution. Why doesn't Apple really make an advance in the world and release a $299 17" thin client Emac ($399 19", $549 20") and appropriate upgrades to Mac OS X server to support a significantly more cost efficient and easier to manage configuration for schools and groups.
... developers get together and concentrate on communication rather than just development. Project leader Theo de Raadt was quoted as saying 'I don't think anybody else does this, developers suspend their lives for a week to focus entirely on just development.'"
How can you quote one sentence and incorrectly interpret it at the same time?
The Korean slice of the Web is relatively small compared to the English-language chunks of cyberspace. Koreans often come up short when trying to find information in their native tongue.
To remedy the situation, Naver -- which is more like a Yahoo-esque portal than a mere search engine -- came up with what it calls Knowledge iN, where users post questions that are answered by other users -- creating a database that now totals more than 41.1 million entries. A search on the site brings up typical Web results along with the Knowledge iN database and news and blog sites.
with a Firefox plugin, which has existed for quite some time and doesn't require you to move the mouse over the binoculars making for more productive use. The extension also works with Yahoo! search and has screenshots for a lot more sites than ask.com currently has.
Not that misleading, you don't have to bulk email to be affected. Say you have a company in Hong Kong and send less than a thousand emails a month to clients with Yahoo, Hotmail, AOL, etc addresses, your mail is pretty much guaranteed to be marked as spam. To sign up with Bonded Sender or Habeas is about $100 per month, not exactly a cost effective choice just to keep a corporate vanity domain, and another good reason to sign up for a free US service like gmail. Paying per email helps bring certified email to more users, as it lowers the cost significantly for low volume senders, but the head quarter location limitation is a rather harsh restriction.
One wonders if Google should sell its spam service to other venders, it allows Asian email and appears to do a better job then Hotmail and Yahoo.
Google didn't mention that MSN & Yahoo's email filters do Evil and block by default far too many domains. They have a geographical prejudice against asia that means a new server in Hong Kong will be guaranteed to have all new email in the junk/spam/bulk folder.
So if I have a server in Hong Kong and I don't send enough email to warrant their whitelisting service I would have to setup a server in the US or use a free email provider:(
The IT department looks after computers, the software that runs on them, and the networking that joins them together. The IS department looks after database, CRM, ERP, Oracle, etc, big applications. The OP is getting his acronyms messed up.
Sites like Amazon setup routing agreements with US ISPs such that any end user is only one or two hops away from their network, this has been documented in a few networking magazines. What is the difference with what BellSouth is mentioning?
Google Earth has this feature, but both highlight errors in the overlay process. I'm sure there are worse examples, but the Brooklyn Bridge road is in the East River at high zoom.
None of the torrent files are actually hosted on linuxisotorrent.com, and more importantly most are from "The Linux Mirror Project" which performs exactly the same purpose - torrents for Linux distributions.
A concern is that there is no credit to "The Linux Mirror Project" for any of their work in providing the torrents, its only a couple of static files on a webserver and a revenue stream from the google adverts on the side.
The teacher gives a talk about not being a MPAA sheep yet has this statement in his blog:
"Obviously I had to resign to save his job (and everybody else's at the Masters Program). So I did."
Something doesn't add up here, but that depends on the alternative of not resigning. There was no real foundation for a dismissal, so he would have been shifted to a quieter role until he made a simple mistake.
But Phatak's proposal comes with the power of numbers. India's 1,750 colleges with computer science and electrical engineering degrees admit about 250,000 students a year.
But if everyone is going to follow the new license and not release anything what benefit will there be for anyone else?
For only another $15 a month you could pick up a new computer from Sham Shui Po, they have AMD Semprons 2200's and Intel Celeron 1.8 Ghz computers for $1800. But you'll be lucky to find good quality cat 5, before searching for cat 5e or cat 6.
Hopefully with this bandwidth they will be able to launch HDTV service, its quite sad seeing all the big plasma and LCD TV's in stores like Fortress and broadway but only a regular TV signal.
I want to see a map of all local cinemas showing a particular film, either "movie:constantine" shows a link to a local area map, or I can search on http://maps.google.com/ for the same term. However it looks like they haven't reached that level of integration yet as it just shows places with the name "constantine":
I work in a big company and there are so many different systems that require passwords it is beyond a joke. I have twenty different systems providing me with 10 different variations on account name, and numerous limitations on passwords. Some accounts simply have their default password "welcome", some have a random string, some require a new password every month, some remember the last three passwords so you cannot repeat.
So I have given up, I have a big piece of paper taped to the wall with all my accounts and passwords on. Yay!:)
http://www.vmware.com/products/enterprise_desktop. html.
Neither were Oracle: Oracle to offer RedHat support
Although Japan and Russia got there a bit quicker ... Intelcom provide a encoder and decoder Java toolkit for mobile phones. Japan have a Sourceforge Java project for encoding and decoding too.
has been reported from Suntang (google cache), however it can be difficult to find out information from them as their website is almost always down and they never reply to email: office@suntang.com. They primarly install Linux based thin client systems around China, and have moved development over to supporting Windows and concepts like VDSA (the Virtual Disk System Architecture) and Virtual Hard Drive Technology.
:(
They manufacture some great looking thin clients.
They are not flash though, the solid state storage devices use banks of DIMMS with backup batteries and hard drives to save state when power failure occurs.
Flash isn't a terribly fast medium either, hence all the marketing over 12x, 20x, 50x compact flash cards in the digital camera market.
The popularity of the LTSP is showing that Apples high priced eMac machines, even with high discounts aren't really the best solution. Why doesn't Apple really make an advance in the world and release a $299 17" thin client Emac ($399 19", $549 20") and appropriate upgrades to Mac OS X server to support a significantly more cost efficient and easier to manage configuration for schools and groups.
How can you quote one sentence and incorrectly interpret it at the same time?
with a Firefox plugin, which has existed for quite some time and doesn't require you to move the mouse over the binoculars making for more productive use. The extension also works with Yahoo! search and has screenshots for a lot more sites than ask.com currently has.
Not that misleading, you don't have to bulk email to be affected. Say you have a company in Hong Kong and send less than a thousand emails a month to clients with Yahoo, Hotmail, AOL, etc addresses, your mail is pretty much guaranteed to be marked as spam. To sign up with Bonded Sender or Habeas is about $100 per month, not exactly a cost effective choice just to keep a corporate vanity domain, and another good reason to sign up for a free US service like gmail. Paying per email helps bring certified email to more users, as it lowers the cost significantly for low volume senders, but the head quarter location limitation is a rather harsh restriction.
One wonders if Google should sell its spam service to other venders, it allows Asian email and appears to do a better job then Hotmail and Yahoo.
Google didn't mention that MSN & Yahoo's email filters do Evil and block by default far too many domains. They have a geographical prejudice against asia that means a new server in Hong Kong will be guaranteed to have all new email in the junk/spam/bulk folder.
:(
So if I have a server in Hong Kong and I don't send enough email to warrant their whitelisting service I would have to setup a server in the US or use a free email provider
The IT department looks after computers, the software that runs on them, and the networking that joins them together. The IS department looks after database, CRM, ERP, Oracle, etc, big applications. The OP is getting his acronyms messed up.
Sites like Amazon setup routing agreements with US ISPs such that any end user is only one or two hops away from their network, this has been documented in a few networking magazines. What is the difference with what BellSouth is mentioning?
you will find that the Mozilla installer immediately exist so no Firefox or Thunderbird for you!
6 1
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1623
And what happens if you forget your password, after having your emergency bag in the closet for a few years?
Search for Bangkok, finds nothing.
Google Earth has this feature, but both highlight errors in the overlay process. I'm sure there are worse examples, but the Brooklyn Bridge road is in the East River at high zoom.
A concern is that there is no credit to "The Linux Mirror Project" for any of their work in providing the torrents, its only a couple of static files on a webserver and a revenue stream from the google adverts on the side.
links to great time wasters like AJAX magnetic poetry, AJAX magnetic letters, and AJAX Weboggle
"Obviously I had to resign to save his job (and everybody else's at the Masters Program). So I did."
Something doesn't add up here, but that depends on the alternative of not resigning. There was no real foundation for a dismissal, so he would have been shifted to a quieter role until he made a simple mistake.But Phatak's proposal comes with the power of numbers. India's 1,750 colleges with computer science and electrical engineering degrees admit about 250,000 students a year. But if everyone is going to follow the new license and not release anything what benefit will there be for anyone else?
For only another $15 a month you could pick up a new computer from Sham Shui Po, they have AMD Semprons 2200's and Intel Celeron 1.8 Ghz computers for $1800. But you'll be lucky to find good quality cat 5, before searching for cat 5e or cat 6.
Hopefully with this bandwidth they will be able to launch HDTV service, its quite sad seeing all the big plasma and LCD TV's in stores like Fortress and broadway but only a regular TV signal.
I want to see a map of all local cinemas showing a particular film, either "movie:constantine" shows a link to a local area map, or I can search on http://maps.google.com/ for the same term. However it looks like they haven't reached that level of integration yet as it just shows places with the name "constantine":
i ne&sll=40.838190%2C-73.941978&sspn=0.235840%2C0.46 7004
...
http://maps.google.com/maps?q=movie%3A%20constant
Here's hoping
Lets play 'Spot the Difference', searching for "Chocolate Factory", hoping to find trailers of Johnny Depp's new film:
Yahoo
Altavista
I work in a big company and there are so many different systems that require passwords it is beyond a joke. I have twenty different systems providing me with 10 different variations on account name, and numerous limitations on passwords. Some accounts simply have their default password "welcome", some have a random string, some require a new password every month, some remember the last three passwords so you cannot repeat.
:)
So I have given up, I have a big piece of paper taped to the wall with all my accounts and passwords on. Yay!