My comment subject might seem a bit racially biassed, but it's because pretty much all drives are manufctured in "Asia" these days. So to answer your question directly, Asians make the best drives!
And how would I know if I was having this kind of issue? Would it show up in dmesg? What kind of 'stability issues' are we talking about here? Random kernel panics? I've had 6 or so Sandforce SSDs (all either OCZ or Mushkin) and have never had any issues.
I play with high enough sensitivity to where I don't reach the edge of my mouse pad. Most of the time, I can just rest my wrist on my mouse pad and not even have to pick up my arm, let alone the mouse.
Intel is planning to put out a 48-core mobile CPU in less than a decade ( http://www.extremetech.com/computing/139267-intels-48-core-supercomputing-smartphone-cpu-is-less-than-a-decade-away ), with the main benefit being improved energy efficiency. That being said, it may be a smart short-term business move for Qualcom to not pursue 8 core chips in the meantime, and calling everyone else stupid is a convenient way to justify that to stockholders. Myself, I would love to have excessively powerful mobile devices that far exceed the needs of the average consumer. I currently lug around a gargantuan Lenovo w530 which, for the majority of its use, is docked and closed. If I could just dock a phone with workstation-grade hardware in it, that would be much more convenient for me.
The multiplayer and graphics combined are good enough to make me feel like my purchase was warranted, and ill probably purchase dlc in the future too. With all the crappy console ports out there that don't even come close to tapping modern hardware, i'd say this purchase is a no brainer for anyone with a machine that can handle it.
I use tiemu as well with a ti-89 titanium ROM dump. The skins and keyboard mappings could be better (never figured out how to edit that stuff) but it beats carrying around a separate device when you can just run it on the same desktop/laptop you're taking your online math tests with.
I would love to be able to play GW2 on Linux, since it constitutes 99+% of the gaming that I do these days. Mass Effect 3 would be cool too, but I don't really play it much anymore. I'm looking forward to playing native versions of Portal and Left 4 Dead on Linux soon.
Don't get me wrong, I use the binary blob on my desktop and am very satisfied with it. But on a laptop with Optimus, I wouldn't even bother trying to use VDPAU and stuff like that under Linux. You'd think if they had an opportunity to just pass the problem off to the Nouveau devs and wash their hands of it they would be all over it. As it stands, I would never purchase a laptop with an Optimus setup in it, despite the continual improvement in bumblebee that I keep hearing about.
What I'm wondering is, since he came out and said the little bit about using DMA-BUF with the proprietary code, and NVIDIA is starting to share specs with the nouveau devs, do you think NVIDIA might be able to help make nouveau work a bit better with optimus?
Did anyone else here play a legit boxed copy of Ghost Recon: Future Soldier on PC shortly after it came out? It wasn't even really playable for people that weren't pirating it until a patch that came out a week or two ago.
I have to agree. This seems kinda pointless, just connect to your TTYs with tmux or screen, problem solved. Why are we worried about improving something that is deliberately a fall back to a simpler system?
Most Wal-Marts I go into in NC have a single AR-15 on display and a several shotguns and rifles. None of these guns are ones that I would recommend buying. They also have shotgun shells just sitting out on shelves that people could pocket.
But most third party apps like skype and spotify and such that you won't find in most distro's repos are built for Ubuntu. Steam is going to be built for Ubuntu too. Random little apps that interact with android and iOs devices are usually written for Ubuntu if a Linux version exists (example: remotedroid). For this reason, I usually install Mint on friends computers that want to use Linux without having to learn anything about it.
Same here. I've been using Origin since Mass Effect 3 came out and have never really had any issues with it. On one occasion, my ISP was having issues and I couldn't log into Origin, but it still let me start it up in "Offline Mode" and play my games in single player mode. Starting my Origin games straight from the.exe works too. And...I got a few titles I really enjoy for a steal in a big half off sale that they had!
They are allowed to monitor speech on the telephone, and they're also required by law to do so since the Patriot Act. And while I haven't heard of them censoring people's phone calls before, they sure do forward some of the recordings (which they delete after a month or so iirc) to the government who has their own methods of "censoring" individuals. I personally don't approve of the Patriot Act, but it's there, like it or not.
Where in that arcticle does it say that Verizon intends to censor people with "controversial things to say?" I see a lot of presumptuous statements by the editor and some straight up factual things said by a Verizon representative. What if they wanted to censor some child pornography? Or some legitimate terrorism related communications that threatened lives? That's not only their right, but their responsibility. If you have a legitimate link showing that Verizon has or even wants to censor people's political opinions, feel free to give it to me.
You know who else always talks about the Military Industrial Complex? Ron Paul does. You should try actually reading one of his books instead of random bloggers' smear pieces. He addresses problems associated with free market capitalism, like monopolies and bribing politicians. But you don't have to take my word for it!
The idea is that, generating new currency causes inflation, and no one should be able to generate new currency. The amount of goods present in the country and in the world isn't necessarily always going to be affected by the value of a dollar. By freezing the amount of dollars in circulation, you force the country as a whole to not only see but to tackle the actual effects of fiscal policy and regulations. No more invisible hands behind the scenes injecting money into foreign banks and various places. Injecting more money into a bubble to keep it from popping might delay the inevitable, but it just makes the consequences more severe in the long run. Then you have more private investors putting money into something that will just die in the meantime, and in the end all you have accomplished is lowering the value of a dollar, in which case nearly everyone loses.
The thing is, net neutrality bills are a potentially effective solution to a problem that hasn't really manifested its self yet, and quite possibly never will. While there has been some niche cases of ISPs trying to throttle torrents and things like that, for the most part, there's no reason for me to believe that the stuff that I personally do on the Internet will be restricted by some nefarious Caucasian owned corporation in the near future. If anything, the bills will probably result in ISPs having to do more paperwork and such and then deciding that to cover the costs, they're going to make me start paying for my bandwidth after I go above a 5GiB/month limit. But hey, the answer to all of our problems (whether they exist or not) is to just put the government's hand in every single aspect of every single corporation until they no longer exist, right?
Different people derive different implications from history. I've heard people use WWII as a reason to intervene in foreign affairs on far too many occasions for example. "History repeats its self," they always say. As a secular conservative type who thinks Paul is an amazing person but not the emperor of austrian/libertarian thinking, I do have to question his voting record in regards to gay marriage and abortion laws at times. But as a policy, I don't see an issue with delegating these decisions to the states. And if that happened, and I was in those states, I would vote in favor of allowing abortion/gay marriage. I'm just tired of getting the shaft in the two party system is what it comes down to. While most/.ers probably disagree, I think that free market capitalism is the answer to most of our economic issues disagree. And if like 10 people in Alabama or somewhere can't get an abortion while the economy booms because I voted in favor of state's rights, I'll still be able to sleep with myself quite nicely.
I would definitely mod this up if I had any points. It's also worth pointing out that in the rare circumstances where he actually gets congress to vote on one of his proposals, it ends up getting watered down by the other members of congress so much that it becomes pointless. Of course, this is no fault of Rep. Paul's. You can read about such an event here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Reserve_Transparency_Act , but you might as well not waste your time because me and the other 20% of the voters in the GOP primaries that voted for Ron Paul are all KKK members.
Not everyone defines a representative's success by their policies' popularity in congress. I believe strongly in internet freedom, and I'm glad there's at least one person in congress who feels the same way.
My comment subject might seem a bit racially biassed, but it's because pretty much all drives are manufctured in "Asia" these days. So to answer your question directly, Asians make the best drives!
And how would I know if I was having this kind of issue? Would it show up in dmesg? What kind of 'stability issues' are we talking about here? Random kernel panics? I've had 6 or so Sandforce SSDs (all either OCZ or Mushkin) and have never had any issues.
I play with high enough sensitivity to where I don't reach the edge of my mouse pad. Most of the time, I can just rest my wrist on my mouse pad and not even have to pick up my arm, let alone the mouse.
Intel is planning to put out a 48-core mobile CPU in less than a decade ( http://www.extremetech.com/computing/139267-intels-48-core-supercomputing-smartphone-cpu-is-less-than-a-decade-away ), with the main benefit being improved energy efficiency. That being said, it may be a smart short-term business move for Qualcom to not pursue 8 core chips in the meantime, and calling everyone else stupid is a convenient way to justify that to stockholders. Myself, I would love to have excessively powerful mobile devices that far exceed the needs of the average consumer. I currently lug around a gargantuan Lenovo w530 which, for the majority of its use, is docked and closed. If I could just dock a phone with workstation-grade hardware in it, that would be much more convenient for me.
The multiplayer and graphics combined are good enough to make me feel like my purchase was warranted, and ill probably purchase dlc in the future too. With all the crappy console ports out there that don't even come close to tapping modern hardware, i'd say this purchase is a no brainer for anyone with a machine that can handle it.
My biggest concern is that if I supply them with my PI, I might not receive the obligatory junk touching.
I use tiemu as well with a ti-89 titanium ROM dump. The skins and keyboard mappings could be better (never figured out how to edit that stuff) but it beats carrying around a separate device when you can just run it on the same desktop/laptop you're taking your online math tests with.
They already have a Mac client for GW2, how hard could it be to port it?
I would love to be able to play GW2 on Linux, since it constitutes 99+% of the gaming that I do these days. Mass Effect 3 would be cool too, but I don't really play it much anymore. I'm looking forward to playing native versions of Portal and Left 4 Dead on Linux soon.
Don't get me wrong, I use the binary blob on my desktop and am very satisfied with it. But on a laptop with Optimus, I wouldn't even bother trying to use VDPAU and stuff like that under Linux. You'd think if they had an opportunity to just pass the problem off to the Nouveau devs and wash their hands of it they would be all over it. As it stands, I would never purchase a laptop with an Optimus setup in it, despite the continual improvement in bumblebee that I keep hearing about.
What I'm wondering is, since he came out and said the little bit about using DMA-BUF with the proprietary code, and NVIDIA is starting to share specs with the nouveau devs, do you think NVIDIA might be able to help make nouveau work a bit better with optimus?
...to read patch notes for GNOME 3 that read "You can now auto hide the top bar without installing a third party extension."
Did anyone else here play a legit boxed copy of Ghost Recon: Future Soldier on PC shortly after it came out? It wasn't even really playable for people that weren't pirating it until a patch that came out a week or two ago.
I have to agree. This seems kinda pointless, just connect to your TTYs with tmux or screen, problem solved. Why are we worried about improving something that is deliberately a fall back to a simpler system?
Most Wal-Marts I go into in NC have a single AR-15 on display and a several shotguns and rifles. None of these guns are ones that I would recommend buying. They also have shotgun shells just sitting out on shelves that people could pocket.
But most third party apps like skype and spotify and such that you won't find in most distro's repos are built for Ubuntu. Steam is going to be built for Ubuntu too. Random little apps that interact with android and iOs devices are usually written for Ubuntu if a Linux version exists (example: remotedroid). For this reason, I usually install Mint on friends computers that want to use Linux without having to learn anything about it.
Same here. I've been using Origin since Mass Effect 3 came out and have never really had any issues with it. On one occasion, my ISP was having issues and I couldn't log into Origin, but it still let me start it up in "Offline Mode" and play my games in single player mode. Starting my Origin games straight from the .exe works too. And...I got a few titles I really enjoy for a steal in a big half off sale that they had!
They are allowed to monitor speech on the telephone, and they're also required by law to do so since the Patriot Act. And while I haven't heard of them censoring people's phone calls before, they sure do forward some of the recordings (which they delete after a month or so iirc) to the government who has their own methods of "censoring" individuals. I personally don't approve of the Patriot Act, but it's there, like it or not.
Where in that arcticle does it say that Verizon intends to censor people with "controversial things to say?" I see a lot of presumptuous statements by the editor and some straight up factual things said by a Verizon representative. What if they wanted to censor some child pornography? Or some legitimate terrorism related communications that threatened lives? That's not only their right, but their responsibility. If you have a legitimate link showing that Verizon has or even wants to censor people's political opinions, feel free to give it to me.
You know who else always talks about the Military Industrial Complex? Ron Paul does. You should try actually reading one of his books instead of random bloggers' smear pieces. He addresses problems associated with free market capitalism, like monopolies and bribing politicians. But you don't have to take my word for it!
The idea is that, generating new currency causes inflation, and no one should be able to generate new currency. The amount of goods present in the country and in the world isn't necessarily always going to be affected by the value of a dollar. By freezing the amount of dollars in circulation, you force the country as a whole to not only see but to tackle the actual effects of fiscal policy and regulations. No more invisible hands behind the scenes injecting money into foreign banks and various places. Injecting more money into a bubble to keep it from popping might delay the inevitable, but it just makes the consequences more severe in the long run. Then you have more private investors putting money into something that will just die in the meantime, and in the end all you have accomplished is lowering the value of a dollar, in which case nearly everyone loses.
The thing is, net neutrality bills are a potentially effective solution to a problem that hasn't really manifested its self yet, and quite possibly never will. While there has been some niche cases of ISPs trying to throttle torrents and things like that, for the most part, there's no reason for me to believe that the stuff that I personally do on the Internet will be restricted by some nefarious Caucasian owned corporation in the near future. If anything, the bills will probably result in ISPs having to do more paperwork and such and then deciding that to cover the costs, they're going to make me start paying for my bandwidth after I go above a 5GiB/month limit. But hey, the answer to all of our problems (whether they exist or not) is to just put the government's hand in every single aspect of every single corporation until they no longer exist, right?
Different people derive different implications from history. I've heard people use WWII as a reason to intervene in foreign affairs on far too many occasions for example. "History repeats its self," they always say. As a secular conservative type who thinks Paul is an amazing person but not the emperor of austrian/libertarian thinking, I do have to question his voting record in regards to gay marriage and abortion laws at times. But as a policy, I don't see an issue with delegating these decisions to the states. And if that happened, and I was in those states, I would vote in favor of allowing abortion/gay marriage. I'm just tired of getting the shaft in the two party system is what it comes down to. While most /.ers probably disagree, I think that free market capitalism is the answer to most of our economic issues disagree. And if like 10 people in Alabama or somewhere can't get an abortion while the economy booms because I voted in favor of state's rights, I'll still be able to sleep with myself quite nicely.
I would definitely mod this up if I had any points. It's also worth pointing out that in the rare circumstances where he actually gets congress to vote on one of his proposals, it ends up getting watered down by the other members of congress so much that it becomes pointless. Of course, this is no fault of Rep. Paul's. You can read about such an event here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Reserve_Transparency_Act , but you might as well not waste your time because me and the other 20% of the voters in the GOP primaries that voted for Ron Paul are all KKK members.
Not everyone defines a representative's success by their policies' popularity in congress. I believe strongly in internet freedom, and I'm glad there's at least one person in congress who feels the same way.