SATA bus speeds don't really mean anything about actual disk performance, but I can tell you a current generation 3 TB 7200 RPM SATA drive can exceed well over 150 MB/s sequential writes, and I see one for $150 on Newegg right now. I've even see a 2.5 inch 1TB drive hit 125 MB/s. Really the only trouble I see is how fast I could fill up 3 TB on a gigabit link:)
I've found that unless you have nice clean power, CFLs don't last any longer than regular bulbs. Not everyone gets 60 Hz pure sine, 120V+-1% to their house. Older wiring, older part of town, etc. I rented an apartment that had me replacing CFLs once a month (until I realized it was the apartment and not a fluke and switched back). You still can't beat 4 bulbs for $.99.
I have the exact opposite experience. I live in a 60 year old house with various electrical oddities and several fixtures that would blow out incandescent bulbs after about 2 months. Replaced them with CFLs and they've lasted years.
My gripe with CFLs are that some have this odd delay when first turning on that drives me crazy, or some turn on dim and then gradually get to full brightness, and then *a few* work perfectly. And it's really hard to find those ones that work well.
They've stated in the terms that you can suggest a price, but ultimately Amazon decides what to charge for your app.
I can't imagine any developer actually being happy with this arrangement.
I don't know, I could see the eventual scenario where the launcher checks to see if an executable is signed before it is permitted to run. We won't wake up one day to find out OS X has been restricted like this. We'll wake up one day and realize OS X hasn't been updated in years and has been replaced by iOS which has these restrictions built in.
In the realm of Linux I can easily say with 100% certainty there will never come a time when all apps have to come through one official "app store." But Mac... I just honestly can't be sure of that. It seems like all roads are pointing to there.
People are arguing about a 30% cut being a big deal, but it's really not. The big deal will be when their app gets rejected from the store because it "duplicates system functionality" or is sexually explicit or some other such bs.
Re:The industry can take all the time it needs
on
WD Launches 3 Terabyte HD
·
· Score: 3, Interesting
Unfortunately these are Western Digital "Green" drives. Speaking as someone who works at a company that sells RAID devices, their Green drives suck for RAID. They're slow (they're usually not even 5400 rpm), and they like to timeout and drop out of the RAID frequently. We saw this same scenario when 2TB drives were released and only the low-speed/low-power drives were available at the beginning. We'll have to wait a few months before proper 3 TB drives are out there.
Does AOL still own Nullsoft / Winamp? That project has been floundering for years. I haven't used Winamp in a long time but I'd love to see someone else give it some attention and bring it back.
So if Apple claims the "pixel density is so high, your eye is unable to distinguish individual pixels"... does that mean the iPhones v5, 6, 7, etc will continue to use the same resolution display since nothing higher will be noticeable by humans? Or is it obviously more likely that displays will continue to improve for the foreseeable future. Coming in 2011: iPhone featuring the revolutionary Retina Display HD!
Example case - trailers from trailers.apple.com - the ones hosted at apple typically demand that you have Quicktime installed (obviously since Quicktime is their technology). Quicktime might be dandy on the Mac but is most definitely god awful on the PC - much worse than Flash, in fact I'd put it in the same category as Adobe Reader or Real Player plugins.
Further more, Quicktime's browser plugin assigns itself as the default player for many types of media - including mp3 files. So every time I click on an.mp3 link in Firefox, the Quicktime plugin fires up and starts playing it - and its player sucks. Also, since it's impossible to install iTunes without Quicktime, every time I install or upgrade iTunes I have to go through and decrap-ify all the mime associations for Quicktime.
By the way, looks like all of the Popular Mechanics issues are on Google Books, too. I had no idea, looks like I'll be killing a few weekends digging through all this great stuff:)
The jury is out on whether or not Microsoft can compete with Google, but man I would be glad if they could.
Back in the early haydays of the Internet, if you couldn't find something with your favorite search engine, there was always a dozen others you could try. Yahoo, Hotbot, Infoseek, Netscape, Lycos, Ask Jeeves, Infoseek, AOL, Altavista, etc etc. It was likely that you could find different results with each engine.
Everyone is correct that Google dominated the market because they got it right, but the problem that arises is the same that comes with any monopoly. If I can't find something with Google then I'm pretty much SOL. Even when I know for a fact what I'm looking for is out there somewhere, Google has failed me many times. I truly look forward to competitors which take different approaches, because ultimately it gives users better options for searching the web.
It's never been advertised as a lightweight alternative to Firefox. In fact it's the exact opposite - it's a browser suite for those that prefer the everything-and-the-kitchen-sink model. When Firefox (or Phoenix I think it was originally called) spun off from Mozilla, the original suite began a steady decline into obscurity. The bastardization that was Firefox focused on stripping away many of the useful features under the premise of trying to build a "lighter" browser (I think they failed, Firefox is still a huge memory hog). Finally, the Mozilla organization officially closed down the suite project and let it become resurrected as a community project and then was born Seamonkey - an effort to restore the glory of the all-in-one suite but still keep it on track with the code updates that went into Firefox.
I know it's hard for some of you to understand, but please be accepting in that there are some of us that just prefer it this way.
My first reaction to seeing this article was how long it will take for Fox News and friends to declare open source software as socialist and how comrade Obama has taken jobs away from hard working capitalist programmers. It's really not a stretch given their track record.
For those looking for a more fun and lighthearted but still very nerdy comic,
Check out the brilliant webcomic "Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage" at http://sydneypadua.com/2dgoggles/
One of the my most favorite things I've found on the internets:)
I live in a state that Comcast doesn't service so I don't have to worry about them much. However I am a big fan of Hulu, which NBC owns a big stake of, right? Would anyone comment on Comcast's trend of business practices and what they might do with their share of Hulu?
I think one of my favorites has always been the common "binutils" package in Linux. Looks like the last release was binutils-2.19.51.0.11
I don't remember ever seeing anything but a 0 in that 4th number, but it's always been there.
Before tackling something as complex as a "robots" how about basic things like teaching them about electricity and magnetism. Let them build electric motors, circuits that light up LEDs, and don't forget mechanical concepts like gears, pulleys and levers. Think fundamental physics-type experiments.
What I really want is an open system, preferably openoffice based, that also combines the benefits of wiki-like multi user editing and version tracking.
We're stuck using Word because it's so much faster and easier for our documenters to use. Basic things like being able to copy and paste a picture into a document and then draw text and arrows on it is something that a wiki just can't do. I've even looked at wikis that have wysiwyg editors and they're still too time consuming and difficult to use. I've considered Sharepoint but cost is an issue and I'm very gun shy about complicated Microsoft solutions.
Is there a Sharepoint-like open source system out there?
I have a Motorola V3 RAZR and it charges fine via USB with no drivers required. It's a T-Mobile version, I'm guessing yours would be from Verizon or a company that cripples their phones on purpose.
I just logged in and converted my "My Nintendo" membership into "Club Nintendo" membership.
It recognized 4 games and 1 Wiiware title that I had previously registered, and then allowed me to take a survey for each game. The surveys were pretty vague but after I was all finished I already have 210 coins.
The biggest beef I've had since the beginning of my Wii experience is the fact that only Nintendo-brand games like Mario, Zelda, etc qualify to be registered. The dozen or so other games I've bought did not qualify, and there's not a good way to tell before hand if a game will qualify. I remember at the very beginning they advertised some deal like "register 5 games and get a free prize" however I could not find 5 games being sold that would qualify (this was like around 6 months after the Wii was released).
Fuck it, just program the robot to kill anyone carrying a weapon. Then make millions of them and airdrop them into war-torn areas.
Now, that's what I call a peace keeper.
Hopefully we can program the robots to not shoot anyone who uses a broom to sweep the weapons off the streets.
Please put down your weapon.
You have 20 seconds to comply.
You have 15 seconds to comply.
You are in direct violation of penal code 1-13, section 9.
You have five seconds to comply.
Four, three, two, one.
I am now authorized to use physical force.
SATA bus speeds don't really mean anything about actual disk performance, but I can tell you a current generation 3 TB 7200 RPM SATA drive can exceed well over 150 MB/s sequential writes, and I see one for $150 on Newegg right now. I've even see a 2.5 inch 1TB drive hit 125 MB/s. Really the only trouble I see is how fast I could fill up 3 TB on a gigabit link :)
Enable the status bar like the parent said, then you can click on the "1.00x" text and a popup gives you the speed controls.
I've found that unless you have nice clean power, CFLs don't last any longer than regular bulbs. Not everyone gets 60 Hz pure sine, 120V+-1% to their house. Older wiring, older part of town, etc. I rented an apartment that had me replacing CFLs once a month (until I realized it was the apartment and not a fluke and switched back). You still can't beat 4 bulbs for $.99.
I have the exact opposite experience. I live in a 60 year old house with various electrical oddities and several fixtures that would blow out incandescent bulbs after about 2 months. Replaced them with CFLs and they've lasted years.
My gripe with CFLs are that some have this odd delay when first turning on that drives me crazy, or some turn on dim and then gradually get to full brightness, and then *a few* work perfectly. And it's really hard to find those ones that work well.
They've stated in the terms that you can suggest a price, but ultimately Amazon decides what to charge for your app. I can't imagine any developer actually being happy with this arrangement.
I don't know, I could see the eventual scenario where the launcher checks to see if an executable is signed before it is permitted to run. We won't wake up one day to find out OS X has been restricted like this. We'll wake up one day and realize OS X hasn't been updated in years and has been replaced by iOS which has these restrictions built in.
In the realm of Linux I can easily say with 100% certainty there will never come a time when all apps have to come through one official "app store." But Mac... I just honestly can't be sure of that. It seems like all roads are pointing to there.
People are arguing about a 30% cut being a big deal, but it's really not. The big deal will be when their app gets rejected from the store because it "duplicates system functionality" or is sexually explicit or some other such bs.
Unfortunately these are Western Digital "Green" drives. Speaking as someone who works at a company that sells RAID devices, their Green drives suck for RAID. They're slow (they're usually not even 5400 rpm), and they like to timeout and drop out of the RAID frequently. We saw this same scenario when 2TB drives were released and only the low-speed/low-power drives were available at the beginning. We'll have to wait a few months before proper 3 TB drives are out there.
+1 I can listen to Groove Salad for hours.
Does AOL still own Nullsoft / Winamp? That project has been floundering for years. I haven't used Winamp in a long time but I'd love to see someone else give it some attention and bring it back.
So if Apple claims the "pixel density is so high, your eye is unable to distinguish individual pixels" ... does that mean the iPhones v5, 6, 7, etc will continue to use the same resolution display since nothing higher will be noticeable by humans? Or is it obviously more likely that displays will continue to improve for the foreseeable future. Coming in 2011: iPhone featuring the revolutionary Retina Display HD!
Example case - trailers from trailers.apple.com - the ones hosted at apple typically demand that you have Quicktime installed (obviously since Quicktime is their technology). Quicktime might be dandy on the Mac but is most definitely god awful on the PC - much worse than Flash, in fact I'd put it in the same category as Adobe Reader or Real Player plugins.
.mp3 link in Firefox, the Quicktime plugin fires up and starts playing it - and its player sucks. Also, since it's impossible to install iTunes without Quicktime, every time I install or upgrade iTunes I have to go through and decrap-ify all the mime associations for Quicktime.
Further more, Quicktime's browser plugin assigns itself as the default player for many types of media - including mp3 files. So every time I click on an
Yes I will be happy when Quicktime dies.
Account options > More options > Advanced > Open These Additional Mailboxes
Unfortunately that method opens up the secondary mailbox in the same context as the primary account - same server, same login credentials.
However... I've been using the Office 2010 beta and FYI they finally added true multiple-exchange account support.
By the way, looks like all of the Popular Mechanics issues are on Google Books, too. I had no idea, looks like I'll be killing a few weekends digging through all this great stuff :)
Back in the early haydays of the Internet, if you couldn't find something with your favorite search engine, there was always a dozen others you could try. Yahoo, Hotbot, Infoseek, Netscape, Lycos, Ask Jeeves, Infoseek, AOL, Altavista, etc etc. It was likely that you could find different results with each engine.
Everyone is correct that Google dominated the market because they got it right, but the problem that arises is the same that comes with any monopoly. If I can't find something with Google then I'm pretty much SOL. Even when I know for a fact what I'm looking for is out there somewhere, Google has failed me many times. I truly look forward to competitors which take different approaches, because ultimately it gives users better options for searching the web.
It's never been advertised as a lightweight alternative to Firefox. In fact it's the exact opposite - it's a browser suite for those that prefer the everything-and-the-kitchen-sink model. When Firefox (or Phoenix I think it was originally called) spun off from Mozilla, the original suite began a steady decline into obscurity. The bastardization that was Firefox focused on stripping away many of the useful features under the premise of trying to build a "lighter" browser (I think they failed, Firefox is still a huge memory hog). Finally, the Mozilla organization officially closed down the suite project and let it become resurrected as a community project and then was born Seamonkey - an effort to restore the glory of the all-in-one suite but still keep it on track with the code updates that went into Firefox.
I know it's hard for some of you to understand, but please be accepting in that there are some of us that just prefer it this way.
My first reaction to seeing this article was how long it will take for Fox News and friends to declare open source software as socialist and how comrade Obama has taken jobs away from hard working capitalist programmers. It's really not a stretch given their track record.
For those looking for a more fun and lighthearted but still very nerdy comic, Check out the brilliant webcomic "Adventures of Lovelace and Babbage" at http://sydneypadua.com/2dgoggles/ One of the my most favorite things I've found on the internets :)
I live in a state that Comcast doesn't service so I don't have to worry about them much. However I am a big fan of Hulu, which NBC owns a big stake of, right? Would anyone comment on Comcast's trend of business practices and what they might do with their share of Hulu?
The helicopter moms would probably throw a fit if they couldn't check up on their precious snowflakes.
Maybe his reference is to that Celicas haven't been built for the last couple of years.
I think one of my favorites has always been the common "binutils" package in Linux. Looks like the last release was binutils-2.19.51.0.11 I don't remember ever seeing anything but a 0 in that 4th number, but it's always been there.
Before tackling something as complex as a "robots" how about basic things like teaching them about electricity and magnetism. Let them build electric motors, circuits that light up LEDs, and don't forget mechanical concepts like gears, pulleys and levers. Think fundamental physics-type experiments.
What I really want is an open system, preferably openoffice based, that also combines the benefits of wiki-like multi user editing and version tracking. We're stuck using Word because it's so much faster and easier for our documenters to use. Basic things like being able to copy and paste a picture into a document and then draw text and arrows on it is something that a wiki just can't do. I've even looked at wikis that have wysiwyg editors and they're still too time consuming and difficult to use. I've considered Sharepoint but cost is an issue and I'm very gun shy about complicated Microsoft solutions. Is there a Sharepoint-like open source system out there?
I have a Motorola V3 RAZR and it charges fine via USB with no drivers required. It's a T-Mobile version, I'm guessing yours would be from Verizon or a company that cripples their phones on purpose.
I just logged in and converted my "My Nintendo" membership into "Club Nintendo" membership. It recognized 4 games and 1 Wiiware title that I had previously registered, and then allowed me to take a survey for each game. The surveys were pretty vague but after I was all finished I already have 210 coins. The biggest beef I've had since the beginning of my Wii experience is the fact that only Nintendo-brand games like Mario, Zelda, etc qualify to be registered. The dozen or so other games I've bought did not qualify, and there's not a good way to tell before hand if a game will qualify. I remember at the very beginning they advertised some deal like "register 5 games and get a free prize" however I could not find 5 games being sold that would qualify (this was like around 6 months after the Wii was released).
Fuck it, just program the robot to kill anyone carrying a weapon. Then make millions of them and airdrop them into war-torn areas.
Now, that's what I call a peace keeper.
Hopefully we can program the robots to not shoot anyone who uses a broom to sweep the weapons off the streets.
Please put down your weapon.
You have 20 seconds to comply.
You have 15 seconds to comply.
You are in direct violation of penal code 1-13, section 9.
You have five seconds to comply.
Four, three, two, one.
I am now authorized to use physical force.
blam blam blam blam