On some small pages I have to maintain the rates of IE dropped below 50%.
The highest IE-rate I got on a page for a hotel with 46% and the lowest with 28% on the one for my soaring club.
I believe the theory about the advanced and standardised britisch canons is not so new.
At least I read a (not so good written) historical novel named "Der Meister des Siebten Siegels" ("The Master of the seventh Seal") about a fictiv (?) Adam Dreyling, developed a new technology to cast canons in higher quality, escaped to england and armed the english fleet.
At least now it seems to be proven.
Maybe this depends on what you're working on--both from hardware and task view:
My ol' PowerBook is a great tool for daily usage (as same as some ThinkPads I've worked with). It's flat enough to not stress the hands when typing, the keyboard is really good and the touchpad is large and relatively one level with the rest of the surface.
For my mostly text-centered tasks I like to have the keyboard and touchpad close together and don't need to move the hand too far, from this point I even prefer it over a classical keyboard/mouse-combination. And for some advanced graphical works I plug in a wacom.
On some small pages I have to maintain the rates of IE dropped below 50%. The highest IE-rate I got on a page for a hotel with 46% and the lowest with 28% on the one for my soaring club.
Better add a Rob Halford autograph, just make sure, you're truest manly metal.
I believe the theory about the advanced and standardised britisch canons is not so new. At least I read a (not so good written) historical novel named "Der Meister des Siebten Siegels" ("The Master of the seventh Seal") about a fictiv (?) Adam Dreyling, developed a new technology to cast canons in higher quality, escaped to england and armed the english fleet. At least now it seems to be proven.
> Laptops are not ergonomical.
Maybe this depends on what you're working on--both from hardware and task view:
My ol' PowerBook is a great tool for daily usage (as same as some ThinkPads I've worked with). It's flat enough to not stress the hands when typing, the keyboard is really good and the touchpad is large and relatively one level with the rest of the surface.
For my mostly text-centered tasks I like to have the keyboard and touchpad close together and don't need to move the hand too far, from this point I even prefer it over a classical keyboard/mouse-combination.
And for some advanced graphical works I plug in a wacom.
Yes, thanks for you're ideas. I did this all before, and after doing the usual stuff I checked the PSU with a voltmeter: it's just dead.
... died yesterday of a broken power supply. Don't know if I'll bring it back to life. But it had ran Leo before :-)