This form of redundancy (carbon copy + ribbon copy) eliminates the possibility of post-editing by electronic form. The word document version of word processing. This makes a lot of sense for an organization that is dragged into court thousands of times a year. No virus infection to alter reports, or force reinstall of OS, no hdd crashes, no backup fails, just a simple straightforward typewriter.
You could build a rudementary electric telegraph system within your budget. Press down the button, it causes a "click" by magnetizing a clap-bar. Very simple circuit.
I've heard reports of 2 million copies of the audiobook, but otherwise, no hard data. Neuromancer has been published in so many countries by so many companies, making an accurate count for copies published might be difficult.
I meet your cost and raise you the cost of regular hardware upgrades necessary to continue running Windows. When XP came out, 256MB was plenty, now with the updates and everything, 1GB is cramped. When it came out, a Pentium 3 667Mhz was plenty, now a multicore multi-Ghz is needed. This too has to be taken into the TCO.
You know, this fallacy really needs to die. I saw a front end collision between a Smart car and an F450, yeah that super-big thing, all decked out with rims and everything. The F450 wound up on top of the smart car. And what about the Smart Car driver? He opened his door, and walked out. The F450 driver, hospital with major injury despite wering a seatbelt.
That was the day I realized that the "big cars are safe cars" idea was a complete fraud.
I'm just imagining when a new skin turns out to have a virus. Every so often your speedometer pops up with "Your system is infected with 69 viruses, please purchase Antivirus 2009 to correct"
I'm an IT professional on the I4 corridor as well. To say this is a good spot is lying through your teeth. The infastructure to support IT is woeful, network disruptions commonplace, and the structure needed to work is aging to the point of obsolescence. In short, IT in Florida is a joke. Professionals which would be paid $35/hr in any area of the country get paid $9/hr here.
An unusual and easily misinterpreted sign
on
Kodak Kills Kodachrome
·
· Score: 5, Informative
I see replies about the death of film, when this was less than 1% of Kodaks film sales per year. Kodachrome is difficult to process, expensive to maintain the equipment for, and has been slowly being phased out for over 50 years, ever since the killing of it in the large format. What the people here do tend to ignore is that for the death of 1 stock, Kodak has introduced new stocks, such as the Ektar 1 and E100D, that truely are visual marvels, cheaper to process and maintain, and most of all, can be upgraded to newer speeds/processes far cheaper than the now almost 80 year old Kodachrome technology. I do think Kodak has made a lot of mis-steps for Film, and I will miss Kodachrome, but I do not call this a mistake in the least.
The real telling issue is that less than 20% of US Households have adopted either, and it's been out for years. Frankly, this should be no surprise, the "format war" dragged on for so long that by the time the victor had stepped forth, the market they were fighting for was already passing them by. The migration to HD video on demand, online streaming, and yes, downloading of material makes disk-based distribution an out of date concept who is slowly fading into the past.
Other networks, no, other carriers yes. Sprint leases out their network to other cell phone carriers (Boost, for example) which an unlocked Palm Pre would then be able to run on.
Interesting about NC, as NC does not manage or issue SSN's in the first place, for them to allow anything at all in regards to it would be a technical violation of Constitution in both Article I and Article IV.
For tell please inform the class where this upgradeable netbook is which you can add sound, additional wireless, and such to. Because, since we are talking about machines with pre-installed Linux, the customer will never have to deal with any of these except in extreme cases. And in those cases, they'd be in as much trouble as with Windows, which *also* will not install on a netbook without these same driver issues.
This form of redundancy (carbon copy + ribbon copy) eliminates the possibility of post-editing by electronic form. The word document version of word processing. This makes a lot of sense for an organization that is dragged into court thousands of times a year. No virus infection to alter reports, or force reinstall of OS, no hdd crashes, no backup fails, just a simple straightforward typewriter.
You could build a rudementary electric telegraph system within your budget. Press down the button, it causes a "click" by magnetizing a clap-bar. Very simple circuit.
A common Tesla Coil can be made for this budget simply, and would definately get any childs attention. basic schematics can be found all over the net.
At the time this was decided, Hawaii wasn't a US State.
My goodness, sounds like the normal life of the/. reader!
Yes, that did occur to me. It's a hard # to track down, and I would lean more to 6.5 than 150, unless you count torrents.
I've heard reports of 2 million copies of the audiobook, but otherwise, no hard data. Neuromancer has been published in so many countries by so many companies, making an accurate count for copies published might be difficult.
You do realize that is 6.5 million copies... in Canada, right?
I meet your cost and raise you the cost of regular hardware upgrades necessary to continue running Windows. When XP came out, 256MB was plenty, now with the updates and everything, 1GB is cramped. When it came out, a Pentium 3 667Mhz was plenty, now a multicore multi-Ghz is needed. This too has to be taken into the TCO.
You know, this fallacy really needs to die. I saw a front end collision between a Smart car and an F450, yeah that super-big thing, all decked out with rims and everything. The F450 wound up on top of the smart car. And what about the Smart Car driver? He opened his door, and walked out. The F450 driver, hospital with major injury despite wering a seatbelt.
That was the day I realized that the "big cars are safe cars" idea was a complete fraud.
I'm just imagining when a new skin turns out to have a virus. Every so often your speedometer pops up with "Your system is infected with 69 viruses, please purchase Antivirus 2009 to correct"
The Horton was a bomber, not a fighter. It was part of Hitlers 1000,1000,1000 goal. 1000kg of bombs 1000km at 1000km/hr.
I'm an IT professional on the I4 corridor as well. To say this is a good spot is lying through your teeth. The infastructure to support IT is woeful, network disruptions commonplace, and the structure needed to work is aging to the point of obsolescence. In short, IT in Florida is a joke. Professionals which would be paid $35/hr in any area of the country get paid $9/hr here.
So has the Commodore 64:
http://www.c64web.com/
I see replies about the death of film, when this was less than 1% of Kodaks film sales per year. Kodachrome is difficult to process, expensive to maintain the equipment for, and has been slowly being phased out for over 50 years, ever since the killing of it in the large format. What the people here do tend to ignore is that for the death of 1 stock, Kodak has introduced new stocks, such as the Ektar 1 and E100D, that truely are visual marvels, cheaper to process and maintain, and most of all, can be upgraded to newer speeds/processes far cheaper than the now almost 80 year old Kodachrome technology. I do think Kodak has made a lot of mis-steps for Film, and I will miss Kodachrome, but I do not call this a mistake in the least.
The real telling issue is that less than 20% of US Households have adopted either, and it's been out for years. Frankly, this should be no surprise, the "format war" dragged on for so long that by the time the victor had stepped forth, the market they were fighting for was already passing them by. The migration to HD video on demand, online streaming, and yes, downloading of material makes disk-based distribution an out of date concept who is slowly fading into the past.
Other networks, no, other carriers yes. Sprint leases out their network to other cell phone carriers (Boost, for example) which an unlocked Palm Pre would then be able to run on.
What does the amendment preventing a Senator or Rep from voting themselves an immediate pay increase have to do with anything?
Interesting about NC, as NC does not manage or issue SSN's in the first place, for them to allow anything at all in regards to it would be a technical violation of Constitution in both Article I and Article IV.
Only if you choose to then be left to die if you have a catastrophic condition, saving the taxpayers and hospitals the bills.
There's a Pepsi to microsofts Coke?
For tell please inform the class where this upgradeable netbook is which you can add sound, additional wireless, and such to. Because, since we are talking about machines with pre-installed Linux, the customer will never have to deal with any of these except in extreme cases. And in those cases, they'd be in as much trouble as with Windows, which *also* will not install on a netbook without these same driver issues.
>they just want familiar applications that "just work"
Then they want Linux or a Mac, which both offer this, and not Windows, which doesn't.
I'm a big fan of the Buddhist Extremists. "The world is an Illusion, so to destroy it, I set myself on fire!"
I know that St Pete FL has a substantial tent city, I drive by it almost every day.