That's stupid - we have planety of Apples where I work and, while they tend to need less support than their Windows counterparts, people frequently still need help with using and fixing them.
The thought that people in the IT business don't want to support a solid platform sounds ludicrous to me and a sign of a bad IT professional.
It looks like Intel is a bit concerned about Opteron after all; if they weren't, the probably wouldn't be putting in the x86 features into the Itanium shortly after the release of the Opteron. Either way, I think it shows that lately Intel is lacking some innovation, which is fine by me since I'm an avid AMD fan:)
I'm not a huge fan of x86, but being able to easily migrate to 64-bit, or even just being able to have 8 more GPR and SSE registers is a nice idea that Intel should have done LONG ago.
What's the new technology here? It sounds basically like how X does it (and does it exceptionally well, by the way). I'm actually surprised it took people this long to figure out how to duplicate such a mechanism.
Well, if it's the Mac OS X version then it uses GNU Chess and is pretty good, suposedly. It rules over my playing abaility, and I don't know anyone that has been able to beat it...
A simple way:
Use Linux.
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/hda
Be happy.
Need to delete all that child porn before the cops find out, huh?
Doesn't Windows Reloaded soudn a lot like Matrix Reloaded? I mean they even made a Matrix spoof.
That's stupid - we have planety of Apples where I work and, while they tend to need less support than their Windows counterparts, people frequently still need help with using and fixing them. The thought that people in the IT business don't want to support a solid platform sounds ludicrous to me and a sign of a bad IT professional.
It looks like Intel is a bit concerned about Opteron after all; if they weren't, the probably wouldn't be putting in the x86 features into the Itanium shortly after the release of the Opteron. Either way, I think it shows that lately Intel is lacking some innovation, which is fine by me since I'm an avid AMD fan :)
I'm not a huge fan of x86, but being able to easily migrate to 64-bit, or even just being able to have 8 more GPR and SSE registers is a nice idea that Intel should have done LONG ago.
What's the new technology here? It sounds basically like how X does it (and does it exceptionally well, by the way). I'm actually surprised it took people this long to figure out how to duplicate such a mechanism.
Well, if it's the Mac OS X version then it uses GNU Chess and is pretty good, suposedly. It rules over my playing abaility, and I don't know anyone that has been able to beat it...