I have a six-year old computer with a 900 MHz processor. I suspect that the computers with 300 MHz processors came out in 1998, making them eight years old.
But even a distro sold as a service can be installed on multiple machines, though only one qualifies for service. Can you legally install a copy of Microsoft Windows XP on multiple machines?
There is an ambiguity as to whether the percentage disparity is a quotient of the two percentages or their difference. Whether they were misleading or not is a different issue (or did you mean me?).
In the early days, people often dual-booted between Windows NT and MS-DOS/Windows 3.1. MS-DOS and Windows 3.1 operate on local time, so Windows NT followed suit so that you wouldn't have to keep changing your clock each time you changed operating systems.
As people upgraded from Windows NT to Windows 2000 to Windows XP, this choice of time zone had to be preserved so that people could dual-boot between their previous operating system and the new operating system.
But what about those of us who dual boot between Windows XP and Linux?
Re:Cheaper isn't everything
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The Art of SQL
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And what independent bookseller in Columbia, SC has the selection of a Barnes and Noble? Now in Denver, I might support The Tattered Cover, as it has a good selection.
Oh Lord, won't you buy me a Color MacBook? My friends all have Acers, but I want the look. Worked hard all my life, don't leave me forsook. So, oh Lord, won't you buy me a Color MacBook.
Or installing the OS. I'm running OpenSuSE on a server because SLES wouldn't install properly, the X drivers for S3 were broken I think, X just went into an infinite loop when the machine tried to boot.
And why are you running X on a server? One can run yast2 in console mode (why one administer a server by using yast2 is beyond me).
Linux is harder to learn, not to use. It relies on command line a good bit...which isn't a bad thing, but it does make the OS far less intuitive compared to the "use GUI or die" approach that MS has taken.
Man pages are sometimes convoluted, too technical for a Linux noob, or just downright poorly written. I've given up on a task more than once because the man page was intolerable and Google failed to yeild any useful results.
I don't know if I want noobs administering my servers.
Perhaps you should check your reading comprehension. From the post to which I responded:
Actually, your equation was right, but you didn't keep your decimal values consistent. 90% =.9 20% =.2.9 *.2 =.018 (there's the error).9 +.018 =.918 So it should be about 92% uptime total.
But, moving beyond cabinet positions and elected officials, one would also need to consider the need to keep basic government bureaucracy running, such as the Patent Office, Budget Office, GAO, and other important functions of government that the people would still need after a small, limited nuclear exchange.
The Patent Office? Oh yeah, that's the one I'm worried about.
Upgrade from IE 6 to what? Firefox (IE 7 is still beta)? Or did you mean upgrade to IE 6?
I have a six-year old computer with a 900 MHz processor. I suspect that the computers with 300 MHz processors came out in 1998, making them eight years old.
But even a distro sold as a service can be installed on multiple machines, though only one qualifies for service. Can you legally install a copy of Microsoft Windows XP on multiple machines?
Darl McBride? Oh, wait, you said boobies, sorry.
Doesn't Microsoft already own an ISP (msn)?
There is an ambiguity as to whether the percentage disparity is a quotient of the two percentages or their difference. Whether they were misleading or not is a different issue (or did you mean me?).
The difference between percentages is a percentage.
61.25%-29.7%=31.55%. That's the trouble when one compares percentages. :-)
As far as I can tell, booting in XP and then Linux messes up my clock.
In the early days, people often dual-booted between Windows NT and MS-DOS/Windows 3.1. MS-DOS and Windows 3.1 operate on local time, so Windows NT followed suit so that you wouldn't have to keep changing your clock each time you changed operating systems.
As people upgraded from Windows NT to Windows 2000 to Windows XP, this choice of time zone had to be preserved so that people could dual-boot between their previous operating system and the new operating system.
But what about those of us who dual boot between Windows XP and Linux?
And what independent bookseller in Columbia, SC has the selection of a Barnes and Noble? Now in Denver, I might support The Tattered Cover, as it has a good selection.
Oh Lord, won't you buy me a Color MacBook?
My friends all have Acers, but I want the look.
Worked hard all my life, don't leave me forsook.
So, oh Lord, won't you buy me a Color MacBook.
Or installing the OS. I'm running OpenSuSE on a server because SLES wouldn't install properly, the X drivers for S3 were broken I think, X just went into an infinite loop when the machine tried to boot.
And why are you running X on a server? One can run yast2 in console mode (why one administer a server by using yast2 is beyond me).
Linux is harder to learn, not to use. It relies on command line a good bit...which isn't a bad thing, but it does make the OS far less intuitive compared to the "use GUI or die" approach that MS has taken.
Man pages are sometimes convoluted, too technical for a Linux noob, or just downright poorly written. I've given up on a task more than once because the man page was intolerable and Google failed to yeild any useful results.
I don't know if I want noobs administering my servers.
Perhaps you should check your reading comprehension. From the post to which I responded:
.9 .2 .9 * .2 = .018 (there's the error) .9 + .018 = .918
Actually, your equation was right, but you didn't keep your decimal values consistent.
90% =
20% =
So it should be about 92% uptime total.
0.9 * 0.2 = 0.18, not 0.018.
That would be about 304 days, as 20% of 304 is 60.8 (304+60.8=364.8). The 20% must be taken as 20% of the RedHat uptime, not the Windows.
But yeah, that's way too low for RedHat.
Does Microsoft Word automatically adjust column widths to fit data? The last time I used it with tables I had to adjust the table widths manually.
Since when do *.xls files constitute critical data?
But if one were running Linux/BSD, one wouldn't have *.xls files in the first place, and rm is not a Microsoft Windows command.
Shouldn't that be del *.xls?
Cheers?
But, moving beyond cabinet positions and elected officials, one would also need to consider the need to keep basic government bureaucracy running, such as the Patent Office, Budget Office, GAO, and other important functions of government that the people would still need after a small, limited nuclear exchange.
The Patent Office? Oh yeah, that's the one I'm worried about.
The Great Leap Forward occurred when? Late fifties / early sixties? Are people starving in China today?
I've heard people say they want Apple. Do people say they want ASUS?