I'm not sure of the point you're trying to make, but MS employees do need to pay for software. Their company store offers software at a discount. Just because you work for a company doesn't mean you get a free for all license on all their software.
And I would guess that employees not involved with R&D (and even some involved with R&D) would not have access to various software that are being developed. Again, just because you're begin paid $12/hour to answer the phone for WGA issues doesn't mean you get a free for all license to all of MS's software.
Of the millions of phones shipped, only a small percentage of them support full HTML and Javascript (PocketPC-based ones, Palm-based, and Symbian-based).
From http://siliconvalley.internet.com/news/article.php/1598081: An estimated 50 million Java handsets are currently on the market and shipments of Java handsets exceeded PDA shipments in 2002, said Gold, adding that one out of ever ten cell phones in the world will be Java phones by the end of the year.
"The answer is increasingly just Java," Gold told internetnews.com.
"By end 2003, the size of the market that one can address with Java will still be larger than that of all PDAs and smartphones (such as Nokia Communicator and the Ericsson or Samsung equivalents) together, even if PDAs and smartphones grow by 100 percent in units this year (probably an unrealistically high assumption)," said Gold.
But I agree, a utility like this is best suited for the client.
According to the article Sosa later volunteered to be part of a 7 person class action lawsuit. They lost and are now responsible for DirectTV's $100,000 legal bill. They are appealing.
Wouldn't this be better suited as a Java MIDlet? What if you have no signal? What if the server is down? No additional bandwidth charges (for those with carriers that do). And probably quicker response times. And no worries of the site being slashdotted.
Document the calculations and I'll make a MIDlet in a couple of hours. I can find basic equations, but they take into account additional variables (cable loss, receiver related variables) which you don't use.
I'm not sure of the point you're trying to make, but MS employees do need to pay for software. Their company store offers software at a discount. Just because you work for a company doesn't mean you get a free for all license on all their software.
And I would guess that employees not involved with R&D (and even some involved with R&D) would not have access to various software that are being developed. Again, just because you're begin paid $12/hour to answer the phone for WGA issues doesn't mean you get a free for all license to all of MS's software.
It seems like HP is not using the 9200 "brand" anymore and is now correctly using the 9000 "brand".
X1000
ZT300
Of course you can move the card.
How to upgrade your video card w/ pics
Hey HP even sells replacement parts (appropriately mislabeled as well).
hp partsurfer
Of the millions of phones shipped, only a small percentage of them support full HTML and Javascript (PocketPC-based ones, Palm-based, and Symbian-based).
p /1598081:
From http://siliconvalley.internet.com/news/article.ph
An estimated 50 million Java handsets are currently on the market and shipments of Java handsets exceeded PDA shipments in 2002, said Gold, adding that one out of ever ten cell phones in the world will be Java phones by the end of the year.
"The answer is increasingly just Java," Gold told internetnews.com.
"By end 2003, the size of the market that one can address with Java will still be larger than that of all PDAs and smartphones (such as Nokia Communicator and the Ericsson or Samsung equivalents) together, even if PDAs and smartphones grow by 100 percent in units this year (probably an unrealistically high assumption)," said Gold.
But I agree, a utility like this is best suited for the client.
According to the article Sosa later volunteered to be part of a 7 person class action lawsuit. They lost and are now responsible for DirectTV's $100,000 legal bill. They are appealing.
Wouldn't this be better suited as a Java MIDlet? What if you have no signal? What if the server is down? No additional bandwidth charges (for those with carriers that do). And probably quicker response times. And no worries of the site being slashdotted.
Document the calculations and I'll make a MIDlet in a couple of hours. I can find basic equations, but they take into account additional variables (cable loss, receiver related variables) which you don't use.
Hrmmm how? Where does one instruction end and next start? You mean like the other guy's, where he used a space (another character)?