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User: Ed+Avis

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  1. Re:No OS support. on Where Are All the High-Resolution Desktop Displays? · · Score: 1

    At work I run Windows XP at 200 per cent font size and it works pretty well. The biggest problem is badly designed websites that specify fixed pixel sizes. For those I sometimes have to Ctrl-minus in Firefox to get down to 'normal' font size.

  2. Re:Big shoutout to Tridge and the whole Samba team on Samba 4 Enters Beta · · Score: 4, Informative

    Since a European Union antitrust ruling, Microsoft has been co-operating with the Samba team by providing them documentation. This is a news article from 2008: http://lwn.net/Articles/262891/ Sure, it's only because they have been forced to, so Microsoft may not get any points for being nice; but my understanding is that the Samba guys have been pleasantly surprised by the working relationship they now have with their opposite numbers at MS.

  3. Re:Cool tech, but on LG Aims To Beat Apple's Retina Display · · Score: 1

    The Retina display showing well-rendered, hinted and sub-pixel anti-aliased fonts may be beyond what a human eye can resolve. But if you render outline fonts into two-colour bitmaps without hinting, they will still look a bit pixellated and ugly even on the high-resolution display, if it is held close up. An even higher-resolution display would give a bit more latitude to render things more simply and still have them come out looking perfect.

  4. Re:You cant hear it anyway. on Dolby's TrueHD 96K Upsampling To Improve Sound On Blu-Rays · · Score: 1

    I assume the experiment used a high quality 44.1kHz digitizer and DAC. But what about lower quality hardware? If they're done less than perfectly, the digital to analogue or analogue to digital conversions may perceptibly change the sound even at 44.1kHz. One reason to use higher frequencies might be that a 100Hz ADC-DAC pair is always imperceptible, even if built using cheap hardware.

  5. Re:Not for this type of geek on Book Review: Fitness For Geeks · · Score: 1

    If you can afford it join a gym and hire a personal trainer. If you find your workout monotonous, it's probably not that effective either. A good trainer will be able to plan exercise routines that have plenty of variety and are much more effective than doing the same old thing for long periods. Then once you and your body start getting used to the routine, the trainer can change it.

  6. Marginal cost? on Windows 8 Won't Play DVDs Unless You Pay For the Media Center Pack · · Score: 1

    Does the guy understand what marginal cost means? The cost to Microsoft of including a few extra megabytes on the install media (or on the disk of a machine sold with Windows) is zero. It only costs them extra to include the media stuff because of their own marketing contortions where they decided to package and sell it separately. If they just included it by default, the marginal cost would be nothing. There are upfront costs (also known as sunk costs) involved in writing the software in the first place, but marginal cost is the cost of producing one extra copy. In software, as in movies or music, that cost is either zero or something very close to zero.

  7. Re:Intel makes for awesome Linux boxes. on Why Intel Leads the World In Semiconductor Manufacturing · · Score: 1

    Thanks - yes a decent laptop can drive an external display as well as the builtin screen. I am thinking more of desktops with two, four or even eight DVI outputs.

  8. Re:Intel makes for awesome Linux boxes. on Why Intel Leads the World In Semiconductor Manufacturing · · Score: 1

    It's a shame there are no add-in PCI Express cards with Intel's graphics hardware (perhaps a couple of low-end Core processors with the CPU part disabled and just the GPU running). I would love to use Intel graphics instead of Nvidia but if you have several monitors it's not possible - unless you can now get a motherboard with two or four video outputs.

  9. Dual-link DVI? on NVIDIA Unveils Dual-GPU Powered GeForce GTX 690 · · Score: 1

    The article shows three DVI connectors, but are they single-link or dual-link?

  10. Re:Missing the one real advantage of x86 on Review of the First Medfield Phone · · Score: 1

    Good point. The phone could run Virtualbox or VMWare, and XP inside that. Come to think of it, it's suprising low-end PCs like netbooks don't so the same - it could cut hardware costs.

  11. Missing the one real advantage of x86 on Review of the First Medfield Phone · · Score: 1

    Why didn't they just put Windows XP on it? Then it would be *really* useful and have one clear advantage over every other phone. A simple dialler application wouldn't be hard to write to make phone calls. (Linux is better technically, but lots of people are tied to Windows for particular applications and would love to have something more portable than a netbook to run them. In my case, it's a VPN client used to connect to work.) I know Intel wants to push x86 as an embedded platform, and Android is kinda the standard for phones these days, but I'm surprised they give up on the old Wintel model so easily. Heck, I would suggest that replacing Windows Phone with something based on Windows XP and x86 processors is an easy way for Microsoft to grab marketshare in the corporate market.

  12. Re:HD 4000 on Intel Officially Lifts the Veil On Ivy Bridge · · Score: 1

    I don't know what the yield on Intel's new 22nm process is like, but given the large area of the chip used by the GPU, I would have expected a significant proportion of bad chips to be caused by GPU defects. These could then be sold as processors with no onboard GPU. I guess marketing didn't want to confuse things, and in any case the marginal cost of making one more chip is not a big part of the price, so they are content to just throw away these defective chips.

  13. Instant local echo on Mosh: Modernizing SSH With IP Roaming, Instant Local Echo · · Score: 1

    So mosh has brought back the ages-old idea of local echo on the terminal. It disappeared as soon as terminal connections became faster than the old teletype links. I have often wished for such a feature in ssh, some kind of 'cooked mode'. However I usually run a 'screen' session on the other end of ssh, with emacs inside that, and finally a shell-mode under Emacs! Mosh would need to do something quite clever to enable local editing in that.

  14. Re:Everyone ignores Commodore on Jack Tramiel, Founder of Commodore Business Machines, Dies At Age 83 · · Score: 1

    Are you sure the IBM PC was faster than the C64? I believe it did not benchmark that well against the 6502-based machines of the same era. Though for sure there would be workloads where a 16-bit processor is greatly superior, even if it is crippled with an 8-bit data bus as the 8088 was.

  15. Re:Everyone ignores Commodore on Jack Tramiel, Founder of Commodore Business Machines, Dies At Age 83 · · Score: 1

    Making computers in the USA is a property of the time period, not the particular company. In those days IBM also built its computers in the USA or in other developed countries such as the United Kingdom or Japan. I believe the factories were also more highly automated than is usual today: many of the IBM PS/2 series could be assembled entirely by robots.

  16. Wyse keyboards on Dell To Acquire Wyse · · Score: 1

    This seems like a good place to ask if anyone has experience with the Wyse 901867-01 terminal keyboards? There are some for sale on Ebay UK at the moment and they look good (Cherry MX black switches, apparently) but the connector is nonstandard. Can it be converted to USB or PS/2?

  17. Re:Can't wait to see the rebranded offerings on Dell To Acquire Wyse · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that's the reason I suggested network boot, for ease of management - but provided it can be updated remotely by the administrator, booting a local image would also work well.

  18. Re:Can't wait to see the rebranded offerings on Dell To Acquire Wyse · · Score: 1

    Lately we've been using PanoLogic Zero Clients. They are basically glorified network cards in a cube.

    Would a Raspberry Pi work as a thin client? You could just attach it to the back of the monitor with sticky tape, plug in monitor, keyboard, mouse, and Ethernet, and then arrange for it to boot over the network.

  19. Re:16550A on Linux 3.3: Making a Dent In Bufferbloat? · · Score: 1

    Try out 2M and 2MGUI. There is a noticeable difference between the two. With 2M, floppy access is about the same as normal DOS floppies, and with Windows in 386 mode you can do other things while disk access happens. 2MGUI on the other hand hogs the CPU during any floppy access, such that even the mouse pointer in Windows 95 freezes. This is what leads me to believe it is doing something special beyond the normal interrupt-driven floppy I/O. Linux supports several extended disk formats, but none with quite the same capacity as 2MGUI.

  20. Do we need disks any more? on After 60 Years, Tape Reinserts Itself · · Score: 1

    For archiving large amounts of data, tape is cheaper and more reliable than hard disks. For storing and accessing small amounts, flash memory is faster than hard disks, about equally reliable, and not too expensive. For the operating system and other day-to-day things, RAM will soon be cheap enough that you can suck in ten gigabytes of data at boot time and run off a RAM disk. In a parallel universe most PCs are sold with a tape drive and perhaps some flash memory, but no hard disk. Hard disks are specialized, expensive bits of hardware used by those who need them and can pay for them. Tape drives are mass-produced and can be made cheaply and reliably.

  21. Re:16550A on Linux 3.3: Making a Dent In Bufferbloat? · · Score: 1

    Floppy disk formatting requires very little CPU resources.

    Unless you use the amazing 2MGUI which lets you cram more space onto floppy disks, formatting HD 3.5inch floppies to over two megabytes. It drives the floppy directly somehow, chewing up CPU time - which means it works under DOS and WinDOS only.

    (There are other programs such the companion 2M which don't require CPU time but 2MGUI is the record holder for highest capacity.)

  22. Dictionary size on Physicists Discover Evolutionary Laws of Language · · Score: 4, Informative

    The OED has about 600 thousand words, though still this is a lot less than a million. It would be interesting to see the most commonly used word that isn't in the dictionary.

  23. Re:Correction on UK Plan Would Use CCTV To Stop Uninsured Drivers From Refueling · · Score: 1

    If they use CCTV to catch uninsured cars, it must be massively ineffective, since there are 1.4 million uninsured cars still. This in a country whose total population is only about 70 million. It sounds like they just need to pick a day and set up roadblocks, impounding all uninsured cars found. Repeat until that 1.4 million is down to some less insane number.

  24. Re:Someone take that awesome display... on Apple Unveils New iPad · · Score: 1

    I'd buy one if it were 17" or bigger... my current laptop is 1920x1200, and I've thought about replacing it with one of the 2048x1536 Thinkpads, but I don't want to lose physical screen space in exchange for more pixels. A 2560x1600 laptop ought to be possible.

  25. Re:Someone take that awesome display... on Apple Unveils New iPad · · Score: 1

    And put it in a netbook with a Thinkpad-style trackpoint

    You mean like this? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2CMpzOSSIhs