I read this is what the Xbox does, reading outside of disc to inside. They said it was to get the maximum read speed. This makes sense since the outside spins faster than the inside.
I have a customer that has 10 simultaneous citrix ica connections over a 56k line. It works fine. Just use icon caching, 16-color(who needs 24-bit for word, access, most other business apps).
Remote X is also very usable with blackbox, at 16 color over 128k link. I know it won't do wekk over 33.6, unless maybe with compression, never used it.
2000 server only supports 4 processors if it is any upgrade from NT4 server. If it's a clean install, it only supports 2. Advanced 2000 server will support 4 on clean install or 8 if upgraded fron NT 4 Enterprise.
Not trying to nitpick but make sure people get more clearer info. Of course, you probably got your info from MS which is of course going to be a little misleading. Heck, that's true for more companies than just MS though.
How does adding a tax help anything? It gives users a reason not to buy online.
Besides, what about shareware. The demo product is free, therefore $0 tax. Now the license # that I paid the vendor to email me is not taxable.
Not to be insulting, but its nice to know the EU is just as whacked out as our US policies.
How good will the support be, if it takes hours just to download it? I mean, I always want to know that the support will be quick and timely.
Taking hours to send download info just leaves a bad impression immediately. Why would I try software from an operation that I'm already weary of. I'd rather find something else.
What really sucks though (Windows issue only) is the fact that Symantec now charges $20 for a 30 day demo of pcAnywhere. This was the first I've ever heard of this. Who wouldn't find VNC after a google search.
I read this is what the Xbox does, reading outside of disc to inside. They said it was to get the maximum read speed. This makes sense since the outside spins faster than the inside.
Isn't standard ethernet 1,2,3,& 6?
2 posts and can't connect.
Slight correction, you mean ICA. ICS= internet connection sharing ICA=independent client architecture (Citrix)
I have a customer that has 10 simultaneous citrix ica connections over a 56k line. It works fine. Just use icon caching, 16-color(who needs 24-bit for word, access, most other business apps). Remote X is also very usable with blackbox, at 16 color over 128k link. I know it won't do wekk over 33.6, unless maybe with compression, never used it.
Broke a pin off of a p3 cpu. socket-370 i think. Plugged back, had no problem since.
sorry had to do it
When I'm looking for stuff I always look at google and ebay first. If it isn't there, it doesn't exist.
2000 server only supports 4 processors if it is any upgrade from NT4 server. If it's a clean install, it only supports 2. Advanced 2000 server will support 4 on clean install or 8 if upgraded fron NT 4 Enterprise. Not trying to nitpick but make sure people get more clearer info. Of course, you probably got your info from MS which is of course going to be a little misleading. Heck, that's true for more companies than just MS though.
I think that TV is like 320x240 in the US. That would reduce bandwidth by %75 (since it's a 1/4 of VGA). Just a minor correction, not trying to troll.
How does adding a tax help anything? It gives users a reason not to buy online. Besides, what about shareware. The demo product is free, therefore $0 tax. Now the license # that I paid the vendor to email me is not taxable. Not to be insulting, but its nice to know the EU is just as whacked out as our US policies.
How good will the support be, if it takes hours just to download it? I mean, I always want to know that the support will be quick and timely. Taking hours to send download info just leaves a bad impression immediately. Why would I try software from an operation that I'm already weary of. I'd rather find something else. What really sucks though (Windows issue only) is the fact that Symantec now charges $20 for a 30 day demo of pcAnywhere. This was the first I've ever heard of this. Who wouldn't find VNC after a google search.