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User: scasagrande

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  1. Re:Technology looking for a solution? on California Begins Trial Rollout of Digital License Plates (caranddriver.com) · · Score: 1

    I also wonder how these will work in accidents. The tag numbers are usually the way of identifying the owners of the cars.

    A serial number on the back of the plate could survive, even if the display is destroyed.

  2. Dodge Extinction on Small, Big-Brained Animals Dodge Extinction · · Score: 1

    Great name for a new SUV.

  3. Re:Why do you need a 3D? on Porn Industry Tiptoes Into 3D Video · · Score: 1

    The polarization for passive glasses is circular, so alignment isn't an issue.

    The question of active/passive glasses is generally a trade-off between display cost and glasses cost. Most passive technologies for the home also involve reduction in vertical resolution (where alternate lines are polarized differently). Active technologies involve a reduction in frame rate (or an effective doubling in frame rate to recover).

  4. Re:I don't want to know where it comes from . . . on Low-Energy Laser Etching May Replace Fruit Labels · · Score: 1

    But what would you write on Durian?

    The OP did mention "Sweaty Tennis Socks", so we're covered.

  5. I traveled 2 years by bicycle on Gadgets You Backpack Around the World With? · · Score: 1
    From 2001-2003 my wife and I took a 2 year bike trip. While we could take more gear than a backpacker, we still tried to keep it light.

    First was a Fujitsu P1000 micro-laptop (Transmeta Crusoe based, so there's your "linux/linus" reference, although it ran WinME). I used it for email, web browsing, updating a web page, managing finances, storage of digital photos, and as an MP3 player. It held up remarkably well in 15000 miles of on- and off-road riding, and did everything I needed it to do. No CD drive - the external one I used was left behind. The PCMCIA slot was used to mount the camera's memory card.

    Next was a Kodak DC280 digital camera. It used AA batteries, and I used a small charger rather than buying new batteries. The weight of the charger was pretty low. The camera was beat up pretty well, but still works. Pictures were copied to the laptop as needed.

    A couple of small earbud earphones with a splitter to let us listen to music in the tent, as well as an adapter to have RCA outputs to pipe audio to a hotel's TV or stereo when desired (music or webcasts).

    Internet access was typically through dial-up, although I could use a local fast connection when available. You can either get a service with roaming support like iPass, or sign up for local service if you plan to be in a country for a while. We even used Net10's free service while in the USA; this was sufficient to connect, download/upload emails and cache a few web pages, and disconnect.

    I had a cell phone - we'd get pre-paid SIM cards for use in local countries, and just tell friends our new phone number as needed. This was for emergencies, and for making travel arrangements and hotel bookings when needed.

    No GPS receiver - although it might have been nice to have a log of our travels.

    We used BOB trailers for most of the trip, and had a small daypack to carry the computer, camera, passports and cash with us at all times.

  6. Re:no, very sophisticated ispell on Three LindowsOS PCs Reviewed · · Score: 4, Funny

    "So, there you go. All is from Greek!"

  7. Story I heard about OS/2's first demo on OS/2 Going, Going... Gone · · Score: 1

    Story: Gates and IBM's suits are at the first demo of OS/2. They turn the thing on and wait for something like 5 or 10 minutes for it to boot. The IBM guys, used to mainframe boot times, think this is really fast; after all, it takes much longer to boot a mainframe! Bill looks at them and realizes that he's going to go ahead with Windows/Win32. As a former user of OS/2 at IBM, I know that even internally it was hard to get support for it. The first thing many people did was to re-install Win95 over their laptops...