I have seen similar stuff on a computer here, don't know what it is, can't find any registry traces of it, can't figure out what is going on, it isn't scanning, or listening on any odd ports. Gonna have to rebuild it I think.
Coming from a media background I would tend to disagree with your statement. CD audio quality is not perfect, it is Digital, and at that pretty low sampled digital audio. It is missing some of the nuances of "perfect" audio that you get with a true analog recording of the audio. Hence some true stereophiles don't listen to CD's except in their cars or on walkmans, where the ambient noise will cancel out any benefit of really really good audio, which CD's aren't.
CD Audio is 16 Bit, 44Khz Stereo Audio, which is just about what the human ear can hear coupled with what we can process. We hear from about 20Hz to about 22Khz, which based on audio theory, you double to get your sampling rate as 44khz, so the bottle neck that you speak of isn't in the recording equipment, it is in your ear. The reason I say it is about what the human ear can hear and is usually good enough, is that some people hear better, and there are nuances that don't get captured at 16 bit, well truly, 15 bit sampling rate that you get from a cd, just can't compete with true analog recordings of the audio.
Taken from the website [microsoft.com], at the top
5. The United States will publish a notice informing the public of the proposed Final Judgment and public comment period in the Washington Post and the San Jose Mercury News, for seven days over a period of two weeks commencing no later than November 15, 2001.
6. Members of the public may submit written comments about the proposed Final Judgment to a designated official of the Antitrust Division of the United States Department of Justice for a period of 60 days after publication of the proposed Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement in the Federal Register.
7. Within 30 days after the close of the 60-day public comment period, the United States will file with the Court and publish in the Federal Register any comments it receives and its response to those comments.
So, if we don't like it, we should file a comment. if enough people file comments maybe they will get it that this is unsatisfactory to the populus.
Preach on brother. I found the same thing about slackware, I used nandrake, interviewed with and was offered a job with SuSE and have installed redhat. and after it all. I still come back to slackware, why? Cause it has the ability to give me a plain old linux box, with X and can do it all on not "bleeding" edge hardware.
I like the ability to compile my own software and not have to wait for mandrake or redhat to release a new kenel or update to something, and I am not tied down to the rpm management system, but I can choose to use the tgz's if I want.
Ok People, I realize that MSU isn't the largest school in michigan... Oh wait, it is.
Then I guess it doesn't have any sports teams to make you remember it... Oh wait. it does& lt;/a>
Look... MSU instituted this policy for all incomming freshman at the start of this school year..... well shoot me with a stick
The only article I found on the net was this one.
Anyhow.. just trying to give my alma mater it's Due Props.
What are you talking about, will take "another year for this *amazing new technology* to be available"
HP omnibook 900b's currently come with the exact same thing, you buy a 650 and it clocks down to 500 when on battery, if you had read the article you would have heard something about that.
There is a systems out, that does groupware type of functions through a browser. It already exists, is open source, and is useable if not complete yet. It can be found here. It is called TWIG, or "The Web Information Gateway". It might be a solution, and if more people got involved in it it might go faster, and get developed a bit more quickly. There is also Zope. It is a python programming language, and there are , I am sure, ways of duplicating Exchange to Outlook interaction using that. Just my $.02
I am very pleased with a Belkin 6 port AT kvm switch I use at work it is reliable, doesn't cause any errors on the machines on it, and is generally a very useful thing just my.02C later
every major retail outlet uses tactics such as this to try to deter the a$$hole shoplifters. having spent all my pre-tech job years in retail i saw the lengths that establishments went to to halt what some think of as a victimless crime, and at least some of them were just as concerned with internal theft as theft from "customers" just my piece of life-experience
http://www.geocities.com/pierceive/adblock/
Posix compliance ... hrmm... seems like a change warranting a full version increase.
I have seen similar stuff on a computer here, don't know what it is, can't find any registry traces of it, can't figure out what is going on, it isn't scanning, or listening on any odd ports.
Gonna have to rebuild it I think.
Coming from a media background I would tend to disagree with your statement. CD audio quality is not perfect, it is Digital, and at that pretty low sampled digital audio. It is missing some of the nuances of "perfect" audio that you get with a true analog recording of the audio. Hence some true stereophiles don't listen to CD's except in their cars or on walkmans, where the ambient noise will cancel out any benefit of really really good audio, which CD's aren't.
CD Audio is 16 Bit, 44Khz Stereo Audio, which is just about what the human ear can hear coupled with what we can process.
We hear from about 20Hz to about 22Khz, which based on audio theory, you double to get your sampling rate as 44khz, so the bottle neck that you speak of isn't in the recording equipment, it is in your ear.
The reason I say it is about what the human ear can hear and is usually good enough, is that some people hear better, and there are nuances that don't get captured at 16 bit, well truly, 15 bit sampling rate that you get from a cd, just can't compete with true analog recordings of the audio.
Sorry to burst your bubble.
Taken from the website [microsoft.com], at the top
5. The United States will publish a notice informing the public of the proposed Final Judgment and public comment period in the Washington Post and the San Jose Mercury News, for seven days over a period of two weeks commencing no later than November 15, 2001.
6. Members of the public may submit written comments about the proposed Final Judgment to a designated official of the Antitrust Division of the United States Department of Justice for a period of 60 days after publication of the proposed Final Judgment and Competitive Impact Statement in the Federal Register.
7. Within 30 days after the close of the 60-day public comment period, the United States will file with the Court and publish in the Federal Register any comments it receives and its response to those comments.
So, if we don't like it, we should file a comment. if enough people file comments maybe they will get it that this is unsatisfactory to the populus.
Preach on brother. I found the same thing about slackware, I used nandrake, interviewed with and was offered a job with SuSE and have installed redhat. and after it all. I still come back to slackware, why? Cause it has the ability to give me a plain old linux box, with X and can do it all on not "bleeding" edge hardware.
I like the ability to compile my own software and not have to wait for mandrake or redhat to release a new kenel or update to something, and I am not tied down to the rpm management system, but I can choose to use the tgz's if I want.
Just my $.02
Take the time, write something meaningful and express how much you dislike this bill.
Thanks in advance
Ok People, I realize that MSU isn't the largest school in michigan... Oh wait, it is.
Then I guess it doesn't have any sports teams to make you remember it... Oh wait. it does& lt;/a>
Look... MSU instituted this policy for all incomming freshman at the start of this school year..... well shoot me with a stick
The only article I found on the net was this one.
Anyhow.. just trying to give my alma mater it's Due Props.
What are you talking about, will take "another year for this *amazing new technology* to be available"
HP omnibook 900b's currently come with the exact same thing, you buy a 650 and it clocks down to 500 when on battery, if you had read the article you would have heard something about that.
There is a systems out, that does groupware type of functions through a browser.
It already exists, is open source, and is useable if not complete yet.
It can be found here.
It is called TWIG, or "The Web Information Gateway".
It might be a solution, and if more people got involved in it it might go faster, and get developed a bit more quickly.
There is also Zope.
It is a python programming language, and there are , I am sure, ways of duplicating Exchange to Outlook interaction using that.
Just my $.02
I am very pleased with a Belkin 6 port AT kvm switch I use at work .02C
it is reliable, doesn't cause any errors on the machines on it, and is generally a very useful thing
just my
later
every major retail outlet uses tactics such as this to try to deter the a$$hole shoplifters.
having spent all my pre-tech job years in retail i saw the lengths that establishments went to to halt what some think of as a victimless crime, and at least some of them were just as concerned with internal theft as theft from "customers"
just my piece of life-experience