Yep, I can attest to the parent's experience.
It wasn't too long ago that when you were working with 2D images or video editing that you went with Matrox almost automatically for their image quality.
I was shocked and digusted when I found out that my uncle's small business in New York City could not get high speed Internet access, and his business really needs faster access. Sure, implementing nation-wide broadband access maybe difficult for country of our (US) size, but if even some people in New York City can't get it, I think there definitely is a problem. Why can't the people who live in greater metropolitan areas in the US enjoy the same level of access as the ones in rural South Korea?
Yes, there are many good fiction books out there, but as I get older, I feel as if I'm wasting time reading made-up stories when I don't even have too much time to spend on reading something factual (at least relatively) that affects me and our society or something that can improve my job skills. Maybe I should stop reading slashdot, but who can live without slashdot?
I remember a few years ago when Sun was enemies with Microsoft Scott McNealy during an interview said that software is a feature, and hardware is what people bought. What a difference a few billion dollars make!
Good skill to learn in the US for the time when all the IT workers get laid off... there'll be huge demand for them.
to be implanted either on our forehead or the right hand?
no, it's v4lu34b13
Will give whole new meanings to .com BOOM! AND BUST!
my favorite's quintessential player.
Yep, I can attest to the parent's experience. It wasn't too long ago that when you were working with 2D images or video editing that you went with Matrox almost automatically for their image quality.
because movies and music made these days are not even worth my time anymore.
I was shocked and digusted when I found out that my uncle's small business in New York City could not get high speed Internet access, and his business really needs faster access. Sure, implementing nation-wide broadband access maybe difficult for country of our (US) size, but if even some people in New York City can't get it, I think there definitely is a problem. Why can't the people who live in greater metropolitan areas in the US enjoy the same level of access as the ones in rural South Korea?
Yes, there are many good fiction books out there, but as I get older, I feel as if I'm wasting time reading made-up stories when I don't even have too much time to spend on reading something factual (at least relatively) that affects me and our society or something that can improve my job skills. Maybe I should stop reading slashdot, but who can live without slashdot?
OpenOffice is nice and I do use it, but I'm not sure if I'd run it on a four year old laptop.
I remember a few years ago when Sun was enemies with Microsoft Scott McNealy during an interview said that software is a feature, and hardware is what people bought. What a difference a few billion dollars make!