Now that you mention it, I have had to replace a number of NIC's on windows servers which kept reseting themselves. They all were 3com and were replaced with what I could find in the box (mainly Realtek and DLink). Since they were all bought around the same time I thought that they came with a "best before" date but I might be wrong. Has anyone else experienced similar problems? It was showing in the logs as TCPIP event 4201 with this message:
The system detected that network adapter 3Com EtherLink XL 10/100 PCI TX NIC (3C905B-TX) was connected to the network, and has initiated normal operation over the network adapter.
Re:What is the point of scanning at such a high re
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600 PowerMacs Make One DVD
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once digitised, could they not be processed to remove those? I don't know much about image processing but I'm sure someone would be able to come up with a filter that would pick up such spots and remove them (based on previous and next clean frames maybe?).
By the sound of it, it would be more of a "pay for itself" decontamination process than a biological goldmine. As soon as the metals are cleared out, the land will be used to grow any other plants and most probably be stuffed with fertilisers. Then a few years down the line some other miracle plants will be used to clear those out and keep the cycle going...
Now that you mention it, I have had to replace a number of NIC's on windows servers which kept reseting themselves. They all were 3com and were replaced with what I could find in the box (mainly Realtek and DLink). Since they were all bought around the same time I thought that they came with a "best before" date but I might be wrong. Has anyone else experienced similar problems? It was showing in the logs as TCPIP event 4201 with this message: The system detected that network adapter 3Com EtherLink XL 10/100 PCI TX NIC (3C905B-TX) was connected to the network, and has initiated normal operation over the network adapter.
once digitised, could they not be processed to remove those? I don't know much about image processing but I'm sure someone would be able to come up with a filter that would pick up such spots and remove them (based on previous and next clean frames maybe?).
By the sound of it, it would be more of a "pay for itself" decontamination process than a biological goldmine. As soon as the metals are cleared out, the land will be used to grow any other plants and most probably be stuffed with fertilisers. Then a few years down the line some other miracle plants will be used to clear those out and keep the cycle going...