People don't want lots and lots of single purpose devices. They do not want to have to learn how to set up something for photos, another thing for music, another thing for video.
People also don't want to have to make little johnny stop watching his barney video to show grandma pictures of their last vacation, and then stop grandma because jenny wants to listen to their mp3s. I guess Bill's solution is to buy them all one of their own.
You mean the one that Mike Jones, the linebacker, made to stop the outstretched Kevin Dyson, at about the half yard line, since St. Louis had screwed up and let Tennessee have too much time on. The one that everyone at work talked about for weeks afterwords, the one that half the people at work had a background with that picture on it? - Nope, don't remember that one at all, now you tell me there were commercials during that game... interesting.
Boy that makes me just want to go back to those times, when people with no valid business plan would get cash handed to them on a silver platter, just because of the term "Internet" in their mission statement. Techies like us getting overpaid to do nothing.
<sarcasm> Wait a sec, no it doesn't, I'd rather be here in these times, with all these good jobs, and job security, what was I thinking? </sarcasm>
The Miniket boots from 128KB of NOR Flash, and includes 16MB of SDRAM. As noted above, various models offer different amounts of user file storage, which is based on a single internal NAND Flash chip. The 128KB NOR Flash is only used for bootloader functions; all other system software, including the kernel, is stored within the much larger NAND Flash.
So for someone who hasn't seen all of the Star Wars series:
Should I wait until this comes out, and then see the 6 in their intended order?
Or should I forget all the prequels, and just watch the original three?
Or watch the original three, then the prequels?
I'm curious what the general concensus is. I've just never watched them, except for the original star wars once. (Now that I've shocked everyone, what's your opinion?)
I'd find someone who would be willing to allow ssh access to a machine of their own here in the states. Tunnel everything through ssh. I mean EVERYTHING, down to the last bit. I've never been to China, nor do I plan to anytime in the near future, but from what I have read about their censorship, any precaution you can take is a good one. Encrypted file systems, encrypted transmissions, all good.
Good luck if you do go, and perhaps you can post back to slashdot to let us know what it is really like behind the great firewall.
Under such a scenario, pressure would likely intensify on SBC rivals Verizon and BellSouth to obtain bigger access to the corporate-services market, probably through an acquisition of MCI Inc. Shares of MCI rose 71 cents to $19.37.
I know cisco is working hard on this too. A cisco show I recently attended said that they are planning on having a similar product out sometime that will switch from cell to your phone system when you are within range. I thought their target date was sometime this year.
If the media industries only took the time in the late 90's to understand and serve this group - I believe they call it marketing - rather than fight against them their revenues would be significantly more. Of all industries that should know this it should be the movie industry. <p><p> Today, the film industry generates more income from video/DVD sales and rentals than from theater runs. Had they won their case 20 years ago against Sony and the Supreme Court ruled VCR's were illegal (it was a close 5 to 4 decision) the film industry would have less than HALF the revenues it does today.</i> <p> <p> I hardly see movies in theaters anymore anyway. I don't really enjoy them as much, probably since a lot of movies anymore are crap put out for the sole purpose of making money. (which all movies are to an extent) <p> <p> I save the money for video rentals, I get about 4 movies for the same price for my wife and I. We can then watch them whenever, and not pay $3 for a popcorn and $4 for a soda. <p> <p> Much more enjoyable, and no kids around to bother me while I watch.
Are they hiring lawyers to test them? I mean if it should happen to overheat, and cause the user to catch on fire, a the cold hearted lawyer would not be injured, right? If they do catch on fire, its not like it is a big loss anyways, right?
That's why they are out. If you know anything about doctors, they usually hate technology changes. Its part of the requirements, much like the bad handwriting. They don't want anything that will keep them away;)
Open the Administrative Tools/Services app. Find the "Event Monitor" service. Open the Properties for this service. You cannot pause or stop this service, so set the General/Startup Type to Disabled. On the Recovery tab, set all 3 failure actions to Take No Actions.
Reboot.
Since the service didn't start, spoolcll.exe is not running. Delete it (or whatever).
But, do not delete the service, as its existence will prevent new copies of the virus from activating.
People who use windows for other things, and don't want to pay for the MSSQL license. You'd be suprised, there are several people I know who use this, just because they are lazy and cheap.
They don't seem to be too bad, but they aren't marketed very much by dell, and they probably aren't as high of quality as the Mac's. The only bad thing is the external power supply is rather large.
I got pictures of urinals...
Enjoy the reading...
Slashdot isn't really the best place to ask about getting additional bandwidth.
<p>
<p>Testing your bandwidth, and blowing your limits, yes...
<p>
Getting additional, try google or something
People also don't want to have to make little johnny stop watching his barney video to show grandma pictures of their last vacation, and then stop grandma because jenny wants to listen to their mp3s. I guess Bill's solution is to buy them all one of their own.
well, when you have billions of dollars already in on this, of course he's going to say its what people want. Why wouldn't he?
;)
Heck, he probably already has 10 of these in his own house. And if he has a problem, he just yells at the developers to fix it now
Talk about being ironic...
You mean the one that Mike Jones, the linebacker, made to stop the outstretched Kevin Dyson, at about the half yard line, since St. Louis had screwed up and let Tennessee have too much time on. The one that everyone at work talked about for weeks afterwords, the one that half the people at work had a background with that picture on it? - Nope, don't remember that one at all, now you tell me there were commercials during that game... interesting.
Boy that makes me just want to go back to those times, when people with no valid business plan would get cash handed to them on a silver platter, just because of the term "Internet" in their mission statement. Techies like us getting overpaid to do nothing.
<sarcasm>
Wait a sec, no it doesn't, I'd rather be here in these times, with all these good jobs, and job security, what was I thinking?
</sarcasm>
The Miniket boots from 128KB of NOR Flash, and includes 16MB of SDRAM. As noted above, various models offer different amounts of user file storage, which is based on a single internal NAND Flash chip. The 128KB NOR Flash is only used for bootloader functions; all other system software, including the kernel, is stored within the much larger NAND Flash.
I think diskless means no CD/DVD/floppy
I already did that, and I should have stuck with just the first one.
So for someone who hasn't seen all of the Star Wars series:
Should I wait until this comes out, and then see the 6 in their intended order?
Or should I forget all the prequels, and just watch the original three?
Or watch the original three, then the prequels?
I'm curious what the general concensus is. I've just never watched them, except for the original star wars once. (Now that I've shocked everyone, what's your opinion?)
I take it that is not Darwin's survival of the clickiest?
http://64.233.167.104/search?q=cache:EIUTKvYXDkQJ: www.eff.org/endangered/+&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
I'd find someone who would be willing to allow ssh access to a machine of their own here in the states. Tunnel everything through ssh. I mean EVERYTHING, down to the last bit. I've never been to China, nor do I plan to anytime in the near future, but from what I have read about their censorship, any precaution you can take is a good one. Encrypted file systems, encrypted transmissions, all good.
Good luck if you do go, and perhaps you can post back to slashdot to let us know what it is really like behind the great firewall.
Sounds like everyone wants to play...
I know cisco is working hard on this too. A cisco show I recently attended said that they are planning on having a similar product out sometime that will switch from cell to your phone system when you are within range. I thought their target date was sometime this year.
If the media industries only took the time in the late 90's to understand and serve this group - I believe they call it marketing - rather than fight against them their revenues would be significantly more. Of all industries that should know this it should be the movie industry.
<p><p>
Today, the film industry generates more income from video/DVD sales and rentals than from theater runs. Had they won their case 20 years ago against Sony and the Supreme Court ruled VCR's were illegal (it was a close 5 to 4 decision) the film industry would have less than HALF the revenues it does today.</i>
<p>
<p>
I hardly see movies in theaters anymore anyway. I don't really enjoy them as much, probably since a lot of movies anymore are crap put out for the sole purpose of making money. (which all movies are to an extent)
<p>
<p>
I save the money for video rentals, I get about 4 movies for the same price for my wife and I. We can then watch them whenever, and not pay $3 for a popcorn and $4 for a soda.
<p>
<p>
Much more enjoyable, and no kids around to bother me while I watch.
Are they hiring lawyers to test them? I mean if it should happen to overheat, and cause the user to catch on fire, a the cold hearted lawyer would not be injured, right? If they do catch on fire, its not like it is a big loss anyways, right?
That's why they are out. If you know anything about doctors, they usually hate technology changes. Its part of the requirements, much like the bad handwriting. They don't want anything that will keep them away ;)
If they use linux, it will give them an even greater edge over more advance countries running windows.
Cheaper Labor, Cheaper Software = Cheaper than everywhere else. Not good.
Open the Administrative Tools/Services app.
Find the "Event Monitor" service.
Open the Properties for this service.
You cannot pause or stop this service, so set the General/Startup Type to Disabled.
On the Recovery tab, set all 3 failure actions to Take No Actions.
Reboot.
Since the service didn't start, spoolcll.exe is not running.
Delete it (or whatever).
But, do not delete the service, as its existence will prevent new copies of the virus from activating.
Any stats to back that up?
People who use windows for other things, and don't want to pay for the MSSQL license. You'd be suprised, there are several people I know who use this, just because they are lazy and cheap.
They don't seem to be too bad, but they aren't marketed very much by dell, and they probably aren't as high of quality as the Mac's. The only bad thing is the external power supply is rather large.
If the people aren't going to go into the menus, I doubt that they are going to read a book about how to go into the menus and beyond.