as an intern for the DNR in alaska, my job is to do the grunt work of 'webifying' a ~21 year old COBOL database system. the back end isnt being changed, but the application is getting a java and jsp front end so that the forms can be used over the internet with something like modern a GUI.
thats actually quite different from QoS. usually its the modem on the user end that is different (or at lest the settings), and that modem bottle necks your traffic to match what you paid for. i think this is entirly diffenent, the issue is whether or notthe osp can give different sites different speeds, not whether they can give the customer different speeds
as an intern for the DNR in alaska, my job is to do the grunt work of 'webifying' a ~21 year old COBOL database system. the back end isnt being changed, but the application is getting a java and jsp front end so that the forms can be used over the internet with something like modern a GUI.
thats actually quite different from QoS. usually its the modem on the user end that is different (or at lest the settings), and that modem bottle necks your traffic to match what you paid for. i think this is entirly diffenent, the issue is whether or notthe osp can give different sites different speeds, not whether they can give the customer different speeds
good point
booble.com
you forgot 'kaplad speed'
couldnt agree more
so its illegal to play DVDs on linux based machines?? please elaborate, this i did not know.