Intel is shooting for high horsepower, while AMD is shooting for high torque.
This suggests that while intel will have high speeds on their CPUs, the temperature underload vs no-load will be very similar. But the AMD temperatures should vary wildly under load vs. no-load.
And another facet is that the intels will benefit hardly at all from overclocking, while the AMD should benefit nicely.
This leads me to a strange issue. What kind of spacing will be between each intel CPU? Its going to require huge spacing to show a performance difference, but at such high GHz to begin with this should be hard. But AMD can have low GHz, but smaller spacing will produce a nicer performance difference.
A bridge has no more need for a MAC address that a switch. A switch is essentially a set of bridges.
If your cable/dsl MODEM has a MAC address, then its more than a bridge. Most of them are routers and webservers as well.
These devices effectively do have MAC addresses on their cable/dsl side though, and likely you can not switch to a new one without contacting your ISP.
Yes but 3 pair of womens shoes cost as much as 1 pair of mans shoes. My wife can go out with $100 and come back with a grip. $100 will get me a pair of pants and a smoothie.
Yes I recall when working for one of the big 3 as an Engineer we all joked about how all our wives, etc. were the ones driving the big trucks though we had bought them for ourselves.
Yet the radio buttons still could not be pushed with a finger-nailed hand...
Plus women simply outnumber men, and not as many are in jail as men.
Nevertheless, I don't believe this for 1 second. They must be stretching the definition of 'tech.'
In my experience, even when women posses tech, it was purchased by a man.
Yea, integratedness has fallen out of favor with me. At least those things that are human detectable such as audio and video.
Integrated sound thus far has been a bad failure. It works well if nothing else is taxing the CPU, but otherwise, it can stutter. My nforce stutters when the network is active so no playing mp3s located on my Linux share...
I'm sure this actually works though. When I was younger and cared, I could control my dreams to a degree. But I find that most of my dreams that I could control were really just the last 1-2 minutess before I woke up at 6am...
The only way to convince your wife the PC could go in the living room was not to put the PC in the living room.
Jedi Mind Trick?
I actually have a PC in the kitchen. Its darn quiet. Thermaltake pure power PSU, ~AMD1.1GHz or less processor (I believe its less), Slim Slient PRO CPU Fan from www.svc.com. NFORCE 1 built in video.
Yes but lets remember that registration with the US copyright office is only done when one is on the path to law suit. Most of the time you see copyrighted materials, they are not fully copyrighted, but the right to copyright is sort of reserved.
If they find that you filed for copyright with the USCO they will know you are serious.
First let me say I agree with your premise. I have never received an anonymous delivery, email or otherwise, that I desired.
But let me show the fallicy of yahoo's actions.
Yahoos step 1 is to reject forged headers. Forged headers was just made illegal by the Bush administration IIRC. I completely approve. Yahoos step 2 is to force a signature on every email by the server. Interestingly, Step 2 removes the need for step 1 and makes you wonder if step 2 is their real desire. Note that a solid step 1 also removes the need for step 2, given that open relays are shut down.
This is where I disapprove.
This proposes the same problem as DRM. Who controls which signatures are accepted? Once again we are right back with Verisign, et al. So unless your server has a PURCHASED KEY from verisign, or the like, your server won't be sending email to yahoo or any of the ISPs that adopt this.
I promise they won't be suggesting PGP either And so the spiral begins. Yahoo sells the rights to the certificates it will accept on a yearly basis. Verisign subsells this right in the form of the infamous certificate chain.
So what if the code is free, the certificates are not!
And exactly who the hell do these guys thing they are? "New form of matter?" "Created?" Should I expect a patent soon?
it works fine if I play files locally, but playing an mp3 from a remote location is horrible.
No question it could be drivers as the lastest for Linux are a horrible joke and have been as such for over 6 months. Had to roll my own there.
but on windows I am having this problem. Perhaps I should revert back to asus drivers instead of nvidia ones. I have an nforce2 400 board from asus.
Microsoft certainly *is* an ISP.
Bill Gates is unquestionably a great and accomplished man. The height of Nerddom. Probably a better choice than the handfull of rock stars...
What they should have done is have a backup system. Such as everything that flies in the US does. WTH else is all the expense for?
I think without the protection of the earths atmosphere their is lots of bombardment of electrical waves and other such phenomonon.
Wouldn't it be both simple and great to list the web server you are connected to by both IP and domain name in the status bar???
WTH else are they using the status bar for?
I thought my wife to look for the lock icon, and check the certificate. But she was probably just giving me the nod treatment.
Yea, this is the point I was making about a year ago in an long drawn out argument with someone on slashdot...
If HR is doing the hiring, then Certs and degrees with count more. If the Manager is doing the hiring, then experience and knowledge will count more.
Also, bigger companies are more capable of training less experienced people in general.
Another analogy would be
Intel is shooting for high horsepower, while AMD is shooting for high torque.
This suggests that while intel will have high speeds on their CPUs, the temperature underload vs no-load will be very similar. But the AMD temperatures should vary wildly under load vs. no-load.
And another facet is that the intels will benefit hardly at all from overclocking, while the AMD should benefit nicely.
This leads me to a strange issue. What kind of spacing will be between each intel CPU? Its going to require huge spacing to show a performance difference, but at such high GHz to begin with this should be hard. But AMD can have low GHz, but smaller spacing will produce a nicer performance difference.
AMD will have a larger line of chips than intel.
Is my logic off anywhere in here?
Yea, and from the article I found the term "misleading" to be incorrect. It was not misleading, that is different. It was lying.
Misleading would be to say it contains 90% "sliver."
A bridge has no more need for a MAC address that a switch. A switch is essentially a set of bridges.
If your cable/dsl MODEM has a MAC address, then its more than a bridge. Most of them are routers and webservers as well.
These devices effectively do have MAC addresses on their cable/dsl side though, and likely you can not switch to a new one without contacting your ISP.
I saw one of those crime solving specials where Microsoft had IP and times stored back a couple of years. So I have to disagree with you.
That does beg the question, Did they file their lawsuits with IP addresses AND times, or just IP addresses?
I expect those suits to be eliminated quickly.
No, its fucking stupid. Another waste of time and money.
If I intend to reprint money on your printers, you don't think I can update the firmware? (lets also remember all jobs are inside jobs)
Oh, excuse me! Printers are too cheap to have firmware anyway, its all in the drivers. CUPS anyone?
I can't see as I will have a problem with this. It will make me ctrl-alt-del and shut down the browser, never again to return to that web page...Ever.
Sometimes I turn off my pop-up blocking to get a better feel of the respectability of websites I'm browsing.
I beg to differ. Females buy clothes with the same level of confidence and results as men buy 'tech.'
Likely just as women overspend for tech, men overspend on clothes.
As far as power tools, I first establish that it does the basics, wont brake, then I can shop between the rest for the EGO booster...
Yes but 3 pair of womens shoes cost as much as 1 pair of mans shoes. My wife can go out with $100 and come back with a grip. $100 will get me a pair of pants and a smoothie.
Yes I recall when working for one of the big 3 as an Engineer we all joked about how all our wives, etc. were the ones driving the big trucks though we had bought them for ourselves.
Yet the radio buttons still could not be pushed with a finger-nailed hand...
Plus women simply outnumber men, and not as many are in jail as men.
Nevertheless, I don't believe this for 1 second. They must be stretching the definition of 'tech.'
In my experience, even when women posses tech, it was purchased by a man.
Yea, integratedness has fallen out of favor with me. At least those things that are human detectable such as audio and video.
Integrated sound thus far has been a bad failure. It works well if nothing else is taxing the CPU, but otherwise, it can stutter. My nforce stutters when the network is active so no playing mp3s located on my Linux share...
Like the movie "Brain Waves."
I'm sure this actually works though. When I was younger and cared, I could control my dreams to a degree. But I find that most of my dreams that I could control were really just the last 1-2 minutess before I woke up at 6am...
The only way to convince your wife the PC could go in the living room was not to put the PC in the living room.
Jedi Mind Trick?
I actually have a PC in the kitchen. Its darn quiet. Thermaltake pure power PSU, ~AMD1.1GHz or less processor (I believe its less), Slim Slient PRO CPU Fan from www.svc.com. NFORCE 1 built in video.
I don't think they can sue for the search engine doing its thing. But I totally agree that they can sue for paid placements on a tradmarked term!
Yes but lets remember that registration with the US copyright office is only done when one is on the path to law suit. Most of the time you see copyrighted materials, they are not fully copyrighted, but the right to copyright is sort of reserved.
If they find that you filed for copyright with the USCO they will know you are serious.
I don't see any nice pictures or anything about whats new?
Do they still consider mozilla a non-end user product and thus only intend to support developers?
It has certainly gotten better over the last few versions. But what earns this a +0.1 value?
No, its the USPTO this time.
Only the money ladden will survive.
First let me say I agree with your premise. I have never received an anonymous delivery, email or otherwise, that I desired.
But let me show the fallicy of yahoo's actions.
Yahoos step 1 is to reject forged headers. Forged headers was just made illegal by the Bush administration IIRC. I completely approve.
Yahoos step 2 is to force a signature on every email by the server. Interestingly, Step 2 removes the need for step 1 and makes you wonder if step 2 is their real desire. Note that a solid step 1 also removes the need for step 2, given that open relays are shut down.
This is where I disapprove.
This proposes the same problem as DRM. Who controls which signatures are accepted? Once again we are right back with Verisign, et al. So unless your server has a PURCHASED KEY from verisign, or the like, your server won't be sending email to yahoo or any of the ISPs that adopt this.
I promise they won't be suggesting PGP either And so the spiral begins. Yahoo sells the rights to the certificates it will accept on a yearly basis. Verisign subsells this right in the form of the infamous certificate chain.
So what if the code is free, the certificates are not!