IE will spawn multiple processes (if that feature is enabled) when you click on the IE icon while it's already running. The new window will be a new process.
Maybe that tidbit can help you avoid the cookie problem
I think that the actual cost the full version of Windows 98 is around $300. The upgrade was $99 and the OEM version sold for about that too. Notice that MS does not technically support OEM versons, the OEM is responsible for that.
The Oracle said that the power of the one comes from the machine core (mainframe). It might not be a satisfying explanation, but the thing didnt go unaddressed.
Actually that's exactly what Netscape did. They open sourced the browser and focused on using Communicator to guide users to the Netcenter portal site. That was actually the big reason why AOL bought them.
As you see it still didn't work. Personally, I think that Netscape was doomed anyway. The browser was destined to be free and their app server had serious pricing issues. They were definitely one of the most important companies of the last ten years though. Browsers for the Masses, Javascript, SSL, RSS, Gecko/Mozilla/Firebird. They had an immeasurable impact on the web as it stands right now, years after they became an irrelevant company.
I guess that souldn't assume that people actually have a clue about what the speak of. The fact is that if you actually care about the issue one was or another, you would know.
YHBT. Now, I agree with some of these things you say but I've got to comment on a few others, regardless of the fact that it was a bite to a troll.
Irrelevant. That is the fault of the people committing the crimes, and no one else. I could likely find a rather large number of criminals where you live, but you have neglected to provide that information.
This is like saying that school systems that have shitty overall test scores don't need to do anything because it's all the kid's (or parent's) fault. Of course a lot of people (particularly Americans) DO sat that but they miss the overall point. Something is wrong and it is not fixing itself. Same goes for:
A problem, yes, but once again, the sole fault of those who don't control their eating and exercise habits. This does not consider the genetically obese; were only the genetically obese counted, the levels would almost certainly be similar to anywhere else.
You act like the U.S. is the only country with genetically obese people. Or that somehow there are more genetically obese people in the U.S. Unlikely. It has been proven time and time again that Americans eat more and worse than practically any other population and are less active to boot. This is a cultural thing. An American cultural thing.
Irrelevant. If a rich white male is elected, then a rich white male is elected. That's all it means.
If rich white males are the only ones who can get elected then obviously there is an issue here. Our current president, who is practically nothing but a rich white male, makes it evident that the list of "qualifications" is short.
Let he who is without sin cast the first stone, my friend.
Yeah that goes both ways.
>> God Bless America, and its massive and ever-growing poverty gap
Documentation, please.
Some things are just common knowledge. Do a web search for U.S. poverty gap and you find tons of documentation. This is no secret.
Irrelevant, given that all are either produced here or duly purchased from others. It is not as though they are stolen.
I think that the point here is that the U.S. is like a huge pig on the worlds resources. 280 million people out of 6 billion plus use 60% of the worlds resources. It's typical of an American to quantify this in money (I'm an American and did too the first time that I heard this argument) but it goes beyond that. Think of Agent Smiths "cancer" speech in The Matrix.
Your Iran comment shows how clueless you are and I feel bad even responding to it, but here goes anyway.
Give me a link showing UN sanctions imposed in 1988 on Iraq with respect to the Kurd gassing.
Even if you could find it, it's beside my original point because the Prevention of Genocide Act of 1988 that would have been the US equivalent but didn't make it through the House intact and was snuffed out. The Reagan Administration went out of its way to not punish Iraq, our ally, for the gassing of the Kurds. Those gassings has been going on for a while but Halabja just happened to be photographed by a journalist and shown to the world.
If it were that simple then why didn't the U.S. just do it? Because even with the technicalities that you cite, there is a right and wrong way to do things. Particularly with respect to a conflict that was initially backed almost universally. In the end they ended up doing it half right and that tokened half is has more to do with U.S. credibility than what you and the administration may perceive as our right.
The U.S. isn't going to be the sole superpower forever. Perhaps a little humility now could help us in the future.
Very few people act like Saddam was a good guy, but just being a bad guy isn't reason enough to break protocol and invade the country. This is why the WMD question is such a big one.
When Saddam gassed the Kurds, it was during the Iran-Iraq war (because the Kurdish village that was attacked was allegedly helping the Iranians) during which Saddam had the backing of the U.S. The U.S. knew exactly what went down and didn't do dick. As a matter of fact, the Pentagon co-developed a report afterwards saying that Iran was more than likely the ones who did the gassing. Evidence now says that was a B.S. cover story to justify the continuing relationship between the U.S. and Saddam.
Anyhow, if the WMD program was as dangerous as billed, I'm sure that a significant number of people know where these weapons are. Surely many more than those who knew where Saddam was hiding. Which one turns up first? Don't you think the person that could point out these weapons would become extraordinarily rich? Somebody has to know. So far they have gotten crap lead after crap lead. Not even a TRACE of the stuff.
Anyhow, they have Saddam now so we'll see where it goes. Personally I hope that they find them (WMD) because this could set a precedent that undermines stability worldwide. Not that worldwide stability is attainable anyway... but I'm sure you know what I mean.
there is something, err, nope I still don't see any server with anything like a pedegree that runs AMD chips.
Oh now it's about sales to major corporations? All that I was saying is if Cray, IBM, and Sun servers don't have a decent pedigree then who does?
The Opteron is not a from scratch design, it's an evolution of the XP/MP Athlons so much of the underlying technology is more mature than its new moniker may imply. The chip has been out in its present state for less than a year and has gotten a number of supercomputer wins so it's no secret that these are monster chips.
There's also the fact that in many cases they outperform equivalent Intel chips at cooler temps and lower prices. If they aren't adopted, it will probably have more to do with marketing than technology.
Novell is still extremely reliable, especially considering its DOS-based roots. I would deploy eDirectory/ZEN over AD/SMS in a heartbeat and know plenty of other people who would as well. They have lost marketshare to MS on cost and learning curve, not the quality of the technology.
Well you also have to remember that much of the infrastructure issues were a result of Desert Storm and the sanctions that came afterward. Yeah we can argue till we're blue in the face about why these things hadn't been rebuilt in the 10+ years prior, but the bottom line is that this "New" construction is only new with respect to the way that Iraq was 8 months ago, not when the world first started dropping bombs on them.
Just like I figured. Maybe you should do a little more research on the A64 design before you even attempt to speculate. AMD has been working on this over the past few generations of the Athlon XP and has gotten the A64s running very cool (they aren't supposed to go any higher than 85W, including any unreleased chips in this current generation - though the jury is out on whether that will actually happen).
Of course Apple chips have always run cooler partly (though not fully) because they have always run slower. According to the EE times, the chip is significantly hotter and the elaborate design that you speak of is to address that as well as cut down on the noise generated by said design.
Now I could be totally misreading all of this and someone will surely correct me if not. Whatever the case, it sounds like you're assuming that all past trends were staying constant when they certainly aren't. AMD took a big leap with SOI and Apple wanted significantly faster speeds. These decisions among others make both of these chips a bit different from previous iterations.
Considering that fact that the G5 and A64 are very new chips, your comment on the A64 burning to a crisp seems to have come straight out of thin air. Unless you have some current empirical evidence - not the fact that 2 generations ago AXP chips used to run pretty hot - you should refrain from making such statements. Judging by the cooling devices that I've seen on those G5 chips, I'd imagine that they may run a tad bit hotter. Though I could be wrong.
Anyhow, the only people who REALLY care about MTBF are server admins anyway. Even still... a PC that costs as much as a Mac would more than likely have the same MTBF.
You would be totally amazed at how many programs use 16-bit code for their installers. You find out the hard way when you get hit by that Ghost / Windows bug that knocks out WOW.
At best the P4 Emergency Edition is in a dead heat with the A64FX with the FX being the gaming / productivity king and the EE being the media production king.
IE will spawn multiple processes (if that feature is enabled) when you click on the IE icon while it's already running. The new window will be a new process.
Maybe that tidbit can help you avoid the cookie problem
Why is the P4 2.6C faster than the P4 3.0?
Opterons require registered RAM. They won't even boot up without it.
I think that the actual cost the full version of Windows 98 is around $300. The upgrade was $99 and the OEM version sold for about that too. Notice that MS does not technically support OEM versons, the OEM is responsible for that.
Choose Your Own Adventure #1: The Cave of Time
Man those were the days.
The Oracle said that the power of the one comes from the machine core (mainframe). It might not be a satisfying explanation, but the thing didnt go unaddressed.
Actually that's exactly what Netscape did. They open sourced the browser and focused on using Communicator to guide users to the Netcenter portal site. That was actually the big reason why AOL bought them.
As you see it still didn't work. Personally, I think that Netscape was doomed anyway. The browser was destined to be free and their app server had serious pricing issues. They were definitely one of the most important companies of the last ten years though. Browsers for the Masses, Javascript, SSL, RSS, Gecko/Mozilla/Firebird. They had an immeasurable impact on the web as it stands right now, years after they became an irrelevant company.
I guess that souldn't assume that people actually have a clue about what the speak of. The fact is that if you actually care about the issue one was or another, you would know.
YHBT. Now, I agree with some of these things you say but I've got to comment on a few others, regardless of the fact that it was a bite to a troll.
Irrelevant. That is the fault of the people committing the crimes, and no one else. I could likely find a rather large number of criminals where you live, but you have neglected to provide that information.
This is like saying that school systems that have shitty overall test scores don't need to do anything because it's all the kid's (or parent's) fault. Of course a lot of people (particularly Americans) DO sat that but they miss the overall point. Something is wrong and it is not fixing itself. Same goes for:
A problem, yes, but once again, the sole fault of those who don't control their eating and exercise habits. This does not consider the genetically obese; were only the genetically obese counted, the levels would almost certainly be similar to anywhere else.
You act like the U.S. is the only country with genetically obese people. Or that somehow there are more genetically obese people in the U.S. Unlikely. It has been proven time and time again that Americans eat more and worse than practically any other population and are less active to boot. This is a cultural thing. An American cultural thing.
Irrelevant. If a rich white male is elected, then a rich white male is elected. That's all it means.
If rich white males are the only ones who can get elected then obviously there is an issue here. Our current president, who is practically nothing but a rich white male, makes it evident that the list of "qualifications" is short.
Let he who is without sin cast the first stone, my friend.
Yeah that goes both ways.
>> God Bless America, and its massive and ever-growing poverty gap
Documentation, please.
Some things are just common knowledge. Do a web search for U.S. poverty gap and you find tons of documentation. This is no secret.
Irrelevant, given that all are either produced here or duly purchased from others. It is not as though they are stolen.
I think that the point here is that the U.S. is like a huge pig on the worlds resources. 280 million people out of 6 billion plus use 60% of the worlds resources. It's typical of an American to quantify this in money (I'm an American and did too the first time that I heard this argument) but it goes beyond that. Think of Agent Smiths "cancer" speech in The Matrix.
So the U.S. can sink to the level of every vicious dictator in the world?
Your Iran comment shows how clueless you are and I feel bad even responding to it, but here goes anyway.
Give me a link showing UN sanctions imposed in 1988 on Iraq with respect to the Kurd gassing.
Even if you could find it, it's beside my original point because the Prevention of Genocide Act of 1988 that would have been the US equivalent but didn't make it through the House intact and was snuffed out. The Reagan Administration went out of its way to not punish Iraq, our ally, for the gassing of the Kurds. Those gassings has been going on for a while but Halabja just happened to be photographed by a journalist and shown to the world.
If it were that simple then why didn't the U.S. just do it? Because even with the technicalities that you cite, there is a right and wrong way to do things. Particularly with respect to a conflict that was initially backed almost universally. In the end they ended up doing it half right and that tokened half is has more to do with U.S. credibility than what you and the administration may perceive as our right.
The U.S. isn't going to be the sole superpower forever. Perhaps a little humility now could help us in the future.
Very few people act like Saddam was a good guy, but just being a bad guy isn't reason enough to break protocol and invade the country. This is why the WMD question is such a big one.
When Saddam gassed the Kurds, it was during the Iran-Iraq war (because the Kurdish village that was attacked was allegedly helping the Iranians) during which Saddam had the backing of the U.S. The U.S. knew exactly what went down and didn't do dick. As a matter of fact, the Pentagon co-developed a report afterwards saying that Iran was more than likely the ones who did the gassing. Evidence now says that was a B.S. cover story to justify the continuing relationship between the U.S. and Saddam.
Anyhow, if the WMD program was as dangerous as billed, I'm sure that a significant number of people know where these weapons are. Surely many more than those who knew where Saddam was hiding. Which one turns up first? Don't you think the person that could point out these weapons would become extraordinarily rich? Somebody has to know. So far they have gotten crap lead after crap lead. Not even a TRACE of the stuff.
Anyhow, they have Saddam now so we'll see where it goes. Personally I hope that they find them (WMD) because this could set a precedent that undermines stability worldwide. Not that worldwide stability is attainable anyway... but I'm sure you know what I mean.
there is something, err, nope I still don't see any server with anything like a pedegree that runs AMD chips.
Oh now it's about sales to major corporations? All that I was saying is if Cray, IBM, and Sun servers don't have a decent pedigree then who does?
The Opteron is not a from scratch design, it's an evolution of the XP/MP Athlons so much of the underlying technology is more mature than its new moniker may imply. The chip has been out in its present state for less than a year and has gotten a number of supercomputer wins so it's no secret that these are monster chips.
There's also the fact that in many cases they outperform equivalent Intel chips at cooler temps and lower prices. If they aren't adopted, it will probably have more to do with marketing than technology.
I guess those 325 series IBMs, upcoming Sun servers, and Cray supercomputers don't count eh?
Note that none of the particapants in the conversation were actual racists.
But of course we don't know this. We only know that the conversation about integration was not a racist one.
I agree with you, I'm just being nitpicky.
Is there anything to suggest that another agent has been killed in this manner?
Well you'll be happy to know that you can enable a sound in Firebird too, and you can specify it.
Novell is a lot of things good and bad... but cheap ain't one of em.
Novell is still extremely reliable, especially considering its DOS-based roots. I would deploy eDirectory/ZEN over AD/SMS in a heartbeat and know plenty of other people who would as well. They have lost marketshare to MS on cost and learning curve, not the quality of the technology.
Well you also have to remember that much of the infrastructure issues were a result of Desert Storm and the sanctions that came afterward. Yeah we can argue till we're blue in the face about why these things hadn't been rebuilt in the 10+ years prior, but the bottom line is that this "New" construction is only new with respect to the way that Iraq was 8 months ago, not when the world first started dropping bombs on them.
Whatever that's worth.
Just like I figured. Maybe you should do a little more research on the A64 design before you even attempt to speculate. AMD has been working on this over the past few generations of the Athlon XP and has gotten the A64s running very cool (they aren't supposed to go any higher than 85W, including any unreleased chips in this current generation - though the jury is out on whether that will actually happen).
Of course Apple chips have always run cooler partly (though not fully) because they have always run slower. According to the EE times, the chip is significantly hotter and the elaborate design that you speak of is to address that as well as cut down on the noise generated by said design.
Now I could be totally misreading all of this and someone will surely correct me if not. Whatever the case, it sounds like you're assuming that all past trends were staying constant when they certainly aren't. AMD took a big leap with SOI and Apple wanted significantly faster speeds. These decisions among others make both of these chips a bit different from previous iterations.
Considering that fact that the G5 and A64 are very new chips, your comment on the A64 burning to a crisp seems to have come straight out of thin air. Unless you have some current empirical evidence - not the fact that 2 generations ago AXP chips used to run pretty hot - you should refrain from making such statements. Judging by the cooling devices that I've seen on those G5 chips, I'd imagine that they may run a tad bit hotter. Though I could be wrong.
Anyhow, the only people who REALLY care about MTBF are server admins anyway. Even still... a PC that costs as much as a Mac would more than likely have the same MTBF.
You would be totally amazed at how many programs use 16-bit code for their installers. You find out the hard way when you get hit by that Ghost / Windows bug that knocks out WOW.
At best the P4 Emergency Edition is in a dead heat with the A64FX with the FX being the gaming / productivity king and the EE being the media production king.