Has anyone else noticed what appears to be a Constitution-class starship http://www.shiporama.org/constitution.htmpartly buried in rubble at the top left of the crater? Part of the saucer section and warp nacelles are clearly visible.
Hush must have started with solid billets of aluminium of almost five and a half centimetres thick to create the side panels. Those solid blocks of aluminium have then been machined into vertical fins, then each one of the fins has again been machined with ridges for ultimate heat dissipation. About 15mm of the side panel has been left solid, in order to soak up all the heat, that is then radiated out through the fins.
How about using Terminal Services for those few people who absolutely HAVE to use Windows apps? The Terminal Services client on the Fedora distribution works pretty well. Just set up a Win2000 or 2003 server with however many Terminal Services licenses and the needed apps and away they go. If you have hundreds of users, and only a small percentage of them need a few Windows apps this is probably cheaper than buying XP licenses for those people.
Too big for that... #1 is tiny. Maybe a #4 http://www.technovelgy.com/ct/content.asp?Bnum=399
Has anyone else noticed what appears to be a Constitution-class starship http://www.shiporama.org/constitution.htmpartly buried in rubble at the top left of the crater? Part of the saucer section and warp nacelles are clearly visible.
I'm guessing it was a mis-spelling... he meant to say "touting".
Damn! I forget to check page 3... a day late and a dollar short. I withdraw my comment. Sorry for the inconvenience.
Hush must have started with solid billets of aluminium of almost five and a half centimetres thick to create the side panels. Those solid blocks of aluminium have then been machined into vertical fins, then each one of the fins has again been machined with ridges for ultimate heat dissipation. About 15mm of the side panel has been left solid, in order to soak up all the heat, that is then radiated out through the fins.
...extrusion?
How about using Terminal Services for those few people who absolutely HAVE to use Windows apps? The Terminal Services client on the Fedora distribution works pretty well. Just set up a Win2000 or 2003 server with however many Terminal Services licenses and the needed apps and away they go. If you have hundreds of users, and only a small percentage of them need a few Windows apps this is probably cheaper than buying XP licenses for those people.
Finally, some Microsoft money being used for good rather than evil!
Thank goodness I'm not 'most people'... they sound pretty stupid!
...has a great article on just this subject.