We use IOGEAR's USB-to-VGA adapters at work with our laptops for a 3rd monitor. It works great, and uses the DisplayLink software. They also make a USB-to-DVI adapter.
How is this interesting? They aren't forcing people to give up their classics. It is an incentive.
People with cars they don't feel are worth the $5000 are the ones who would be scrapping their cars.
I pay around $50 (it might be $55-$60, can't remember) for 20/5 FIOS. I've hit 2.8 megabytes per second on Usenet downloading. For $10-$15 more I can have 20/20, and for $80 more a month I can get 50/20.
KeePass might work well for this, and has the added benefit of encryption. I use it to store a lot of networking-related information at work, and with its search capabilities it has been quite useful.
I got my Wii for free from Netgear
on
Where are Wii?
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· Score: 1
I got a free Wii from Netgear by purchasing a 48 port Gigabit router. Bought the router in August, and finally got it this week. Better late than never. Though you can no longer get the same deal, I think they are offering free iPhones now with purchase of a router.
If you check out NetReg, in the download and installation instructions they have steps on how to set up forwards like this. NetReg uses it to require people to register their MAC address. Anyone not registered is forwarded to the registration page, but it would be simply to modify it using their example. We use NetReg at our university, and I am working expanding some of its functionality for my senior project.
I played through HL2 and EP1 on a Compaq Evo N610C laptop (1.8 GHZ P4, Radeon 9200 32mb graphics card, and the RAM upgraded to 1 GB). Despite the older machine and playing on the lowest quality settings, I still loved the game. I am amazed Valve can scale the game so well.
Gee, I must be behind. I spent those first 50 milliseconds waiting for the page to load. Who are these people with such leet connections that pages load so quickly, and where can I sign up?
How about offering other PBS shows for download. My mom TiVo's "America's Test Kitchen" every weekend, and I enjoy watching MotorWeek. It would be nice to just download them, burn to a CD, etc.
Kotaku has its own video up that is much better quality.
Here it is from the final shooting script: http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview/id/473913.html
We use IOGEAR's USB-to-VGA adapters at work with our laptops for a 3rd monitor. It works great, and uses the DisplayLink software. They also make a USB-to-DVI adapter.
n/t
The summary is an exact copy of the opening paragraph of Ars Technica's article, without any citation or even link to the original story.
How is this interesting? They aren't forcing people to give up their classics. It is an incentive. People with cars they don't feel are worth the $5000 are the ones who would be scrapping their cars.
Yea I was hoping to would stop after the election but apparently that was too much to hope for.
I love IT Crowd (for those that didn't get the reference). I'm hoping they release the DVDs here in the US as I'd rather not have to import them.
Or what about firmware updates? I just updated my blu-ray player's firmware for the 5th time, while I've never updated any DVD player I owned.
Flash works fine, but I haven't tried Office yet. Were you referring to the Flash plugin or the full-blown application?
I did google and didn't see anything specifically declaring OpenNet to be Exchange-based. Could you provide a URL reference?
RTFA. They were using OpenNet, not Exchange. "the department's OpenNet e-mail system".
I pay around $50 (it might be $55-$60, can't remember) for 20/5 FIOS. I've hit 2.8 megabytes per second on Usenet downloading. For $10-$15 more I can have 20/20, and for $80 more a month I can get 50/20.
KeePass might work well for this, and has the added benefit of encryption. I use it to store a lot of networking-related information at work, and with its search capabilities it has been quite useful.
I got a free Wii from Netgear by purchasing a 48 port Gigabit router. Bought the router in August, and finally got it this week. Better late than never. Though you can no longer get the same deal, I think they are offering free iPhones now with purchase of a router.
If you check out NetReg, in the download and installation instructions they have steps on how to set up forwards like this. NetReg uses it to require people to register their MAC address. Anyone not registered is forwarded to the registration page, but it would be simply to modify it using their example. We use NetReg at our university, and I am working expanding some of its functionality for my senior project.
I played through HL2 and EP1 on a Compaq Evo N610C laptop (1.8 GHZ P4, Radeon 9200 32mb graphics card, and the RAM upgraded to 1 GB). Despite the older machine and playing on the lowest quality settings, I still loved the game. I am amazed Valve can scale the game so well.
The proxy site can be found hereand here. It doesn't really hint as to what they were using it for, but my guess is porn, P2P, or Facebook/MySpace/etc. It might also have to do with the domain name itself being an issue.
Gee, I must be behind. I spent those first 50 milliseconds waiting for the page to load. Who are these people with such leet connections that pages load so quickly, and where can I sign up?
Here's a link to the guy's site. The AP article didn't list one. http://www.milliondollarhomepage.com/
How about offering other PBS shows for download. My mom TiVo's "America's Test Kitchen" every weekend, and I enjoy watching MotorWeek. It would be nice to just download them, burn to a CD, etc.
If I remember my grammar correctly, it's "I" before "E" EXCEPT after "C".