There is only one True Chair Vendor:
Lay-Z-Boy
While it may not always be practical, NOTHING compares to a Lay-Z-Boy. Period. The armrests work great as optical mouse pads, you can sleep in it if necessary/desired, you will never, ever have back problems.
Granted, they are a little expensive and require a creative solution to monitor positioning, but they're still a good deal cheaper than an Aeron.
When you preformed a search, the client would encrypt the search string and then submit that encrypted string to the Napster server. It would search for that encrypted string in the normal way, and then your client would decrypt the search results. It would have to be very simple encryption (like rot13) so similarly named files would not be overlooked, but it would not need to be complex to qualify under the DMCA.
The names of the MP3's could then have the specific key for that MP3 appended, which would be used to decrypt it client-side. Total strain on the servers would be unchanged.
When you preformed a search, the client would encrypt the search string and then submit that encrypted string to the Napster server. It would search for that encrypted string in the normal way, and then your client would decrypt the search results. It would have to be very simple encryption (like rot13) so similarly named files would not be overlooked, but it would not need to be complex to qualify under the DMCA.
The names of the MP3's could then have the specific key for that MP3 appended, which would be used to decrypt it client-side. Total strain on the servers would be unchanged.
1. Imagine a beowulf cluster of these.
2. ???
3. All your base are belong to us.
Could you be bothered to export some cheap Mac hardware from your alternate reality?
There is only one True Chair Vendor: Lay-Z-Boy While it may not always be practical, NOTHING compares to a Lay-Z-Boy. Period. The armrests work great as optical mouse pads, you can sleep in it if necessary/desired, you will never, ever have back problems. Granted, they are a little expensive and require a creative solution to monitor positioning, but they're still a good deal cheaper than an Aeron.
When you preformed a search, the client would encrypt the search string and then submit that encrypted string to the Napster server. It would search for that encrypted string in the normal way, and then your client would decrypt the search results. It would have to be very simple encryption (like rot13) so similarly named files would not be overlooked, but it would not need to be complex to qualify under the DMCA.
The names of the MP3's could then have the specific key for that MP3 appended, which would be used to decrypt it client-side. Total strain on the servers would be unchanged.
When you preformed a search, the client would encrypt the search string and then submit that encrypted string to the Napster server. It would search for that encrypted string in the normal way, and then your client would decrypt the search results. It would have to be very simple encryption (like rot13) so similarly named files would not be overlooked, but it would not need to be complex to qualify under the DMCA.
The names of the MP3's could then have the specific key for that MP3 appended, which would be used to decrypt it client-side. Total strain on the servers would be unchanged.