No, the Netapps use CIFS over TCP/IP, and in our case we used our regular datacenter LAN which was arguably better than even many dedicated storage networks, but which was a stock ethernet lan nonetheless.
Use the Recovery Console on win2k and above and disable the service that is failing to boot, very simple and most techs who worked on win2k should be familiar with it thanks to the steaming pile that was Adaptec's Easy CD Creator 4.
That's funny because a very common use for Netapp filers is to hold Oracle and Exchange databases. The filers were traditionally NAS devices necessitating that they be attached to a network =) Of course a properly designed network is more reliable than just about any local storage system (Think dual Cisco 6500 series for the core to redundant 6500's for the local storage switches, put dual admin modules in each Cisco and you basically have guarenteed 6+ 9's uptime for the network, this was our real setup at my last job). Just because it's on the network does not mean it has to be unreliable. Hell with the battery backed ram cache, failover clustering, etc the Netapp's are MUCH more reliable than local storage.
The obvious answer is to encrypt the pictures with Ritz's public key and have the private key kept only in their machines. Don't fight technology with stupid legislation, fight it with better technology.
Actually this will probably blow up in the studios faces as it is very in your face DRM. Once you tell someone they can't tape sex in the city or their other favorite popular program with their new ultra expensive HDTV setup they will be ROYALLY pissed. Free use rights as upheld by the supreme court should not simply be ruled away by a board elected by no one.
It has nothing to do with incompetence. As it stands right now cell phone numbers are assigned in blocks, eg 555-123-XXXX and 555-125-XXXX could be cell blocks and 555-124-XXXX could be a land line exchange. All non-retarded telemarketers have a list of exchanges across the country which are designated as cell exchanges and scrub all those numbers from their call lists as one of the first steps. With this change those exchanges won't necessarily be all cell so they can no skip that step, as well you can have a cell phone that has a phone number in a non-formerly cell block so the telemarketers would have no way of knowing it was a cellphone. Since 95+% of people pay for incoming calls to their cell this is a problem.
Now telemarketers can no longer screen out cellphone blocks so expect more telemarketing calls on your cellphone as they can correctly claim that they no longer have the ability to tell if a number is a cell number or not.
Both the games I currently play have problems with ATI drivers. NWN and Etherlords 2 both have sections on bugs in ATI drivers and what to do about them (often nothing can be done until ATI works with the publisher to fix the problems). These are not the only games that have ATI problems either.
Actually 3dfx SLI stood for scan line interleave, meaning that each chip rendered every other line, not every other pixel. For the 4 chip cards each chip did every fourth line.
Good, I can use it for the theatrical mega-version of LOTR. This will be each of the extended editions played in the theater followed by the theatrical release of the third movie. It should be a stupendous half day =)
I have a series one iPod and I get around 10 hours battery life if I leave it on repeat album and random play. This mode loads an album at a time into cache (if it will fit) so that HDD access is minimized. Not only that but for the adventurous geek there is an aftermarket battery pack with an ~15% higher rating than the stock unit available here, it appears they have even added one for the series 3 ipod's.
Except when you have a bunch of transistors leaking current and draining your battery neadlessly. It's like taking the Ferrari out into rural Nevada and using the turbochargers, fun for a while but it sucks when you run out of juice.
Well downsampling from the 7.1 signal to a stereo signal with a 3D spatializing engine would probably work a lot better than taking a stereo signal and trying to generate the 3D positional information. The amount of 3D positioning you can get out of a pair of stereo headphones and good algorithms is amazing.
Personally I think it's retarded that they spec'd a 664Mpixel/s. 33Mtriangle/s graphics core for a handheld with a resolution of only 480*272, at 60fps that means each triangle can be 1/4th of a pixel, or each pixel can be refreshed 5,000+ times a second, somehow I doubt their lcd refreshes that quickly! The one thing that would be cool would be streaming mp3's to the device over the 802.11b radio link, but somehow I doubt it would get decent battery life that way =)
No, hopefully it would be criminally negligent homicide. The action leading to the deaths would be premeditated and obvious to the thinking man that it was dangerous. I like idiots to get 10-25 instead of 5-10 =)
and their usage to see through clothing to see naked skin is utturly rediculous
You've obviously never seen This site or ones like it dedicated to the Sony camcorders with Nightshot and their ability to see through thin clothing. Of course it uses near infrared instead of xrays but the same principal.
If you had RTFA you would know that 80% of the Fortune 500 runs Netware in some capacity. The features Netware offers aren't really all that usefull for small companies (other than reliability) but there is nothing better for large enterprises.
The company that I might go to work for next week is looking at using NDS as the centerpiece of a single sign on solution. They hope to reduce an average of 9 passwords down to one. At work[-2] they also used NDS for SSO, it was more like 20 disparit systems down to 1 password. Reducing passwords isn't just a nicety, it gets people to remember their password instead of writing them all down on the postit on the side of their monitor. Other than that there is a large installed base of Novell shops that don't see a need to go to anything else because Netware works for them.
It might be too soon for the general home market (I know plenty of people who run it at home but most are geeks). For the corporate desktop I don't think it's too soon at all. In fact I have been part of some large scale rollouts. One was around 4,500 seats which was around 10% of that companies total seats. This was a Redhat supported contract too.
With mp3 it's already there. ID3v2 allows for arbitrary insertion of material and there are already formats out there for lyrics, liner notes, cover art, etc. Beyond that Copyright holder and composer are standard ID3v2 fields that any modern player should be able to display.
Because as Apple has found out nearly half of their sales have been album at a time. It may have to do with the pricing structure ($1/song or $10/album), but somehow I think most people still like the idea of a cohesive set of songs by a single artist. I guess eventually the format of the LP will be dead but it may take some time before we get there.
No, the Netapps use CIFS over TCP/IP, and in our case we used our regular datacenter LAN which was arguably better than even many dedicated storage networks, but which was a stock ethernet lan nonetheless.
Use the Recovery Console on win2k and above and disable the service that is failing to boot, very simple and most techs who worked on win2k should be familiar with it thanks to the steaming pile that was Adaptec's Easy CD Creator 4.
That's funny because a very common use for Netapp filers is to hold Oracle and Exchange databases. The filers were traditionally NAS devices necessitating that they be attached to a network =) Of course a properly designed network is more reliable than just about any local storage system (Think dual Cisco 6500 series for the core to redundant 6500's for the local storage switches, put dual admin modules in each Cisco and you basically have guarenteed 6+ 9's uptime for the network, this was our real setup at my last job). Just because it's on the network does not mean it has to be unreliable. Hell with the battery backed ram cache, failover clustering, etc the Netapp's are MUCH more reliable than local storage.
The obvious answer is to encrypt the pictures with Ritz's public key and have the private key kept only in their machines. Don't fight technology with stupid legislation, fight it with better technology.
Actually this will probably blow up in the studios faces as it is very in your face DRM. Once you tell someone they can't tape sex in the city or their other favorite popular program with their new ultra expensive HDTV setup they will be ROYALLY pissed. Free use rights as upheld by the supreme court should not simply be ruled away by a board elected by no one.
It has nothing to do with incompetence. As it stands right now cell phone numbers are assigned in blocks, eg 555-123-XXXX and 555-125-XXXX could be cell blocks and 555-124-XXXX could be a land line exchange. All non-retarded telemarketers have a list of exchanges across the country which are designated as cell exchanges and scrub all those numbers from their call lists as one of the first steps. With this change those exchanges won't necessarily be all cell so they can no skip that step, as well you can have a cell phone that has a phone number in a non-formerly cell block so the telemarketers would have no way of knowing it was a cellphone. Since 95+% of people pay for incoming calls to their cell this is a problem.
Now telemarketers can no longer screen out cellphone blocks so expect more telemarketing calls on your cellphone as they can correctly claim that they no longer have the ability to tell if a number is a cell number or not.
Both the games I currently play have problems with ATI drivers. NWN and Etherlords 2 both have sections on bugs in ATI drivers and what to do about them (often nothing can be done until ATI works with the publisher to fix the problems). These are not the only games that have ATI problems either.
Actually 3dfx SLI stood for scan line interleave, meaning that each chip rendered every other line, not every other pixel. For the 4 chip cards each chip did every fourth line.
Good, I can use it for the theatrical mega-version of LOTR. This will be each of the extended editions played in the theater followed by the theatrical release of the third movie. It should be a stupendous half day =)
I have a series one iPod and I get around 10 hours battery life if I leave it on repeat album and random play. This mode loads an album at a time into cache (if it will fit) so that HDD access is minimized. Not only that but for the adventurous geek there is an aftermarket battery pack with an ~15% higher rating than the stock unit available here, it appears they have even added one for the series 3 ipod's.
What do you call the HDD???
Except when you have a bunch of transistors leaking current and draining your battery neadlessly. It's like taking the Ferrari out into rural Nevada and using the turbochargers, fun for a while but it sucks when you run out of juice.
Hell, DVD burners just broke the $100 barrier and blanks are about as cheap on a per MB basis if you shop around.
Well downsampling from the 7.1 signal to a stereo signal with a 3D spatializing engine would probably work a lot better than taking a stereo signal and trying to generate the 3D positional information. The amount of 3D positioning you can get out of a pair of stereo headphones and good algorithms is amazing.
Personally I think it's retarded that they spec'd a 664Mpixel/s. 33Mtriangle/s graphics core for a handheld with a resolution of only 480*272, at 60fps that means each triangle can be 1/4th of a pixel, or each pixel can be refreshed 5,000+ times a second, somehow I doubt their lcd refreshes that quickly! The one thing that would be cool would be streaming mp3's to the device over the 802.11b radio link, but somehow I doubt it would get decent battery life that way =)
No, hopefully it would be criminally negligent homicide. The action leading to the deaths would be premeditated and obvious to the thinking man that it was dangerous. I like idiots to get 10-25 instead of 5-10 =)
and their usage to see through clothing to see naked skin is utturly rediculous
You've obviously never seen This site or ones like it dedicated to the Sony camcorders with Nightshot and their ability to see through thin clothing. Of course it uses near infrared instead of xrays but the same principal.
If you had RTFA you would know that 80% of the Fortune 500 runs Netware in some capacity. The features Netware offers aren't really all that usefull for small companies (other than reliability) but there is nothing better for large enterprises.
The company that I might go to work for next week is looking at using NDS as the centerpiece of a single sign on solution. They hope to reduce an average of 9 passwords down to one. At work[-2] they also used NDS for SSO, it was more like 20 disparit systems down to 1 password. Reducing passwords isn't just a nicety, it gets people to remember their password instead of writing them all down on the postit on the side of their monitor. Other than that there is a large installed base of Novell shops that don't see a need to go to anything else because Netware works for them.
Then make an RFC for embedding PDF's into ID3v2 tags. Since PDF is an open standard it wouldn't even be a problem from a proprietary standpoint.
It might be too soon for the general home market (I know plenty of people who run it at home but most are geeks). For the corporate desktop I don't think it's too soon at all. In fact I have been part of some large scale rollouts. One was around 4,500 seats which was around 10% of that companies total seats. This was a Redhat supported contract too.
Sure you can, you just need Stanton's Final Scratch Pro =)
With mp3 it's already there. ID3v2 allows for arbitrary insertion of material and there are already formats out there for lyrics, liner notes, cover art, etc. Beyond that Copyright holder and composer are standard ID3v2 fields that any modern player should be able to display.
Because as Apple has found out nearly half of their sales have been album at a time. It may have to do with the pricing structure ($1/song or $10/album), but somehow I think most people still like the idea of a cohesive set of songs by a single artist. I guess eventually the format of the LP will be dead but it may take some time before we get there.