That device is also requires app support, numerous reviews on that page say it doesn't mirror output and doesn't work for a number of apps. Your presentation might not go that well after all, unless of course you only use Keynote and Videos for your presentations; or jailbreak the phone to enable mirroring...
Superfetch is a huge part of the perception that Vista is a 'resource pig'. It loads your RAM with commonly accessed files when there is nothing else to do with it, in theory that ram can be cleared as soon as something you're running actually needs it so there is no performance loss in preloading.
I've been running Vista for around 18 months on a relatively inexpensive machine as well and the only complaint I have with it is that it is still far slower for gaming than XP would be.
really? I use google talk and I don't see what you are talking about. elaborate? Open a new chat window, click the chat area and hold down a key. The window will scroll lines up into the chat area. It is sort of annoying if you're writing huge blocks of text, but a simple option to limit the scroll lines or expand the window downwards would appease most people I think.
Personally, I prefer it the way it is, but wish it didn't scroll up 12 lines or so into my chat area.
none of the questions answered were all that new, and were very sanitised. The major question I still have is concerning supplements. I realize that part of a DMs responsibility is to control what he allows in his game so as not to unbalance it. With the huge number of Wizards released supplements in 3.5 this became especially challenging, as few of the new classes or prestige classes seemed at all balanced with core versions and were either very underpowered or terribly overpowered. Same with spells, feats and monsters. My gaming group has collectively picked up 20 or so additional books, from which any player can cherry pick a feat here, PRC there, new spell here, and wind up with something that drastically unbalances the campaign. None of my players are char-op munchkins, but in every book there are one or two neat things that seem quite reasonable on their own but end up with very unreasonable synergy with other non-core abilities.
What is WOTC doing in 4E to more properly balance all content being put out in supplements both against the core rules and against other supplements.
You need to do more research. The connector is a measly $29. http://store.apple.com/us/product/MC552ZM/A
That device is also requires app support, numerous reviews on that page say it doesn't mirror output and doesn't work for a number of apps. Your presentation might not go that well after all, unless of course you only use Keynote and Videos for your presentations; or jailbreak the phone to enable mirroring...
Superfetch is a huge part of the perception that Vista is a 'resource pig'. It loads your RAM with commonly accessed files when there is nothing else to do with it, in theory that ram can be cleared as soon as something you're running actually needs it so there is no performance loss in preloading.
I've been running Vista for around 18 months on a relatively inexpensive machine as well and the only complaint I have with it is that it is still far slower for gaming than XP would be.
Personally, I prefer it the way it is, but wish it didn't scroll up 12 lines or so into my chat area.
Clearly you're a turkey-maggot like the ones sitting on the board of education, corrupting our youths with your orange granddaddy witchtalk.
none of the questions answered were all that new, and were very sanitised. The major question I still have is concerning supplements. I realize that part of a DMs responsibility is to control what he allows in his game so as not to unbalance it. With the huge number of Wizards released supplements in 3.5 this became especially challenging, as few of the new classes or prestige classes seemed at all balanced with core versions and were either very underpowered or terribly overpowered. Same with spells, feats and monsters. My gaming group has collectively picked up 20 or so additional books, from which any player can cherry pick a feat here, PRC there, new spell here, and wind up with something that drastically unbalances the campaign. None of my players are char-op munchkins, but in every book there are one or two neat things that seem quite reasonable on their own but end up with very unreasonable synergy with other non-core abilities.
What is WOTC doing in 4E to more properly balance all content being put out in supplements both against the core rules and against other supplements.