Am I the only person who likes Code Red 20x more then all of those sodas? Why wasn't it even included in this? Another drink missing is Mountain Dew Amp. Sure, its pretty bad in my opinion, but I think it should be included just because this shootout just needs a drink from Mountain Dew.
Also, since when is Vanilla Coke being marketed as an energy drink?
"The default--and unchangeable-- synchronization interval for Windows XP is one week."
This isn't entirely true: while there is no way to change the synch setting in Windows using the UI, but a simple change of a number in the Registry will give the desired results:
To change the interval that Windows updates the time using the internet time servers via regedit, navigate to:
1. HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ControlSet001\Services \W32Time\TimeProviders\NtpClient 2. Select "SpecialPollInterval" 3. Change decimal value from 604800 to a different value in seconds. i.e.: 172800 (2 Days) or 86400 (1 Day) and so on.
Am I the only person who likes Code Red 20x more then all of those sodas? Why wasn't it even included in this? Another drink missing is Mountain Dew Amp. Sure, its pretty bad in my opinion, but I think it should be included just because this shootout just needs a drink from Mountain Dew.
Also, since when is Vanilla Coke being marketed as an energy drink?
"The default--and unchangeable-- synchronization interval for Windows XP is one week."
This isn't entirely true: while there is no way to change the synch setting in Windows using the UI, but a simple change of a number in the Registry will give the desired results:
To change the interval that Windows updates the time using the internet time servers via regedit, navigate to:
1. HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ControlSet001\Services \W32Time\TimeProviders\NtpClient
2. Select "SpecialPollInterval"
3. Change decimal value from 604800 to a different value in seconds. i.e.: 172800 (2 Days) or 86400 (1 Day) and so on.