Most providers lock their phone, and as a result, you are stuck using that phone with that provider. A couple years ago, when I got my first GSM phone, I purchased it through a buddy of mine who worked for the cellular provider, and since the phone wasn't out on the market yet, the provider hadn't locked the phone I got. We were able to use both Rogers and Fido SIM cards on my phone with no problems.. that is until I sent the phone back for a software upgrade, and got the phone returned with the provider lock enabled.. however the battery life was twice the length which was nice.
In Windows, to find simular information to what lspci provides, open up regedit and visit
(Win9x):
hkey_local_machine\enum\pci
and you will see all the PCI devices listed there, like such:
VEN_0000&DEV_1111&SUBSYS_22222222&REV_ 33
You can type the vendor ID (0000) into http://www.pcidatabase.com to find out who manufactures the card/chip, and then do a 'find' on the resulting page for the device id (1111) to see which specific card/chip is being used.
(I've always used 0x0000 for vendor, I'm not sure if just 0000 will work.)
Also, if you expand those keys, you will be able to see the device description by looking at the keys below.
This applies to WinNT/XP/2k/etc as well, however I believe the registry key is different.
1. Transfer an entire DVD (Shouldn't take more than 30 seconds or so).
2. "This DVD I transfered contains approximately as much data as 7.5 CD-Rom's"
3. "Obviously your employees are not going to be downloading CD's or DVD constantly throughout the day, however, you have 3000 employees, and 1 CD-Rom contains as much data as 450 floppy disks. That means, in the 30 seconds in took me to transfer that DVD, 3375 floppy disks worth of information could be transferred. That means, every employee could download a floppy disk of information every 30 seconds all day long, and there would still be available bandwidth."
You could even mention how 20 MS Word documents can fit on one floppy (depending on size), and explain that not everyone will be downloading all that data at the exact same time, thus improving the transfer speeds for the other users.
4. ???
5. Profit
In the footer of google.ca they have a link to www.google.com/ncr which resets google back to.com instead of.ca. This preference seems to be saved in a cookie, since google.com now defaults to.com for me, instead of.ca.
If you use http://news.yahoo.com-stories-f8209d09fasd@brentoz ar.com/breakingnews/riaa.aspx?ex=10600&Language=EN &&partner=GOOGLE&Refer=3 as your link it will appear more like a yahoo story.
(remove spaces)
You can do that.. depending on the phone...
Most providers lock their phone, and as a result, you are stuck using that phone with that provider. A couple years ago, when I got my first GSM phone, I purchased it through a buddy of mine who worked for the cellular provider, and since the phone wasn't out on the market yet, the provider hadn't locked the phone I got. We were able to use both Rogers and Fido SIM cards on my phone with no problems.. that is until I sent the phone back for a software upgrade, and got the phone returned with the provider lock enabled.. however the battery life was twice the length which was nice.
In Windows, to find simular information to what lspci provides, open up regedit and visit
(Win9x): hkey_local_machine\enum\pci
and you will see all the PCI devices listed there, like such:
VEN_0000&DEV_1111&SUBSYS_22222222&REV_ 33
You can type the vendor ID (0000) into http://www.pcidatabase.com to find out who manufactures the card/chip, and then do a 'find' on the resulting page for the device id (1111) to see which specific card/chip is being used.
(I've always used 0x0000 for vendor, I'm not sure if just 0000 will work.)
Also, if you expand those keys, you will be able to see the device description by looking at the keys below.
This applies to WinNT/XP/2k/etc as well, however I believe the registry key is different.
1. Transfer an entire DVD (Shouldn't take more than 30 seconds or so).
2. "This DVD I transfered contains approximately as much data as 7.5 CD-Rom's"
3. "Obviously your employees are not going to be downloading CD's or DVD constantly throughout the day, however, you have 3000 employees, and 1 CD-Rom contains as much data as 450 floppy disks. That means, in the 30 seconds in took me to transfer that DVD, 3375 floppy disks worth of information could be transferred. That means, every employee could download a floppy disk of information every 30 seconds all day long, and there would still be available bandwidth."
You could even mention how 20 MS Word documents can fit on one floppy (depending on size), and explain that not everyone will be downloading all that data at the exact same time, thus improving the transfer speeds for the other users.
4. ???
5. Profit
How about %SYSTEMDIR%\Desktop\YOU_ARE_INFECTED.TXT ? I would expect that to be more visable than just C:\
X T
However, with profiles, etc the Desktop does change for each user. Maybe C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\Desktop\YOU_ARE_INFECTED.T
In the footer of google.ca they have a link to www.google.com/ncr which resets google back to .com instead of .ca. This preference seems to be saved in a cookie, since google.com now defaults to .com for me, instead of .ca.
(Look for "Go to Google.com" in the footer).
If you use http://news.yahoo.com-stories-f8209d09fasd@brentoz ar.com/breakingnews/riaa.aspx?ex=10600&Language=EN &&partner=GOOGLE&Refer=3 as your link it will appear more like a yahoo story.
(remove spaces)