If the videos are not currently available on DVD, where did they get them from? Cameras in theaters? Maybe the quality of -these- copied DVDs really is crappy..
Its far from truely secure, not cheap by any means, and you need lots of really beafy servers to handle the load, plus extra $thousands for licenses for things like load balancing and more users.
My current job is administration of both Citrix farms and Linux servers, and the school I attend uses neither. They have, however sucessfully stretched the IT budget with more then 500 fat-thin clients. Most of the labs on campus are diskless win98 stations booting off the network. Cyrix MediaGX pizza boxes are really nicely suited for this, as they can afford to stick 4-6 of these little things in each freshmen "living center" (which houses probably 100 students each). They almost never break, and have just enough CPU power to run (not incredibly fast) any normal app a student would be running.
Yeah, that jetpack dealy sounds a lot more interesting then these useless documents.
(The only useful documents are the ones in the basement of mp_beach)
I thought it was 20 seconds? And yeah the songs from the matrix sound track have real names and artists, but nobody has heard of them - except maybe like 3 people who know of propeller heads maybe.. (Both entire CDs are nothing but pure goodness of course - the original score and the 'soundtrack')
I just think it was an interesting choice of songs, to say the least. Go amd!
I work for the worlds 5th largest ASP (citrix junk) and since I started we went from 0 Linux boxes to a total of 5 today (4 purely for DNS, another for some pop3/qmail stuff)
According to the PCworld article, "the drives are available in 15GB, 30GB, and 75GB capacities" - but according to IBM at http://www.storage.ibm.com/hdd/support/dtla/dtlamo d.htm there is 20GB, 45GB, and 60GB as well. Not to mention the product number for *ALL* 75GB 75GXP drives is "DTLA-307075". This number has NOTHING to do with being "made in Hungary". All the 75GXP drives appear to have part numbers DTLA-3070xx where xx is the size in GB.
Anyways, my 45GB 75GXP has been working fine for over a year, as well as the two 40GB 60GXP drives in two other computers, and the raid array of 2x 20GB's in another computer, which has been going strong for well over two years.
Then there is my two Seagate 9.1G's, which have each been RMA'd once, and the 14 drives I RMA'd in the past 3 months at work - all 10G Maxtor and W.D.!
http://www.csis.gvsu.edu/~rubleyr/sab
source available for Linux (compiles under BSD too!) and I also compile for win32 - I am fully devoted to overcomming ANY form of advertisement - no matter how much programming is involved.
Our hostmaster@ address received (about 8 months ago) numerous emails from versign asking us to renew domains we didnt really own.
..etc..
If I remember correctly, there were all along the lines of:
fart-sluts.com
shitonmyface.com
I wish I still had the list, there were so funny!
If the videos are not currently available on DVD, where did they get them from? Cameras in theaters?
Maybe the quality of -these- copied DVDs really is crappy..
"tho" is correct, as is "thru" ....
Whatever, jock, no real programmer would seriously think 1-based arrays are the most intuitive.
On the upside, my morphing program's website has seen a 20x-increase in unique visitors within the last week!.
www.morpheussoftware.net
Its far from truely secure, not cheap by any means, and you need lots of really beafy servers to handle the load, plus extra $thousands for licenses for things like load balancing and more users. My current job is administration of both Citrix farms and Linux servers, and the school I attend uses neither. They have, however sucessfully stretched the IT budget with more then 500 fat-thin clients. Most of the labs on campus are diskless win98 stations booting off the network. Cyrix MediaGX pizza boxes are really nicely suited for this, as they can afford to stick 4-6 of these little things in each freshmen "living center" (which houses probably 100 students each). They almost never break, and have just enough CPU power to run (not incredibly fast) any normal app a student would be running.
Yeah, that jetpack dealy sounds a lot more interesting then these useless documents. (The only useful documents are the ones in the basement of mp_beach)
why do we care about these documents again?
Where I work, PC Anywhere is the one on our list. Of course, (tight)VNC is heralded as the best product ever..
and .mil ? ...
tune2fs -c 0 -i 0 /dev/hdXX
I thought it was 20 seconds? And yeah the songs from the matrix sound track have real names and artists, but nobody has heard of them - except maybe like 3 people who know of propeller heads maybe.. (Both entire CDs are nothing but pure goodness of course - the original score and the 'soundtrack') I just think it was an interesting choice of songs, to say the least. Go amd!
Nice soundtrack.
I work for the worlds 5th largest ASP (citrix junk) and since I started we went from 0 Linux boxes to a total of 5 today (4 purely for DNS, another for some pop3/qmail stuff)
According to the PCworld article, "the drives are available in 15GB, 30GB, and 75GB capacities" - but according to IBM at http://www.storage.ibm.com/hdd/support/dtla/dtlamo d.htm there is 20GB, 45GB, and 60GB as well. Not to mention the product number for *ALL* 75GB 75GXP drives is "DTLA-307075". This number has NOTHING to do with being "made in Hungary". All the 75GXP drives appear to have part numbers DTLA-3070xx where xx is the size in GB.
Anyways, my 45GB 75GXP has been working fine for over a year, as well as the two 40GB 60GXP drives in two other computers, and the raid array of 2x 20GB's in another computer, which has been going strong for well over two years.
Then there is my two Seagate 9.1G's, which have each been RMA'd once, and the 14 drives I RMA'd in the past 3 months at work - all 10G Maxtor and W.D.!
http://www.csis.gvsu.edu/~rubleyr/sab source available for Linux (compiles under BSD too!) and I also compile for win32 - I am fully devoted to overcomming ANY form of advertisement - no matter how much programming is involved.