The US Military uses VOIP? And it failed during this incident? Why would they use technology that is hardly the most reliable to confer on the battlefield. Isn't that a little dangerous? I wouldn't trust my life to VOIP, no matter how secure/reliable a military network was.
The answer to all of these problems is the Pentium M. This should be the de facto desktop chip for all office desktops, because except for gaming and floating point deals, the PentM kills on productivity and halves (at least) power consumption. What gives? Toss the P4 into the river. On a large scale, companies could save thousands on power alone with these babies. Sure, initial investment is more now...but ramp up production and we're there. Plus...new 915s with dual-channel DDR...nice.
The US Military uses VOIP? And it failed during this incident? Why would they use technology that is hardly the most reliable to confer on the battlefield. Isn't that a little dangerous? I wouldn't trust my life to VOIP, no matter how secure/reliable a military network was.
The answer to all of these problems is the Pentium M. This should be the de facto desktop chip for all office desktops, because except for gaming and floating point deals, the PentM kills on productivity and halves (at least) power consumption. What gives? Toss the P4 into the river. On a large scale, companies could save thousands on power alone with these babies. Sure, initial investment is more now...but ramp up production and we're there. Plus...new 915s with dual-channel DDR...nice.