Keep in mind that TopGear, while often entertaining, has a certain "style" with editing footage together to convey whatever message they feel like conveying.
Really though, how often do you drive >200 miles in a day? Typically you're not going to completely deplete the battery every day, and you're going to be leaving the car charging overnight, so for most drivers that would work out quite well.
This is not true. The Linux kernel will in fact use RAM that is not in use by other applications for filesystem buffers and cache. You can see how much memory is used for this with free.
IIRC, Apple did this with their Dos Compatible Macs.... You could run both DOS and MacOS at the same time, and had some bios function that switched between the two.
Keep in mind that TopGear, while often entertaining, has a certain "style" with editing footage together to convey whatever message they feel like conveying. Really though, how often do you drive >200 miles in a day? Typically you're not going to completely deplete the battery every day, and you're going to be leaving the car charging overnight, so for most drivers that would work out quite well.
If you did well in english, you could write documentation.
Fixed. I have to wonder if that was intentional, or just evidence you shouldn't be writing documentation.
This is not true. The Linux kernel will in fact use RAM that is not in use by other applications for filesystem buffers and cache. You can see how much memory is used for this with free.
Highly doubtful, OSX requires special roms... Maybe in Mac-On-Linux though.
You know, if it were not for this article, I very well might have forgotten to read my ex-girlfriend's email tonight...
What do you think a bluetooth headset or bluetooth phone is duders?
IIRC, Apple did this with their Dos Compatible Macs.... You could run both DOS and MacOS at the same time, and had some bios function that switched between the two.