Does this really make things easier for...
on
Digital Doodling
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· Score: 1
the business professional? Any quick notes that you need to take are much more easily put into a palm type of hardware. 3000 is a lot for a Intel 600 mhz notebook.
I would have been VERY impressed if IBM released a lcd+writing tablet in one type of product. This doesn't seem very useful and I suspect that it will be a passing fad.
I believe the fine folks at www.project-0.com also deserve some recognition for successfully bypassing the encryption of King of Fighters 2000 (which is contained on a neo geo pocket cartridge within the KOF 2000 cartridge). long live snk!
Being first to support a chip doesn't say much. Apple was first with a graphical OS but Windows has trounced them. I don't know how stable the Itanium builds of Linux are, but the most important thing to consider is how much support the OS has. Sure, Linux has a lot of support on slashdot, but the cold hard facts is that Windows has a lot of support for servers. Lots of people will still blow of Linux and wait for the Windows ver to come out. To see whether Window will flop with their Itanium configuration, you first have to wait to see how many Windows Itanium packages are sold when it arrives. I'd like to see Linux succeed and all. But don't make assumptions because of a lack of information.
the business professional? Any quick notes that you need to take are much more easily put into a palm type of hardware. 3000 is a lot for a Intel 600 mhz notebook. I would have been VERY impressed if IBM released a lcd+writing tablet in one type of product. This doesn't seem very useful and I suspect that it will be a passing fad.
I believe the fine folks at www.project-0.com also deserve some recognition for successfully bypassing the encryption of King of Fighters 2000 (which is contained on a neo geo pocket cartridge within the KOF 2000 cartridge). long live snk!
Being first to support a chip doesn't say much. Apple was first with a graphical OS but Windows has trounced them. I don't know how stable the Itanium builds of Linux are, but the most important thing to consider is how much support the OS has. Sure, Linux has a lot of support on slashdot, but the cold hard facts is that Windows has a lot of support for servers. Lots of people will still blow of Linux and wait for the Windows ver to come out. To see whether Window will flop with their Itanium configuration, you first have to wait to see how many Windows Itanium packages are sold when it arrives. I'd like to see Linux succeed and all. But don't make assumptions because of a lack of information.