They were like beavers! The new strain of vampires lived underwater in a damn made from bones. Did the people working on the script have writers block and decide, "Hey lets make them like beavers".
I have been running an Exchange 2K server in a small enterprise enviorment for about 4 months now. We origionally migrated from Lotus Notes, and I am currently much happier with Exchange 2K than Lotus Domino. The server has been running for that entire time without requiring a single reboot.
We perform backups of the entire server on a 20gb Travan drive daily. Every monday I run exmerge and extract every mailbox into its own PST file. I can then usually compress the PSTs down from 900mb to less than 400mb, at which point I burn it to CD and file it on a shelf.
Actually it will be RAX, according to the Hammer white paper: http://www.x86-64.org/documentation_folder /white_p aper.pdf.
Perhaps it means, Really extended register?
ughhh... not everyone eats meat
on
The Future of MREs
·
· Score: 2, Interesting
Not everyone eats meat, and not everyone eats every kind of meat. The MREs that were being dropped to Afghans were vegetarian MREs. There are also vegetarian soldiers in the US Army, and Muslim/Jews who cannot eat Pork and Hindus who cannot eat Beef.
Via purchased X86 clone CPU maker Cyrix a while back, perhpas some/.er's might remember the old Cyrix 6x86 PR133 and PR166 cpus. Anyway Via purchased Cyrix a while back and now produces the C3 and C4 line of processors. As far as I know these are PIII clone CPUs built to work in standard Intel chipset motherboards. They are supposed to be a big hit in Asia because they are really cheap, and consume very little power.
In order to produce a Chipset for a CPU you need to have a license from the CPU manufacturer. Hence the big legal tussel between VIA and Intel over VIA DDR chipset for the P4, which Intel claims is an infringment on their P4 patents.
I doubt you will ever see an Intel made chipset for an AMD cpu. Why, well my good natured/.er it is bad for business, it would be like Microsoft releasing X-Box games for other systems.
I have a MB based of the ALI Magik1 chipset with a Duron 750 and PC2100 Cas 2.5 DDR Ram. As far as I know the Duron itself will not permit being run with anything other than a 100 mhz bus, (or 200mhz bus in the case of DDR Ram). I would recommend buying a 133mhz/266mhz rated Athlon CPU if you really want that 133mhz ram speed.
Clustering for windows requires Windows 2000 Advanced Server, and a great deal of patching. And with old hardware you are out of luck trying to run Windows 2000 Advanced Server.
Distributed computing for Windows has been around for a while though, Seti@home has been doing it for years.
Nintendo hired ATI to custom produce a graphics chip for their Game-Cube much like Microsoft hired Nvidia to custom build a graphics processor for thier X-Box. I do not believe that Nintendo would be using ATIs technology for their new Triforce, ATI probably only licensced their graphics chip for use with the Game-Cube.
That would require a launch almost daily to accomodate that many visitors, assuming you take at most 2 visitors at a time. According to NASA, the average cost to launch the shuttle is about $470 million dollars. Talk about a good deal for the tourists.
>>Yes it is. That is why they created the idea of Amendments.
So how do you suppose we interrupt those amendments? Create more amendments to explain cases in which the original amendment isn't applicable? IF you know your civics you also know how hard it is to amend the constitution. There are thousands of Laws passed and the US code (every federal law written) is volumes upon volumes. But to ratify an amendment it requires 3/4 of the state legislatures or 3/4 vote in a constitutional convention.
http://www.house.gov/Constitution/Constitution.htm l
>>And yes, you CAN buy an M1 tank. A distant neighbor has a lovely collection of tanks he keeps in his barn. Very impressive
I assure you your neighbor does not have an M1 tank, perhaps a vintage WWII with its main gun disabled. Assuming he could afford the $4.3 cost for an M1, he would not be sold one. Only a select few countries who are very close allies to the US are allowed to import M1 tanks.
Unfortunately my friend the constitution is not written in stone. The courts are the ones who decide how to interpret the constitution, and can make exceptions cases that were never conceived of when the law was written. It is a very flexible and fair system that was developed to allow changes over time. Our values today are certainly not the same that they were back in the 1800s.
The supreme court has ruled time and time again that there are exceptions to the 1st amendment. Principally fighting words are not protected, any language that you use to insight violence or public mayhem can be restricted. Language and expression that is considered obscene is commonly censored. Certainly if you help someone perpetrate a violence you are liable for your actions, and can be preemptively censored.
There are good reasons why we don't let people publish material on how to build bombs, its the same reason why you cannot by a M1 tank.
Funny how violence solved his problems quickly enough.
Re:Yeah.... riiiiight...
on
AOL vs. Trillian
·
· Score: 2, Interesting
Trillian unlike Microsoft, AT&T, and Jabber was designed exclusively to interoperate with several messenging services. I have friends who use AIM, MSN, Yahoo and ICQ, with Trillian I just need one ap to communicate with them all. It also has a pretty good IRC client built in, I for one love the program and hope AOL takes its head out its ass. AOL is moaning like a whore years after its Netscape was raped by Microsoft, yet they too are trying to dick with the competition. I thought TOC and OSCAR were supposed to be open standards by now?
Verizon cannot change a persons mailing address. They kept sending it to my old address which the post-office was forwarded all my mail to my present address. So I would usually get my bill a week before it was due, I would call them up pay be credit card, then have them change my address. Finally the post office stopped doing address forwarding, my service was 3 days within being cut off because I hadn't paid my bill. So I called up yet again, paid by credit card and had them change my address. I am waiting with not so much expectation for my next billing statement.
There is a very good reason for using codenames for chips other than just a number. You cannot copyright a number under US patent law. There were a whole host of Clone CPUs being pushed out by AMD and Cyric with the name 486. So now all chips carry a name, not a number. Even by all accounts your PIII is a 786.
At COX cable they provide residential with up to 8 dhcp addresses at 512Kbps down and 128Kbps up. If you have just one machine connected they bump your speed up to 1.5Mbps down, and for each other machine you want at 1.5Mbps its 5$ more a month. My room-mate and were previsouly jacked into a hub each at 512Kbps, I recently purchased a SpeedStream 100/10 2 port router for 30$ on sale. I called up the cable modem support, told them I was reducing the number of machines connected to one, and had them bump me to 1.5Mbps. They didn't seem to have a problem with it, for now.
No my friend, nothing is more important than fresh Guinness. More than once I have been served what I thought was to a pint of rich, full, frothy brew, only to be pained by a mug of such teppid foulness that it makes my knees quiver just thinking about it. For god sakes I plead to the bartenders of the world, change your C02 tanks when they are empty.
Other than a video input (S-Video, RCA or Coax) the X-BOX could easily act as a PVR, of course while not being used for anything else. I certainly might shell out 300$ for one if it could act as a PVR and a game system.
Far too many people have never even heard of Mogadishu before the movie, nor that 19 americans were killed and 72 wounded in the fighting. The girl I took to see the movie thought it was during Desert Storm.
They were like beavers! The new strain of vampires lived underwater in a damn made from bones. Did the people working on the script have writers block and decide, "Hey lets make them like beavers".
I have been running an Exchange 2K server in a small enterprise enviorment for about 4 months now. We origionally migrated from Lotus Notes, and I am currently much happier with Exchange 2K than Lotus Domino. The server has been running for that entire time without requiring a single reboot.
We perform backups of the entire server on a 20gb Travan drive daily. Every monday I run exmerge and extract every mailbox into its own PST file. I can then usually compress the PSTs down from 900mb to less than 400mb, at which point I burn it to CD and file it on a shelf.
Actually it will be RAX, according to the Hammer white paper:r /white_p aper.pdf.
http://www.x86-64.org/documentation_folde
Perhaps it means, Really extended register?
Not everyone eats meat, and not everyone eats every kind of meat. The MREs that were being dropped to Afghans were vegetarian MREs. There are also vegetarian soldiers in the US Army, and Muslim/Jews who cannot eat Pork and Hindus who cannot eat Beef.
Amen to that, I eat better when doing field exercises than I do when I cook at home!
Via purchased X86 clone CPU maker Cyrix a while back, perhpas some /.er's might remember the old Cyrix 6x86 PR133 and PR166 cpus. Anyway Via purchased Cyrix a while back and now produces the C3 and C4 line of processors. As far as I know these are PIII clone CPUs built to work in standard Intel chipset motherboards. They are supposed to be a big hit in Asia because they are really cheap, and consume very little power.
In order to produce a Chipset for a CPU you need to have a license from the CPU manufacturer. Hence the big legal tussel between VIA and Intel over VIA DDR chipset for the P4, which Intel claims is an infringment on their P4 patents. /.er it is bad for business, it would be like Microsoft releasing X-Box games for other systems.
I doubt you will ever see an Intel made chipset for an AMD cpu. Why, well my good natured
I have a MB based of the ALI Magik1 chipset with a Duron 750 and PC2100 Cas 2.5 DDR Ram. As far as I know the Duron itself will not permit being run with anything other than a 100 mhz bus, (or 200mhz bus in the case of DDR Ram). I would recommend buying a 133mhz/266mhz rated Athlon CPU if you really want that 133mhz ram speed.
Clustering for windows requires Windows 2000 Advanced Server, and a great deal of patching. And with old hardware you are out of luck trying to run Windows 2000 Advanced Server.
Distributed computing for Windows has been around for a while though, Seti@home has been doing it for years.
I am sure Nintendo has a pretty good argument when it comes to the name Triforce, after all Zelda has been around much longer than Nvidia has been.
Nintendo hired ATI to custom produce a graphics chip for their Game-Cube much like Microsoft hired Nvidia to custom build a graphics processor for thier X-Box. I do not believe that Nintendo would be using ATIs technology for their new Triforce, ATI probably only licensced their graphics chip for use with the Game-Cube.
0 /4 313.html
s /a sk_ati/
http://www.ati.com/na/pages/corporate/press/200
http://www.sharkyextreme.com/hardware/interview
That would require a launch almost daily to accomodate that many visitors, assuming you take at most 2 visitors at a time. According to NASA, the average cost to launch the shuttle is about $470 million dollars. Talk about a good deal for the tourists.
Uhhhh the space shuttle uses hydrogen fuel for its main engine, what the hell are you talking about?
>>Yes it is. That is why they created the idea of Amendments.m l
So how do you suppose we interrupt those amendments? Create more amendments to explain cases in which the original amendment isn't applicable? IF you know your civics you also know how hard it is to amend the constitution. There are thousands of Laws passed and the US code (every federal law written) is volumes upon volumes. But to ratify an amendment it requires 3/4 of the state legislatures or 3/4 vote in a constitutional convention.
http://www.house.gov/Constitution/Constitution.ht
>>And yes, you CAN buy an M1 tank. A distant neighbor has a lovely collection of tanks he keeps in his barn. Very impressive
I assure you your neighbor does not have an M1 tank, perhaps a vintage WWII with its main gun disabled. Assuming he could afford the $4.3 cost for an M1, he would not be sold one. Only a select few countries who are very close allies to the US are allowed to import M1 tanks.
Unfortunately my friend the constitution is not written in stone. The courts are the ones who decide how to interpret the constitution, and can make exceptions cases that were never conceived of when the law was written. It is a very flexible and fair system that was developed to allow changes over time. Our values today are certainly not the same that they were back in the 1800s.
The supreme court has ruled time and time again that there are exceptions to the 1st amendment. Principally fighting words are not protected, any language that you use to insight violence or public mayhem can be restricted. Language and expression that is considered obscene is commonly censored. Certainly if you help someone perpetrate a violence you are liable for your actions, and can be preemptively censored. There are good reasons why we don't let people publish material on how to build bombs, its the same reason why you cannot by a M1 tank.
Funny how violence solved his problems quickly enough.
Trillian unlike Microsoft, AT&T, and Jabber was designed exclusively to interoperate with several messenging services. I have friends who use AIM, MSN, Yahoo and ICQ, with Trillian I just need one ap to communicate with them all. It also has a pretty good IRC client built in, I for one love the program and hope AOL takes its head out its ass. AOL is moaning like a whore years after its Netscape was raped by Microsoft, yet they too are trying to dick with the competition. I thought TOC and OSCAR were supposed to be open standards by now?
Verizon cannot change a persons mailing address. They kept sending it to my old address which the post-office was forwarded all my mail to my present address. So I would usually get my bill a week before it was due, I would call them up pay be credit card, then have them change my address. Finally the post office stopped doing address forwarding, my service was 3 days within being cut off because I hadn't paid my bill. So I called up yet again, paid by credit card and had them change my address. I am waiting with not so much expectation for my next billing statement.
There is a very good reason for using codenames for chips other than just a number. You cannot copyright a number under US patent law. There were a whole host of Clone CPUs being pushed out by AMD and Cyric with the name 486. So now all chips carry a name, not a number. Even by all accounts your PIII is a 786.
At COX cable they provide residential with up to 8 dhcp addresses at 512Kbps down and 128Kbps up. If you have just one machine connected they bump your speed up to 1.5Mbps down, and for each other machine you want at 1.5Mbps its 5$ more a month. My room-mate and were previsouly jacked into a hub each at 512Kbps, I recently purchased a SpeedStream 100/10 2 port router for 30$ on sale. I called up the cable modem support, told them I was reducing the number of machines connected to one, and had them bump me to 1.5Mbps. They didn't seem to have a problem with it, for now.
No my friend, nothing is more important than fresh Guinness. More than once I have been served what I thought was to a pint of rich, full, frothy brew, only to be pained by a mug of such teppid foulness that it makes my knees quiver just thinking about it. For god sakes I plead to the bartenders of the world, change your C02 tanks when they are empty.
Other than a video input (S-Video, RCA or Coax) the X-BOX could easily act as a PVR, of course while not being used for anything else. I certainly might shell out 300$ for one if it could act as a PVR and a game system.
vacuous coward
Far too many people have never even heard of Mogadishu before the movie, nor that 19 americans were killed and 72 wounded in the fighting. The girl I took to see the movie thought it was during Desert Storm.
Coward