Exactly. It says you may not use the software installed on the licensed device within a virtual (or otherwise emulated) hardware system. Aka, you install it on your PC, the licensed device, then want to install it again inside vmware. It does not say that the licensed device cannot be a virtual hardware system.
You don't get the point. DVI connectors have analog on them as well as digital. You can have a DVI cable that carries no digital signal, just the analog part. All the DVI->DSUB connectors that come with most vid cards now do is take the analog DVI pins and straight through them so they match up with the DSUB pin configuration... The digital part of DVI is just the small group of pins sitting in a square to the side of the connector. All those other pins on there are analog outputs.
I have a ScottVest and also live in DC. If you get the sport model, and some of the others too, it has zip off sleeves and becomes a VERY light weight vest. I wore mine pretty much all summer, there were very few days that I took it off because I was hot. And it was real nice having this summer with all the rain, as it has a hood that you can unroll from the neck area, and I keep the sleeves in the back pocket, so I just pulled out the sleeves and the hood, and I had a rain coat.
But the first thing to do is go and talk with your manager. Tell them you like your job but don't feel you are being fairly compensated, etc.
But, depending on where you work some companies will only do large salary adjustments if you have an offer from somewhere else for them to match/beat. Even if they don't have a policy like this, having an offer from somewhere else gives you leverage for getting a raise.
Actually you can't watch it while downloading if the MPEG-4 format they are talking about is DivX;-), its not a streamable format. This is another reason people on modems and such won't like it, as if you get an incomplete d/l you can't watch it.
The quality of DivX is very good for how small the files are, but no trying to watch it on a slow computer, as its very processor intensive to decode, my 450mhz machine usually can only keep up around 25-28 fps while viewing 30fps avi's @ 640x480.
The nice thing about MPEG-4 is you can have variable bandwidth, so your high motion scenes can take up more space and look good, while your low motion scenes can be low bandwidth and not take up very much space.
Exactly. It says you may not use the software installed on the licensed device within a virtual (or otherwise emulated) hardware system. Aka, you install it on your PC, the licensed device, then want to install it again inside vmware. It does not say that the licensed device cannot be a virtual hardware system.
You don't get the point. DVI connectors have analog on them as well as digital. You can have a DVI cable that carries no digital signal, just the analog part. All the DVI->DSUB connectors that come with most vid cards now do is take the analog DVI pins and straight through them so they match up with the DSUB pin configuration... The digital part of DVI is just the small group of pins sitting in a square to the side of the connector. All those other pins on there are analog outputs.
I have a ScottVest and also live in DC. If you get the sport model, and some of the others too, it has zip off sleeves and becomes a VERY light weight vest. I wore mine pretty much all summer, there were very few days that I took it off because I was hot.
And it was real nice having this summer with all the rain, as it has a hood that you can unroll from the neck area, and I keep the sleeves in the back pocket, so I just pulled out the sleeves and the hood, and I had a rain coat.
But the first thing to do is go and talk with your manager. Tell them you like your job but don't feel you are being fairly compensated, etc.
But, depending on where you work some companies will only do large salary adjustments if you have an offer from somewhere else for them to match/beat. Even if they don't have a policy like this, having an offer from somewhere else gives you leverage for getting a raise.
Actually you can't watch it while downloading if the MPEG-4 format they are talking about is DivX ;-), its not a streamable format. This is another reason people on modems and such won't like it, as if you get an incomplete d/l you can't watch it.
The quality of DivX is very good for how small the files are, but no trying to watch it on a slow computer, as its very processor intensive to decode, my 450mhz machine usually can only keep up around 25-28 fps while viewing 30fps avi's @ 640x480.
The nice thing about MPEG-4 is you can have variable bandwidth, so your high motion scenes can take up more space and look good, while your low motion scenes can be low bandwidth and not take up very much space.