That's what I'll be doing - here's the linked section:
C. IF YOU WANT TO OBJECT TO THE SETTLEMENT, BUT STILL BE A PART OF THE SETTLEMENT CLASS. If you do not request exclusion from the Settlement Class, you may object to any aspect of the proposed Settlement, including the fairness of the settlement, the attorneys' fees and costs or the adequacy of Plaintiff or Class Counsel or Notice, by filing and serving a written objection. Your written objection must state the case name and number ((Zurakov v. Register.com, Case No. 01-600703), the grounds for your objection and your full name and address, and your objection must be filed with the Clerk of the Court, 60 Centre Street, New York, NY, 10007 with a copy to Counsel. SUCH OBJECTIONS MUST BE RECEIVED NO LATER THAN OCTOBER 14, 2003. If you mail an objection to the Settlement, then you bear the risk of any problems with the mails. Such objections will be considered at the Settlement Hearing (see section VIII below), at which you may appear if you wish.
I would say that the two year failure rate for Fujitsu harddrives sold in my shop was as high as 75% up till 2001 - when I stopped selling them because the RMA's were driving me nuts. I'd also say under %10 for Maxtor and Western Digital, the other drives I sold...
High priced top end CPUs are never worth it performance wise - the only extra value they usually offer are bragging rights. However, if it weren't for the early adopters who spend huge gobs of cash on these badboys, chipmakers wouldn't be able to re-coup their R&D dollars as quickly. It helps keep Moore's Law on the books...
It only ships with drivers for Windows - which makes it appear as a USB drive. It also makes reference to running ScanDisk on the device. I'm no expert but doesn't that mean FAT? Or is it setup just to look FAT16/32 when Windows is looking?
I think his web server has been in-cased in carnbonite.
That's what I'll be doing - here's the linked section:
C. IF YOU WANT TO OBJECT TO THE SETTLEMENT, BUT STILL BE A PART OF THE SETTLEMENT CLASS.
If you do not request exclusion from the Settlement Class, you may object to any aspect of the proposed Settlement, including the fairness of the settlement, the attorneys' fees and costs or the adequacy of Plaintiff or Class Counsel or Notice, by filing and serving a written objection. Your written objection must state the case name and number ((Zurakov v. Register.com, Case No. 01-600703), the grounds for your objection and your full name and address, and your objection must be filed with the Clerk of the Court, 60 Centre Street, New York, NY, 10007 with a copy to Counsel. SUCH OBJECTIONS MUST BE RECEIVED NO LATER THAN OCTOBER 14, 2003. If you mail an objection to the Settlement, then you bear the risk of any problems with the mails. Such objections will be considered at the Settlement Hearing (see section VIII below), at which you may appear if you wish.
I would say that the two year failure rate for Fujitsu harddrives sold in my shop was as high as 75% up till 2001 - when I stopped selling them because the RMA's were driving me nuts. I'd also say under %10 for Maxtor and Western Digital, the other drives I sold...
High priced top end CPUs are never worth it performance wise - the only extra value they usually offer are bragging rights. However, if it weren't for the early adopters who spend huge gobs of cash on these badboys, chipmakers wouldn't be able to re-coup their R&D dollars as quickly. It helps keep Moore's Law on the books...
It only ships with drivers for Windows - which makes it appear as a USB drive. It also makes reference to running ScanDisk on the device. I'm no expert but doesn't that mean FAT? Or is it setup just to look FAT16/32 when Windows is looking?